This action is on two appeal bonds. Plaintiff recovered.
Plaintiff instituted an action before a justice of the peace, under the landlord and tenant statute, for the
The first bond was taken by the justice of the peace under section 6400, Revised Statutes, 1889, which provides for a bond as in ordinary appeals from a justice of the peace, except that there shall be included therein conditions for damages, costs, rent due and to accrue, and waste. The second bond was, according to the apparent concession of the parties, taken undef the provisions of section 6340, which reads as follows: “No appeal allowed by a justice shall be dismissed for want of an affidavit or recognizance, or because the affidavit or recognizance made or given is defective or insufficient, if the appellant or some other person for him will before the motion to dismiss is determined, file in the appellate court the affidavit required, or enter into such recognizance as he ought to have entered into, before the allowance of the appeal, and pay all costs that-shall be incurred by reason of such defect or omission, with respect to such affidavit or recognizance.”
It is true that in some instances a reasonable length of time may expire before a case will reach a trial in the circuit court, and therefore it will frequently happen that a bond, thought in the first instance to be sufficient in amount to secure the accruing rent, will become insufficient on account of the protracted litigation. But the fact remains, that a sufficient bond was not taken, though this only becomes apparent for the first time as the case is protracted beyond an' ordinary length.
"We are referred to two cases which are said to sustain plaintiff’s contention that he has a right to maintain an action on both bonds, viz., Walter v. McSherry,
The second of the two cases referred to was also
But defendant interposes an objection to any
We will, therefore, reverse the judgment as to the first count in the petition, which declared on the first bond, and affirm the judgment on the second count, which declared on the new bond.
