Lehman v. Amsterdam Coffee Co.

151 Wis. 207 | Wis. | 1912

WiNsnow, O. J.

By reference to the case of Lehman v. Amsterdam C. Co. 146 Wis. 213, 131 N. W. 362, it will be seen that upon the first appeal in this case a judgment for damages in plaintiff’s favor was reversed and a new trial ordered, unless the plaintiff elected to take a judgment for $1,000, in which case judgment for such last named sum was ordered to be rendered in her favor in the trial court. It now appears that upon return of the record the plaintiff duly filed her election to take judgment for $1,000, whereupon judgment was entered not only against the defendant coffee company, but also against the sureties upon the appeal bond for the sum of $1,000 with costs and with interest at six per cent, per annum from the date of the verdict, less $247.75, being the taxed costs in this court upon the former appeal. The defendant coffee company and the sureties appeal jointly from this judgment.

So far as the sureties are concerned, it is very plain that *209the present judgment must be reversed. By tbeir undertaking they agreed simply that they would pay

'“all costs and damages wbicb may be awarded against them on said appeal, not exceeding two hundred and fifty dollars; .and do also undertake that if the §aid judgment so appealed from, or any part thereof, be affirmed, the said appellant will pay the amount directed to be paid by the said judgment, or the part of such amount as to which the said judgment shall be affirmed, if it be affirmed only in part, and all damages which shall be awarded against said appellant on the said appeal.”

No costs or damages were awarded against them on the appeal, nor was the judgment or any part thereof affirmed. This seems too clear for argument. No part of the original judgment was left in existence after the judgment in this court upon the former appeal. The fact that another judgment might be rendered in the future by the trial court upon the exercise of a certain option by the plaintiff could not under any theory be construed as an affirmance even in part. The sureties are only held according to the language of their bond, and that language does not cover this case. They never agreed to pay a judgment rendered in the future in the trial court, but only the existing judgment or some part thereof in case of affirmance.

The judgment was, of course, proper against the main defendant, except that interest should not have been allowed from the date of the verdict, because the plaintiff was given an option to take judgment for $1,000 and no more. One year’s interest at six per cent., amounting to $60, was included, and the judgment must be reduced by that amount.

By the Court. — As to the appellant sureties the judgment is reversed with costs; as to the defendant Amsterdam Coffee Company the judgment is modified by reducing the same in the sum of $60 as of its date, and as so modified is affirmed without costs.