61 Ill. App. 567 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellee brought this suit for the use of ¡Nathan Jacobson, upon an instrument purporting to be a replevin bond given to appellee as sheriff of Bureau county, Illinois, in a suit instituted by the appellant, Julius T. Edwin, against said Jacobson and one Samuel Ludwinoski, in the Circuit Court of said Bureau county, for the recovery of a stock of goods and fixtures. Upon the trial of the replevin suit the plaintiff in that suit was defeated, and there was judgment for defendants for one cent damages and costs of suit, and a return of the property was awarded to the defendant, Jacobson. The judgment was not complied with in either particular, and this suit followed. It was charged that Edwin had not paid said damages or costs or made return of the property, and there was a trial, resulting in a judgment for $800 debt, the amount of the penalty, and $670.43 damages.
The instrument was admitted in evidence, against the objection of defendants. It is insisted that this was wrong because the seals of the obligors were omitted, and because it was not conditioned for the return of the property unless such return should be awarded to the defendants in the replevin suit jointly, and therefore there had been no breach of the condition in not making a return awarded to Jacobson alone. Although the instrument was not a bond because of the omission of seals, a suit could be maintained upon it; and the objection that there was no breach because a return was awarded to only one, did not extend to the failure to pay the damages and costs, which were adjudged to both. The objection was properly overruled. The suit was brought for the use of Jacobson alone, but plaintiff could Tiring it for the use of any person he might choose, and .that matter was no concern of defendants. Atkins v. Moore, 82 Ill. 240.
The instrument was plainly intended as a replevin bond. It was in the form and contained the recitals of such a bond, with the statement that it was under the hands and seals of the obligors. It filled the office of a replevin bond and secured the execution of the writ and the taking of Jacobson’s goods. We think that its provisions as a contract of indemnity should receive precisely the same construction as a statutory replevin bond for which it was intended. The plain intention of the statute is that the bond shall secure the return of the property to whatever defendant the judgment of the court shall award it, and when considered with that effect there was a breach of the condition to make •return.
' Evidence of expenses for attorney’s fees incurred by Jacobson in the replevin suit was admitted against objection, and the second instruction given at the request of plaintiff directed the jury to include them in the damages. Plaintiff might have recovered such expenses as damages if he had sued for them, but the declaration made no charge that plaintiff had incurred any such expense or suffered any damage except from a failure to pay the one cent and costs and to make the return. As there was no foundation in the pleadings for the evidence it should not have been admitted.
The fourth instruction was bad, because it told the jury that Jacobson was not bound to receive a part of the goods if offered to him. There was evidence that a substantial part of the goods were so offered. Their condition was a matter of dispute, but if they were in the same condition as when taken the plaintiff would be bound to receive them. Harts v. Mundell; 26 Ill. App. 274.
The goods claimed to have been offered were separable from the others, so that they were in no way dependent on the others for use or value, and if not injured or damaged a return of such part would be a defense pro tombo.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.