62 Neb. 888 | Neb. | 1901
This is an action brought by plaintiffs in error in the district court for Pawnee county against defendants in error upon a supersedeas bond given on May 14, 1894, to
The material portion of the decree AA-hich the bond Avas given to supersede is as folloAvs: “It is therefore considered by the court that the deed of conveyance described in the petition from the plaintiffs to the defendant George Hazels for the folloAving described property [describing it] * * * be and the same is hereby, vacated, and set aside, and annulled, and declared of no force and effect, and the cloud upon the title to said real estate by reason of and in consequence of said deed removed, and that the
There can be no doubt that had plaintiffs in error applied to the trial court for the appointment of a receiver, or for the fixing of such conditions and the amount of the supersedeas bond as would have protected their interests, • their rights might have been fully secured. This they failed to do, and they are now asking this court to extend the conditions of the bond set out beyond the fair and natural import of the language used.
It is contended that the obligation of defendants in error to abide and perform the judgment of the supreme court means that they shall abide the judgment as of the date when rendered by the trial court; that under the terms of the decree, plaintiffs in error were entitled to the possession of the premises at the time when the decree was entered; and that the order of this court affirming the judgment of the trial court relates back to the entry
The liability of a surety on an appeal bond is said to be “strielissimi juris; that is, the obligation of surety must not be extended to any other subject, to any other person, or to any other period of time, than is expressed or necessarily included in it. * * * No surety is to be bound beyond the extent of the engagement which shall appear, from the expression of the security and the nature of the transaction, to have been in his contemplation at the time of entering into it. But to this extent the surety is bound. The intent or latitude of the contract of surety-ship is to be ascertained by a fair and liberal construction of the.instrument, in furtherance of the intention of the parties, and then the case must be brought strictly within the terms of the guaranty, and the liability of the surety can not be extended by implication.” Fisse v. Einstein, 5 Mo. App., 78.
In the case of Shreffler v. Nadelhoffer, 133 Ill., 536, the rule is laid down as follows: “The rule of strict construe-
As it' appears from the petition filed by plaintiffs in error that the conditions of the supersedeas bond have been fully complied with by defendants in error, it follows that their petition failed to state a cause of action entitling plaintiffs in error to any relief, and the demurrers were therefore properly sustained by the trial court.
From the authorities cited, and from what has been said, it follows that the judgment of. the district court was right, and it is, therefore, recommended that the same be affirmed.
For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.