5 N.Y.S. 575 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The defendant and Robert C. Brown were engaged in business in the city of Hew York as partners in the year 1880, under the firm name of Moran & Brown. They commenced an action against Alfred Edwards, as defendant, in which an attachment was issued to the sheriff of the county of Hew York, directing him to attach and safely keep the property of Edwards, or so much as might be necessary to satisfy the plaintiff’s demand, $212, with interest and costs. The sheriff seized property under the attachment, which was claimed by the Russell & Hopper Manufacturing Company. To induce and protect the sheriff in continuing to hold the property under the attachment, a bond of indemnity was executed and delivered to him, in which Robert C. Brown, one of the partners, was the principal, and A. D. Wyckoff and the plaintiff, Donegan, were the sureties. This bond was conditioned that the obligors should well and truly save and keep and bear harmless and indemnify the sheriff, and all persons aiding and assisting him in the premises, of and from all harm, let, trouble, damage, liability, costs, counsel fees, expenses, suits, actions, judgments, etc., that should or might arise, come, accrue, or happen to be brought against them, or any of them, for or by reason of levying, attaching, and making sale, under or by virtue of the attachment, of any personal property they should judge to belong to the debtor .An action was brought by the Russell & Hopper Manufacturing Company against the sheriff to recover the property levied upon by virtue of the attachment, and in that action the company recovered judgment. After that the sheriff instituted a suit upon the bond, and recovered a judgment against the obligors therein, and that judgment was paid by the plaintiff, and this, action has been brought by him against Moran, the member of the firm who did not sign the bond, to recover the amount so paid. It was proposed to prove that Moran, the defendant in this action, gave instructions to the sheriff concerning the defense of the suit brought to recover the possession of the property seized under the attachment, and that he was a witness upon the trial of that action. But the court excludal this, as well as nearly all the other evidence