34 Kan. 90 | Kan. | 1885
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On August 19, 1881, Doty Bros. & Co. were hardware merchants doing business at Mankato, Jewell county, but were insolvent. Among their creditors were D. M. Steele & Co., and Case, Bishop & Co. On that day they executed to Case, Bishop & Co. a chattel mortgage on their entire ■stock of hardware. This was all the property they owned subject to the payment of debts, and they mortgaged the same to secure the sum of $2,500, which they owed to Case, Bishop & Co. The mortgage was duly filed in the office of the register of deeds, and Case, Bishop & Co. took possession of the property on the same day. On August 29, 1881, D. M. Steele & Co. commenced this present action in the district court of Jewell county against Doty Brothers & Co. for the amount of their claim, to wit, $103.46, and caused an order of attachment to be issued in the action, which order of attachment was levied by the sheriff of Jewell county upon certain barbed wire, which was then in possession of Case, Bishop & Co., and was a part of the stock of hardware mortgaged by Doty Bros. & Co. to Case, Bishop & Co. On September 19, 1881, Case, Bishop & Co. executed and delivered to said sheriff, who then had the barbed wire in his possession, a forthcoming bond, with the following condition, to wit: “ Now, if said Case> Bishop & Co. shall hold said property and return the same, or the appraised value thereof, if the court so order, and com
The statute under which the bond was given reads as follows :
“Sec. 199. The sheriff shall deliver the property attached to the person in whose possession it was found, upon the execution, by such person, in the presence of the sheriff) of an undertaking to the plaintiff, with one or more sureties, resident in the county, to the effect that the parties to the same are bound, in double the appraised value thereof, that the property, or its appraised value in money, shall be forthcoming to answer the judgment of the court in the action; but if it shall appear to the court that any part of said property has been lost or destroyed by unavoidable accident, the value thereof shall be remitted to the person so bound.” ( Civil Code, §199.)
“1. There is no admission in this bond that the property . is the property of Doty Bros. & Co., and no unconditional promise to return it to the officer.
“2. Doty Bros. & Co. had no other property subject to levy, and therefore D. M. Steele & Co. have not been induced to change their condition, could not have levied on anything else, and are not injured by permitting the truth to be proved.
“ 3. The attorney for D. M. Steele & Co. and the sheriff who made the levy were informed of the nature and extent of the claim of the plaintiffs in error before the levy was made.”
While the foregoing cases may perhaps not be wholly decisive that the claim of estoppel urged in the present case is good, yet still they lend great support to it. So also do the following cases: Dezell v. Odell, 3 Hill, 215; The People v. Reeder, 25 N. Y. 302; Cornell v. Dakin, 38 id. 353; Diossy v. Morgan, 74 id. 11; Gray v. MacLean, 17 Ill. 404; Foltz v. Stevens, 54 id. 180; Dorr v. Clark, 7 Mich. 310; Burk v. Webb, 32 id. 173; Jones v. Peasley, 3 G. Greene, 52; Easton v. Goodwin, 22 Minn. 426; Staples v. Fillmore, 43 Conn. 510; Bursley v. Hamilton, 32 Mass. 40; Dewey v. Field, 45 Mass. 381; Colwell v. Richards, 75 id. 374; Drew v. Livermore, 40 Me. 266; Harris v. Morse, 49 id. 432; Potter v. Sewell, 54 id. 142; Horn v. Cole, 51 N. H. 287; Hanness v. Bonnell, 3 Zab. 159.
There are many authorities upon the other side of this
See also the following cases as having some application to to this case: Fisher v. Bartlett, 8 Me. 122; Lathrop v. Cook, 14 id. 414; Sawyer v. Mason, 19 id. 49; P. B. Cor. v. Wilkins, 27 id. 345; Learned v. Bryant, 13 Mass. 224; Robinson v. Mansfield, 30 id. 139; Barron v. Cobleigh, 11 N. H. 557; Harrison v. Wilkin, 78 N. Y. 390; Jones v. Gilbert, 13 Conn. 507; Dayton v. Merritt, 33 id. 184.
It is also stated that Doty Bros. & Co. had no other property subject to levy. But how could that be known? And should that fact bind the sheriff and the plaintiffs in the action? Should the officer and the plaintiffs in the action, in order to hold the obligors liable for a breach of their bond, be compelled to show that the defendants had other property? They might have other property in some other county or state, and if they had, should the officer or the plaintiffs be compelled to go to the expense of showing it? or would the fact of the defendants having property in some other county or state affect the liability of the obligors on their bond? Would it not be better not to open such a wide field of investigation, for no other purpose than to enable the obligors to violate the conditions of their bond with impunity? When persons give a bond, they should be held to comply with its provisions.
It is also claimed that the obligors of the bond informed the officer and the plaintiffs before the levy was made that the obligors themselves claimed the property under their chattel mortgage. The plaintiffs, however, claimed that this chattel mortgage was void, and the mortgagees themselves tacitly admitted it by executing a bond for the return of the property. If they had been fully satisfied that the mortgage was valid and that they were entitled to the property under it, why did they not at once file their interplea, or commence an action of replevin, or an action in the nature of trover for damages? Besides, after the bond was given and the obligors agreed to return the property, why should the plaintiffs be compelled to hunt up evidence to show that the mortgage was void? Why should they not be allowed to rely upon the condition of the bond that the property or its appraised value would be returned? Why should the obligors be permitted to give a
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.