93 Pa. Super. 104 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1927
Argued December 12, 1927.
The proceeding in the municipal court was an action *106
of assumpsit against Frank S. Dreeben as the surety on a certain bond dated May 14, 1927. A rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense was made absolute and the defendant has appealed. We gather from the pleadings that the bond upon which this suit was brought was given in connection with the institution in the Court of Common Pleas No. 5 of Philadelphia County at No. 844, June T., 1927, of a suit begun by an attachment under the Fraudulent Debtors Act of March 17, 1869, P.L. 8, (the first section of which is amended by the Act of May 24, 1887, P.L. 197), by Solomon Krain against M. Tomashefsky, as defendant, and Tomashefsky's Garden Theatre, Maurice Schwartz and Edward Relkin, as garnishees. The ground upon which the attachment was issued is not stated, but for the purposes of this appeal we may assume that it was alleged that the debt of $900 there sued for had been "fraudulently contracted." It seems that certain moneys in the hands of Maurice Schwartz, one of the garnishees, were attached by the sheriff as the property of the defendant in that suit. Thereupon it became the duty of the officer serving the attachment, under section 3 of the Act of 1869, to take the property attached into his possession, if capable of manual seizure, unless the defendant or someone for him gave a bond, with sufficient surety, "in double the amount of the debt or demand claimed, conditioned that in the event of the plaintiff or plaintiff's recovering judgment in said attachment that he, she or they will pay the debt and costs at the expiration of the stay of execution on sums of like amount given to freeholders, or that he, she or they will surrender up the said property in as good condition as when attached, to any officer having an execution against said party defendant on any judgment rendered in said attachment in favor of the plaintiff." Manifestly the purpose and effect of the bond is merely to prevent the "manual seizure" of the property by *107
an officer and to enable the defendant, or person in possession of the money or goods attached, to retain that possession: Commonwealth v. Sisler,
In Commonwealth v. Klein, supra, this court, citing Walls v. Campbell,
"Whereas the above bounden Max Tomashefsky, the defendant in the above entitled case, and Maurice Schwartz as garnishee in the above entitled case, desire to release certain moneys attached as the property of the said defendant, by virtue of a certain Order of the said Court of Common Pleas No. 5 of Philadelphia County, June T., 1927, No. 844, in a writ of attachment under the Act of 1869; and they desire to dissolve said attachment.
"NOW THE CONDITION OF THIS OBLIGATION IS SUCH, That if the above bounden Max Tomashefsky, defendant, and Maurice Schwartz, as garnishee, shall well and truly maintain title and right to the said moneys to be released and shall suffer no judgment to be entered against them by virtue of the said attachment *109 as of the above term and number; or, in the event of the plaintiff recovering judgment in the said attachment, if he, the defendant, shall pay the debt, interest and costs at the expiration of the stay of execution, and shall save harmless the said plaintiff from all and any loss by virtue of the dissolution of said attachment; or, otherwise, if the said surety shall do so for him, then this obligation is to be void; otherwise it is to remain in full force and virtue."
It is to be noted that the condition of the bond does not follow the provisions of the third section of the act; it contains no provision for the surrender of the property and is broader than would be a bond drawn in accordance with the act. The entire defense is predicated upon the legal proposition that the bond became "null and void when the attachment had been dissolved." If the bond had been conditioned in accordance with the act, and if the attachment had been dissolved by an order of the Court of Common Pleas No. 5, upon the application of the defendant and proof to the satisfaction of the court that proper grounds for issuing it did not exist, and these facts had been properly pleaded, the affidavit of defense would have been sufficient: Fernau et al. v. Butcher et al.,
The parties in the attachment proceedings did not see fit to follow the Act of 1869 by giving the prescribed bond and applying to the court for a dissolution of the attachment, but made their own arrangement *111 for the withdrawal of the attachment by the plaintiff. A part of this arrangement was the voluntary giving of the bond now in suit. When the purpose for which the bond was given is taken into consideration it is clear that it did not fall with the withdrawal of the attachment; it was expressly given for the purpose of securing such withdrawal. For these reasons we are of opinion that the averments of the affidavit of defense do not constitute a defense to the present action.
Judgment affirmed.