123 P. 913 | Wyo. | 1912
This action was brought in a justice’s court by the defendant in error against the principal and surety upon an undertaking given upon an appeal from the'judgment of a justice •■of the peace to the district court. The undertaking is set out in full in the written petition that was filed in the action, together with the affidavit on the bond of the appellant to the •effect that the appeal was taken in good faith and not for the purpose of delay, the affidavit of the surety justifying as such, and the indorsement of the justice approving the undertaking. The undertaking, omitting the affidavits and in-dorsement, reads as follows:
■"H. C. Dunkin,
Plaintiff and Appellee, vs.
F. A. Bortree,
Defendant and Appellant.
Action before J. F. Hoop, Justice of the Peace in and for Sheridan County, State of Wyoming.
We, F. A. Bortree, principal, and A. W. Findley, surety, undertake and acknowledge ourselves to be held and firmly bound in the sum of Two Hundred and Seventy-five Dollars to above named appellee, that the said appellant shall prosecute his appeal to effect and without unnecessary delay, and that if judgment be rendered against said appellant, or his appeal be dismissed, he shall satisfy such judgment and •costs.
Dated the 12th day of December, A. D. 1908.
F. A. Bortree, Apellant.
A. W. Findley, Surety.”
The petition alleges that on December rr, 1908,. a judgment was duly rendered in favor of the plaintiff against F. A. Bortree for $120, and the costs of the action unpaid taxed at $13.40, in an action brought by the plaintiff against said •Bortree then pending before J. F. Hoop, a Justice of the
To the petition an answer was filed alleging: “1. That the said bond, on which plaintiff bases his action, was without consideration. 2. That the said attempted appeal was dismissed in the district court upon the motion of plaintiff, HL
The answer- did not" deny any of the facts alleged in the petition, and the principal question to be decided is, therefore, whether the fact alleged in the answer that the appeal in the action wherein the undertaking was given was dismissed upon the plaintiff’s motion on the ground that the undertaking was insufficient constitutes a defense to this action upon that instrument. The answer alleged that the ground of the dismissal was the insufficiency of the undertaking as an appeal bond or as a supersedeas bond. But it is apparent from our statutes that the quetsion of the sufficiency of the bond or undertaking for the purpose of staying execution was not before the court upon the motion to dismiss the appeal, whatever the grounds stated in the motion. Section 5261, Compiled Statutes, provides that any person desiring to appeal from a judgment rendered by a justice of the peace shall within fifteen days after the rendition of the judgment file with the justice a notice of such desire, and either pay all the costs of the cause up to the time of the transmission of the papers to the district court, including one dollar and fifty cents for the transcript 'allowed to the justice for allowing the appeal and making a transcript, or shall give bond in double the amount of all
It is clear that the only bond or undertaking necessary to perfect an appeal is one for the costs accruing up to the time of the transmission of the papers, including the prescribed fee for allowing the appeal and making the transcript, and that bond is only necessary where such costs are not paid. The fact that no undertaking in stay of execution has been given is not a ground for dismissing the appeal, and hence if one given for that purpose be insufficient in form or substance it constitutes no ground for dismissing the appeal. For that reason the fact, as alleged in the answer, that the judge, in determining the motion to dismiss, declared the bond to be utterly void and invalid is immaterial. If the costs which the statute requires to be paid as a condition to the appeal were not paid or properly secured, then the appeal might be dismissed. Upon the allegations of the answer the only question relating to the undertaking that was before the district court on the motion to dismiss the appeal was whether the instrument was a sufficient bond for the payment of the costs in the justice’s court under the provisions of section 5261.
The rule declaring the sureties discharged from liability upon an undertaking on appeal or for the stay of proceedings or execution where the appeal has been dismissed on the ground of the insufficiency of the undertaking is usually limited, if recognized at all, to cases where it appears that 'by the dismissal of the appeal the appellant has lost the only benefit to be derived from the undertaking, thus leaving it
The general rule upon the subject is expressed in Wing v. Rogers, 138 N. Y. 361, 34 N. E. 194, as follows: “When an action is brought against sureties upon a bond or undertaking given in an action, or upon appeal, the validity and force of the instrument depends upon its efficacy in performing the office or accomplishing the end or result contemplated by the parties at the time it was given. An instrument though properly executed and filed, which for any valid reason is disregarded or fails to secure the stay or accomplish the object for which it was given, is virtually without consideration and cannot be enforced against the sureties. When an undertaking on appeal to stay proceedings upon the judgmerit appealed from fails for any legal reason to secure the stay, and the judgment is enforced as if the bond had not been given, the sureties cannot be held liable.” But it was held upon the facts in that case that the purpose of the undertaking had been accomplished, for it secured the stay that was sought, and, therefore, it was founded upon a good consideration, and the parties suing upon it were entitled to recover.
It is not a good defense to an action upon a bond or undertaking given to stay execution pending appeal, that it was insufficient for that purpose and that the appellee-might for that reason have proceeded to enforce the judgment, where the appellee has not taken such action, or in some other effective mariner rejected the instrument for the purpose of the stay. In the notes to the case of Babcock v. Carter, 67
It is not necessary to decide in this case whether a surety upon a mere cost bond given pursuant to the provisions of section 5261 to avoid the immediate payment of the costs and perfect the appeal would be discharged from liability upon a dismissal of the appeal upon the ground that the bond was insufficient. Nor is the question here to'be decided whether the bond in question was sufficient as a cost bond to take the place of the payment of the costs, for the order of the court in dismissing the appeal in the action wherein the bond or undertaking was given is not here for review. The petition alleges that the costs were not paid, and it may be that the undertaking was intended to secure their payment, and thus perfect the appeal. But whether it was so intended or not, it was plainly intended as an undertaking to stay execution during the pendency of the appeal. The petition alleges the fact that execution of the judgment was stayed until the
We understand counsel for plaintiffs in error to contend that the averment in the answer that the bond was without consideration alone constituted a good and sufficient defense, since pleadings in a justice’s court are not to be construed as strictly as in a court where written pleadings are required, and that it was error for that reason to sustain the demurrer, even if the other allegations of the answer were not sufficient as a defense. But the allegation that the bond was without
The brief of counsel for defendant in error was not filed within the time required by the rules, and the time does not appear to have been extended; and for that reason counsel for plaintiff in error filed a motion to strike such briefs from the files. The briefs not having been filed within the time allowed, defendant in error was not entitled to be heard. The case was taken under advisement upon such motion and the merits without oral argument. A strict application of the rule entitles counsel to have his motion to strike the opposing briefs from the files sustained, and it may be so ordered: That does not, however, entitle the plaintiff in error, to a reversal or modification of the judgment, or prevent the court from considering the questions involved and deciding the case according to its view of the law applicable thereto.
• For the reasons above stated, we think that the demurrer to the answer was properly sustained and that the judgment for the plaintiff below was proper upon the facts alleged. The judgment will be affirmed.