87 P. 677 | Idaho | 1906
This is an application for a writ of prohibition. To the plaintiff’s petition the defendant had demurred on the ground that the petition does not state facts sufficient to entitle her to the relief demanded. This application grows out of the following state of facts: The plaintiff, Mary E. Edminston, commenced an action in the justice court and obtained a judgment for the total sum of $86.40. The defendant in that action, Martha Smith, served and filed her notice of appeal, and gave an undertaking in the following
“Now, therefore, we, the undersigned sureties, do hereby obligate ourselves jointly and severally to the above-named plaintiff, Mary E. Edminston, under the said statutory obligations and all statutory obligations applicable to such undertaking in appeal and for a stay of proceedings in the sum of one hundred eighty dollars ($180).”
When the ease came on in the district court, the plaintiff here, who was respondent there, made a motion to dismiss the appeal on the following grounds: “That no undertaking on appeal for the payment of costs has been executed, or filed by appellant, Martha Smith; and that the undertaking executed by her to stay proceedings is not in a sum equal to twice the amount of the judgment rendered in the justice court including costs; that this court has no jurisdiction of this case. ’ ’
After hearing the motion the court overruled the same, and thereupon the respondent, who is plaintiff here, applied to this court for a writ prohibiting and restraining the district court from proceeding to a trial of the cause. It is contended by the plaintiff that the undertaking given on appeal from the justice court to the district court is so indefinite and uncertain that it is neither good as an- appeal bond nor as a stay bond. It is conceded by both sides that the undertaking is not in a sufficient amount to stay the proceedings as required by section 4812, Revised Statutes. (Wilson v. Doyle, ante, p. 295, 85 Pac. 928.) Counsel who appear for the defend' ant judge contend that the undertaking is in due form for an appeal bond and is in a sufficient amount, and that although it is not sufficient to stay proceedings, it is good as an appeal bond, and that the court correctly overruled the motion. It will be seen from an examination of this undertaking that it contains the language of the statute required in undertakings on appeal from a justice court, namely, that it is “for the payment of costs on appeal.” On the other hand,
Counsel for plaintiff have placed some reliance upon the decision of this court in Wilson v. Doyle, supra, and Numbers v. Rocky Mt. Bell Tel. Co., 7 Idaho, 408, 63 Pac. 381. Those cases each turned upon different facts from those involved here, and neither one of them is decisive of this question. Counsel also cites Duffy v. Greenebaum, 72 Cal. 157, 12 Pac. 74, 13 Pac. 323; Galloway v. Tjossen, 22 Wash. 103, 60 Pac. 129; Buzley v. Sessons, 22 Wash. 125, 60 Pac. 130; Town of
Duffy v. Greenebaum is not in point, for the reason that the undertaking there considered by the court was held not to contain the necessary obligations required in an appeal bond, and only amounted to a stay bond. The other cases cited by plaintiff are from the state of Washington, and appear to support his position. We are not, however, inclined to follow those authorities. They do not seem to us well founded, and have never met with the unanimous approval of that court. As late as the ease of Douglas v. Badger State Mine, 41 Wash. 266, 83 Pac. 178, 4 L. R. A., N. S., 196, Mr. Justice Fullerton repudiated the doctrine that had been previously followed and approved by a majority of that court and said: “In my judgment a .bond sufficient in condition and amount as an appeál bond is good as an appeal bond, regardless of any condition looking to the stay of the judgment it may contain.” The view we have taken in this case seems to have been entertained in California under the statutes from which ours were taken and prior to their adoption in this state. (Mokelumne Hill C. & M. Co. v. Woodberry, 10 Cal. 186; Dobbins v. Dollarhide, 15 Cal. 374; Zollar v. McDonald, 23 Cal. 136; Ward v. Superior Court, 58 Cal. 519.) There was no error in the trial court overruling respondent’s motion to dismiss the appeal and setting the case for trial. Defendant’s demurrer to the petition herein will be sustained, and the ease is dismissed with costs in favor of defendant.