131 A. 766 | Md. | 1926
On June 19, 1923, a judgment was entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City in favor of Martius Mondravisky against Martin Kvedera and Margaret Kvedera, his wife, for the sum of $2,700, with interest from June 19th, 1923, and costs of suit. From this judgment an appeal was taken to this Court by Martin Kvedera and Margaret Kvedera, the said appeal resulting in an affirmance of the judgment appealed from as to Martin Kvedera and a reversal of said judgment as to Margaret Kvedera and the case remanded for new trial as to her, the costs to be equally paid by the appellant, Martin Kvedera and the appellee, Martius Mondravisky. Shortly after the above decision, upon petition of Martin Kvedera and Margaret Kvedera in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City, that court passed an order on May 13th, 1924: "That no further proceedings be taken in the above case until one-half the costs taxed by the clerk of this court and the clerk of the Court of Appeals be paid, unless cause to the contrary be shown on or before the 20th day of May, 1924; provided a copy of this order be served on the plaintiff or his attorney of record on or before the * * * day of May, 1924"; on the back of which order there appears: "Service admitted this 13th day of May, 1924." It is admitted that no part of the costs has been paid by the appellee in this case.
No further proceedings were had in that case, but the appellee instituted proceedings in the Superior Court of Baltimore city on the appeal bond filed in the case decided by this Court in
*378"Know all men by these presents, that we, Martin Kvedera and Margaret Kvedera, Joseph Olevich, Stanislaw *377 Jakubaietis and Mary, his wife, of Baltimore City, in the State of Maryland, are held and firmly bound unto Martius Mondravisky in the full and just sum of $5,500 current money, to be paid to the said Martius Mondravisky, his certain attorney, executors, administrators and assigns; to the payment whereof, well and truly to be made and done, we bind ourselves, our heirs, executors and administrators, firmly by these presents.
"Whereas, the said Martius Mondravisky has recovered in the Court of Common Pleas, at the May Term thereof, A.D. 1923, a judgment, from which judgment the said Martin Kvedera and Margaret Kvedera, his wife, hath prayed an appeal to the next Court of Appeals, to be held for the State of Maryland.
"Now the condition of the above obligation is such, that if Martin Kvedera and Margaret Kvedera aforesaid shall not cause a transcript of the record and proceedings to be transmitted to the next Court of Appeals, within the time required by law, and prosecute said appeal with effect; and also, satisfy and pay to the said Martius Mondravisky, his executors, administrators and assigns, in case the said judgment shall be affirmed, as well, the debt, damages and cost adjudged, in the Court of Common Pleas aforesaid; as also, all damages and costs that may be awarded by the Court of Appeals, aforesaid; then the said bond to be in full force and virtue; otherwise of no effect.
"In witness whereof, we have hereunto set our hands and seals, this 10th day of September, 1923.
his "Martin X Kvedera (Seal) mark "Margaret Kvedera (Seal) "Joseph Olevich (Seal) "Stanislaw Jakubaietis (Seal) "Mary Jakubaietis (Seal)
"Signed, sealed and delivered in the presence of:
"Richard E. Preece, "James A. Henry."
The first contention of the appellant, Margaret Kvedera, is that at the time of the institution of the suit on the appeal bond the plaintiff was in no position to proceed against the principals, for the reason that the order of the Court of Common Pleas in respect to the payment of the costs, as directed by this Court, had not been complied with by the plaintiff below (appellee here). This contention cannot be maintained. The authority of the lower court for passing the order is contained in the Code, art. 75, sec. 74, which provides:
"The court in which an action shall be after new trial has been ordered by the Court of Appeals, or by that court, shall have power to stay all further proceedings in such action until all or any of the costs adjudged by the Court of Appeals, or by that court, shall have been paid by the party adjudged to pay the same."
