54 Neb. 222 | Neb. | 1898
It appears from the record that on June 15, 1894, John J. Walker obtained a judgment in the district court of Butler county against W. T. Richardson and C. O. White, in the sum of $3,150.85, besides the cost of suit. White filed a transcript of the proceedings and judgment, and a petition in error, in. this court for the purpose of procuring a reversal of said judgment, and on June 28, 1894, to secure a stay of execution during the pendency of said error proceeding, he executed and delivered to the clerk of the district court a supersedeas bond, in the sum of
The first contention is that the conditions of the bond have not been broken, for the reason that the judgment which it was given to supersede has never been by this court “affirmed in whole or in part;” in other words, that the dismissal of the error proceeding brought to obtain a review of the said judgment recovered by Walker against Richardson and White was not equivalent to an affirmance of said judgment. The'precise question, upon a review of the authorities, was passed upon in Dunterman v. Storey, 40 Neb. 447, where it was decided that the distoissal of an appeal out of this court, without an examination of the merits of the cause, operated as an affirmance of the judgment sought to be reviewed, within, the meaning of a supersedeas bond conditioned in the language of the one now before the court. The proposition was ably reasoned by Ragan, C., in his opinion in that case, and the doctrine therein stated is sound, and sustained by the weight of authority. A discussion of the subject anew at this time would be without profit.
It is suggested that the surety was discharged by the failure of Walker to have the action revived in the name of White’s representative. This argument is without merit. While the former, had he so desired, might have had the action revived, the law imposed no duty upon him to secure an order of revivor to be entered.
Another argument is that Bell, the surety on the supersedeas, was released and discharged from liability by the failure of Walker to file and prove his claim against the estate of White in the county court of the county where administration was granted. This contention is opposed to the doctrine announced in Eickhoff
Complaint is made of certain rulings on the admission of testimony. These are not available, since the cause was tried without the intervention of a jury. (Stabler v. Gund, 35 Neb. 648; Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co. v. Buckstaff, 38 Neb. 146; Whipple v. Fowler, 41 Neb. 675; Tolerton v. McClure, 45 Neb. 368.) The judgment is
Affirmed.