Plaintiff, alleging physical injury and false imprisonment when she was arrested upon a felony charge, brought suit for damages against the arresting officer, who was a deputy sheriff of Los Angeles County, and against *102 the sheriff of said county and the latter’s official bondsmen. ■A general demurrer on behalf of the sheriff and his bondsmen was sustained without leave to amend, and from the resulting judgment plaintiff appeals. '
While the general rule is that a sheriff is liable for the torts of his deputies committed in the performance of the latters’ official acts or acts
colore officii (Abbott
v.
Cooper,
The sheriff not being liable personally, his sureties are likewise not answerable; not even in the case of defendant National Surety Company, whose bond by its express terms covers the acts of the sheriff’s deputies. The right of third persons to sue on such bonds is granted by section 961 of the Political Code for “the wrongful act or default of such officer in his official capacity”. This right to sue on ^uch a bond is derived from express statutory authority aloné, and the section granting the right does not provide for suit for acts or defaults of deputies. Plaintiff, therefore, a stitanger to the bond, may not maintain suit thereon.
(Sunter
v.
Fraser,
Judgment affirmed.
Crail, P. J., concurred.
Wood, J., dissented.
A petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on April 21,1936.