By the language of the statute, the power of the lower court is confined to cases pending therein, after a new trial has been ordered, either by the Court of Appeals or the lower court; it provides that no further proceedings shall be had in suchaction, namely, the action in which a new trial has been granted, until all costs are paid by the party adjudged to pay the same. The new trial awarded in this case was in a suit between the appellee and Margaret Kvedera, and the effect of the lower court's order was to prevent any further proceedings in that case until the costs should have been paid. The lower court's action was a proper exercise of the discretion committed to it by the statute, but the effect of the order is limited to the action in which a new trial has been awarded. That action was one between the appellee and Margaret Kvedera, while the case now before us is a suit upon the appeal bond by the obligee in said bond against the principals and sureties therein, in an endeavor to collect the judgment against Martin Kvedera which was affirmed by this Court. Therefore it will be clearly seen that section 74 of article 75, limiting the authority of the lower court to staying proceedings pending before it upon an award of a new trial, does not *379 extend to an action such as is now being considered. The intent and purpose of the statute was to vest in the trial court the authority to stay proceedings in cases where new trials were awarded until the party against whom costs had been adjudged had paid the same, and the proceeding thus stayed is the action in which a new trial has been awarded.
The main question for decision on this appeal is: Are the sureties on the appeal bond, and Margaret Kvedera, one of the principals therein, liable where this Court in the former appeal affirmed the judgment of the lower court as to one of the defendants and reversed it as to the other? Prior to the Act of 1920, ch. 229, codified as section 26 of article 5 of the Code of 1924, a joint judgment on appeal must have been reversed or affirmed as to both. This legislation now empowers this Court, upon appeal, to reverse as to one and affirm as to others, and has been applied in the cases of Myers v. Shipley,
"`No execution upon any judgment or decree in any court of law or equity shall be stayed or delayed, unless the person against whom such judgment or decree shall be rendered or passed, his heirs, executors, or administrators, or some other person in his or their behalf, shall immediately, upon praying an appeal from any such judgment or decree, or suing out a writ of error upon any such judgment, enter into bond with sufficient securities in at least double the sum recovered by such judgment or decree, or in double the value of the matter or thing in controversy, which shall have been recovered or decreed, if a movable chattel or chattels, to be estimated by the court from whose judgment or decree the said appeal shall be made or writ of error directed, with condition as follows or to the following effect: That if the said party appellant, or party suing out such writ of error, shall not cause a transcript of *380 the record and proceedings of the said judgment or decree to be transmitted to the Court of Appeals within the time required by law, and prosecute the said appeal or writ of error with effect, and also satisfy and pay to the said party in whose favor such judgment or decree was rendered or passed, his executors, administrators or assigns, in case the said judgment or decree shall be affirmed, as well the debt, damages and costs, or the damages or sum of money or other matter or thing, and costs, adjudged in the court from which the appeal is taken, or writ of error sued out, as also all damages and costs that may be awarded by the Court of Appeals, then the said bond to be and remain in full force and virtue, otherwise of no effect."
It is clear that the purpose of the bond thus provided for is to stay execution upon the judgment pending the appeal, and the statute provides the various conditions which the bond must contain, namely, that the appellant shall cause a transcript of the record to be transmitted to the Court of Appeals within the time prescribed by law, that he shall prosecute the appeal with effect, and that he shall satisfy and pay to the party in whose favor the judgment or decree appealed from was rendered, in case said judgment or decree be affirmed, the debt, damages and costs adjudged in the court from which the appeal is taken, as also the damages and costs that may be awarded by this Court. Section 58 requires the judge or clerk of the court from which the appeal is taken to approve any bond under the preceding section upon an affidavit being made that the appeal is not taken for delay; and section 62 of the same article provides:
"No bond required by this article to be executed for the purpose of staying or delaying execution upon any judgment or decree which shall be approved shall be avoided for any matter of form."
