19 N.Y.S. 844 | Superior Court of Buffalo | 1892
It appears from the complaint that on the 26th day of February, 1891, the plaintiff recovered a judgment in the municipal court of Buffalo against tile defendant for $117.47 damages and $7 costs; that the defendant took an appeal from the judgment to the general term of this court; that the court ordered a new trial before the municipal court, and stayed proceedings on the judgment and execution until the determination of that case. The new trial in the court below resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and against the defendant, for $140.83damages and costs. An execution was issued on that judgment, and returned wholly unsatisfied. The undertaking on the original appeal was given pursuant to section 3050 of the Code of Civil Procedure for the purpose of staying execution pending the appeal. It was conditioned that “if the appeal is dismissed, or if judgment is rendered against the appellant, in the appellate court, and an execution issued thereupon is returned wholly or partly unsatisfied, we, the said sureties, will pay the amount of the judgment, or the portion thereof remaining unsatisfied, not exceeding the sum of $250.00.” This, in substance, is the language of section 3050 of the Code; and it is now claimed by the plaintiff that the condition of the undertaking has become operative by reason of his failure to collect the judgment obtained on the trial in the court below. Under section 356 of the old Code, the condition of the undertaking required to stay execution was “to the effect that if judgment be rendered against the appellant, and execution thereon be returned unsatisfied in whole or in part, the sureties will pay the amount unsatisfied.” It has been held under this section, where the facts were quite similar to the case before us, that the sureties were liable for the judgment obtained in the court below, whenever the condition became operative by reason of a failure to reverse the judgment. Lowry v. Tew, 25 Hun, 257. In Humerton v. Hay, 65 N. Y. 380, an undertaking was given, on appeal from the justice’s court, for a new trial in the appellate court, and a judgment was finally rendered in the appellate court against the appellant. It was held in an action on the undertaking given to stay the execution that this section of the Code had reference to the judgment obtained in the appellate court, and the plaintiff was allowed to recover. In Smith v. Crouse, 24 Barb. 433, where the defendant in a justice’s court judgment gave an undertaking to stay execution pursuant to section 356 of the old Code, pending an appeal to the county court, where the judgment was reversed, and on appeal to the supreme court the judgment of the county court was reversed and that of the justice affirmed, it was held that the sureties were liable on the undertaking for the whole judg