9 Colo. App. 453 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is probably the final chapter in the history of a litigation which commenced in 1891. Wolaver, the sheriff of Weld county, seized some property belonging to one Schmidt. After he had taken possession, Eliza Schmidt, the judgment debtor’s wife, brought suit in replevin for the property against Wolaver, and the judgment plaintiff, Dreyer, claiming it under a chattel mortgage which had been executed to secure a debt. The property was taken under the writ and delivered to Mrs. Schmidt. At the time process was sued out, Clark and Koch executed an undertaking as provided by statute, which in the usual form recited that the defendants had possession of certain named property, consisting of cows, heifers and steers, of the value of $700. The undertaking bound the obligors to the sum of $1,400, for the prosecution of the action with effect, and for the return of the property to the defendant, if return thereof be adjudged, and likewise to pay whatever sum of money should be recovered against the plaintiff. This replevin suit was tried in the county court of Arapahoe county, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendants. From that judgment the plaintiff prosecuted an appeal to the district court. The appeal was subsequently dismissed, and when the cause came again to the county court Mrs. Schmidt attempted to pay the judgment as it had been entered, and avoid any further responsibility as to herself or bondsmen with reference to that judgment. This is the occasion of the present appeal. When the judgment was originally entered in the replevin suit in the county court, the record shows the entry was simply for the defendants and for their costs. After the plaintiff had thus attempted to dispose of the ease, and some years after the entry of the original judgment, the defendants filed a motion to correct the judgment entry, and have it recite a judgment substantially that the property should be returned, or its value paid, which was $700. After the decision of this motion, in which the county court ordered its judgment
The only question suggested or urged in the argument is as to the liability of the sureties to respond according to the terms of their undertaking, when the only evidence of the breach rests on proof of the amended judgment, the demand for the delivery of the property, and the failure to surrender it. The theory of the appellants is that the sureties cannot be made liable because the original judgment did not provide for the return of the property nor award any money judgment against the plaintiff, and the court, in amending its judgment, did that which would release the sureties from their responsibility, or did that from which no liability against them would arise, and that they were entitled to notice of what was to be done, that they might resist it if the obligees would make them respond according to the terms of their obligation. We are unable to appreciate the force of these objections. According to the terms of the undertaking, the
The appellants further insist that the sureties should not be bound because of the possible change that may have occurred in the condition of the parties, and in the status and situation of the property. It is urged with a good deal of force and some slight reason that the liability of the sureties on a bond of this description is not a continuing one, so that the sureties may be made liable, if it appear that by reason of the misprision of the clerk and the correction of the judgment the property has passed from the possession of the plaintiff in the replevin suit, has been lost or dissipated, and Mrs. Schmidt has in the meantime become insolvent, whereby, in the event of any of these suggested contingencies, the liability of the sureties has been increased or enlarged, and they are called on to respond under circumstances which should exonorate them from their responsibility. The answer to this argument simply is that no such plea lias been interposed. The sureties rest their entire defense on the simple basis that the court is powerless to correct the judgment and thereby make the sureties liable on the bond, when by the terms of the original judgment entry they incurred no liability save for costs, which the plaintiff paid, and to that extent relieved them. We are not prepared to say, because no such case is laid before us, what we might hold with reference to this matter if the sureties had pleaded that the property had been sold, lost, dissipated or made away with, and the plaintiff in the replevin suit had become insolvent and the liability of the sureties had been enlarged or increased. No such question is before us. We are without the right, nor are we inclined to presume that the liability of the sureties was in any wise varied by the correction of the judgment entry. The judgment which the court announced
Considerable stress is laid in the argument on the lack of proof of the due execution and delivery of the bond. The plaintiff is sometimes hound to make proof of the execution and delivery of an instrument upon which he basis his action. He is also sometimes relieved from either duty by reason of the condition of the pleadings and the character of the instrument sued on. The code provides that in all actions on written instruments, where a copy of it is set out in the complaint and verified, the execution and genuineness of the paper is admitted, unless it be denied under the oath of the defendant. The answer of the defendants was a joint one by the plaintiff in the replevin suit and the two sureties, and contained a general denial of all allegations not admitted in the answer. If the answer had been only a general denial, we should then have been compelled to determine whether such a denial is enough to raise an issue as to the execution and genuineness of the paper, if properly verified. Whether a general denial is a compliance with this statutory provision we need not determine, because the answer proceeds to make certain admissions which we conclude destroys the effect of the general denial in so far as relates to the execution and genuineness of the paper sued on. The defendants admit that Mrs. Schmidt brought a replevin action in the court against the defendants, and that the action was a particular No. 15,227. They admit that that case was tried on its merits and final judgment entered on it, and was the only case of that number and between these parties ever brought or decided in that court. The answer proceeds to aver a payment and satisfaction and a compliance with the orders
When it is evident, as it is in this case, that there was no issue intended to be raised by the defendants respecting the execution and delivery of the instrument, that the whole defense which they made, or which they attempted to make, was based on the character of the erroneous entry and its subsequent satisfaction, we have the right to indulge in any reasonable presumptions which may be necessary to sustain a judgment which we believe to be just. We discover no error in the record, the judgment is right, and it will therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.