It will be noted that section 57 sets out the required conditions of the bond and provides that those conditions, or conditions to like effect, shall be sufficient. The bond sued on *381
in this case is in strict conformity with the statute, and its purpose was to stay execution on the judgment appealed from, which judgment was against Martin Kvedera and Margaret Kvedera jointly and severally. Being a joint judgment, it became a lien, from its rendition, upon the property held by the entirety by the defendants. Frey v. McGaw,
In the light of this rule and the canons of construction to be applied thereto, we will now examine the contract as contained in the conditions of the bond. It is contended by the appellants that there has been no breach in any of these conditions and therefore the sureties are not liable, while the appellee contends that the condition of the bond requiring the appellants, Martin Kvedera and Margaret Kvedera, to prosecute their former appeal with effect, was broken by an affirmance in this Court of the judgment as to Martin Kvedera, and that because of such affirmance the obligors are bound to pay the judgment and costs. The phrase "prosecute with effect" has been judicially defined by this Court in the case of Karthaus v. Owings, 6 H. J. 134. It was there said: "On the part of the appellant it was contended that the words `prosecute with effect' mean that the party praying the appeal shall prosecute it to final judgment, while the other side insisted that these words imposed on the appellant the necessity of prosecuting the appeal to a successful termination, or a reversal of the judgment. This Court are of the opinion that the construction adopted by the appellee's counsel is the correct one." In Fullerton v. Miller,
In the first of the cases above, "to prosecute with effect" is held to mean, "to prosecute to a reversal of the judgment"; and in the second it is held that there is a breach of the condition to prosecute with effect if the judgment be affirmed. In the present case it is true that the judgment appealed from was not wholly reversed, and it is equally true that the judgment appealed from was not wholly affirmed, for the reason that it was reversed as to one of the parties defendant and affirmed as to the other. We think that the sounder rule to adopt is that, when defendants have filed an appeal bond such as in this case, in strict conformity with the statutory requirements, which bond has been submitted to and approved by the judge or clerk of the trial court, and the purpose of which is to afford an opportunity for a hearing in this Court on appeal, and to stay execution during the pendency of the appeal, both of which purposes have been fully accomplished, after the appeal is heard, if there be remaining a judgment against both or either of said defendants, the appeal has not been prosecuted with effect, and the sureties on the bond are liable. To hold otherwise would be to say that if any judgment is rendered by this Court differing in any material way, either by reason of an enlargement or reduction of the amount of the judgment appealed from, or by reason of the reversal as to one of the defendants, the sureties on the bond would escape liability. This we do not think they should be permitted to do. While the language used in the condition of the bond is plain, the difficulty arises in determining whether this condition has been breached by an affirmance against one of the defendants. Under the authority of Engler v. People's Fire Ins. Co., Hooperv. Hooper, and McShane v. Howard Bank, supra, a bond should be given such construction as will carry out the intention of the parties thereto. From the contract itself it is clear that the intention of the sureties in entering into the contract was to completely stay execution on the judgment, both as against the joint property and the individual property of the judgment debtors. This intention and purpose being clearly *384 demonstrated, it is equally clear that the sureties did intend to assume, and did in fact assume, responsibility commensurate with the purpose that they had in mind. In other words, they could not have stayed execution on the judgment against Martin Kvedera unless at the same time they assumed the obligation to pay that judgment if it was affirmed. It was said by this Court in the case of Karthaus v. Owings, 2 G. J. 443, that case being a suit upon an appeal bond with the same conditions as the one now under consideration, that "the sound legal construction of the condition of the appeal bond was an undertaking to reverse the decision of the county court, or satisfy the judgment of the Court of Appeals."
It is argued by the appellant that the judgment affirmed by the Court of Appeals is not the judgment rendered by the lower court, and while technically this is true, because the judgment was not affirmed against all the parties against whom it was rendered below, yet we are unwilling to give our assent to this construction, and hold that there was not such an affirmance of the judgment as would render the bond liable. We think the better view is, and we so determine, that the obligation or contract of the parties to the bond, both principals and sureties, was to secure such a reversal in the Court of Appeals as to leave no judgment standing which could be enforced against any of the defendants, and failing in this, to pay and satisfy such judgment as was rendered by this Court.
It is stated both in the brief of the appellant Margaret Kvedera, and in oral argument on her behalf, that if the judgment below is affirmed in this case, she will satisfy it and relieve the other appellants. This being true, for the purposes of this case it is not important to determine the extent of her obligation upon the bond.
From the views that we have expressed, our conclusion is that the obligation in the bond to prosecute the appeal with effect has not been fulfilled, and that the affirmance of the judgment by this Court as to Martin Kvedera constitutes such *385 an affirmance as requires the obligors on the bond to pay the judgment against Martin Kvedera, together with the costs in the manner awarded by this Court in the former appeal. Entertaining these views and reaching the above conclusion, the judgment appealed from must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.