delivered the opinion of the court:
W. F. McLaughlin & Co. recovered a judgment against Q. W. Loverin and George J. L. Janes for $1168.71 and costs of suit, which judgment was affirmed by the Appellate and Supreme Courts. (
The abstract shows that counsel for the appellants asked George J. L. Janes, when on the witness stand, what was the financial condition of the firm of Janes Bros. & Co.; but the abstraсt shows no exception to the ruling of the court sustaining an objection to this question, for which reason that ruling is not before us for consideration.
Thereupon counsel for appellants made this offer: “Now, in order to get the case clearly before the court, we offer to" show by the witness that the firm of Janes Bros. & Co.- was insolvent at the time of the levying of the execution, and remained so, and about six months after the replevin action was commenced they made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and that the assets of the firm paid about thirty cents оn the dollar.”
The offer to prove that the firm was insolvent was but an offer to prove a conclusion, and so the objection of the appellee on the ground of incompetency, irrelevancy and immateriality was properly sustained.
Insolvency has been defined as a general inability to answer, in the course of business, the liabilities existing and capable of being enforced. (Best v. Fuller & Fuller Co.
In Lucas v. Beebe,
In Stevens v. Newman,
In Chicago City Railway Co. v. Carroll, supra, the counsel for appellant stated that he desired to offer evidence on the quеstion of the inspection of the cars, and so forth, and the court stated that no evidence would be received except as to the ownership of the line, at that stage of the case, and exception was duly taken by the appellant. It was held that this did not amount to аn offer of evidence, and that the statement of the court was not a ruling upon which error could be predicated. It is true that in that case no witness was put upon the stand, but it is also true that the suggestions of this court as to what offer would have been sufficient relate to an offer tо prove facts, and not conclusions, such as, that the appellant did inspect the cars, or that this had been done regularly or recently, or that the inspection made was an examination of the trolley-pole or its attachments.
If the question as to the delivery of a deed, or the consideration of a bond, or of the failure or partial failure of consideration, is a conclusion and an offer to prove the same insufficient, so is the question of insolvency a conclusion, and the offer to prove the same insufficient as against an objection on the ground of incompetency, irrelevancy and immateriality. There was no error, therefore, in sustaining the objection to the naked offer to prove that the firm of Janes Bros. & Co. was insolvent.
The second part of the offer was to prove certain facts,— that is, that about six months after the replevin action had been commenced Janes Bros. & Co. made an assignment for the benefit of creditors and that the assets of the firm paid about thirty cents on the dollar. This offer to prove certain facts, made in connection with the general offer tо show insolvency, and as a part of the same sentence, might properly be regarded as simply making the general offer specific, in which view of the matter the offer of proof of specific facts should be taken as the whole of the offer.
The affidavit for replеvin is in evidence and states the value of the goods at $20,000. When appellants signed the replevin bond in the penal sum of $40,000, it is to be presumed that they knew this penalty was double the value of the property which they, by giving the bond, were assisting Ernest H. Janes in taking from the sheriff. In an action on a replevin bond to recover the value of the property for a breach of the condition for a return thereof, the authorities are harmonious to the effect that the value of the property stated in the replevin writ and bond is at least prima facie evidence of value as against the sureties on the bond. (24 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed.—539.) It has also been held that the value stated in the replevin affidavit is at least prima facie evidence of value in a suit upon the replevin bond. (Parson v. Gilbert,
The failure to return the property was a breach of the bond, and appellants cannot complain that the judgment was for the amount for which the property was rightfully held, inasmuch as that amount was very much less than the value of the property. Under these circumstances the rulings of the court on the propositions of law requested do not. constitute reversible error. It is not error to refuse to hold propositions of law which may be correct in and of themselves, if they have no application or relevancy to the particular case on trial. Seiberling v. Miller,
The statute provides that “if the property was held for the payment of any money, the judgment may be in the alternаtive that the plaintiff pay the amount for which the same was rightfully held, with proper damages, within a given time, or make return of the property. (Hurd’s Stat. 1905, chap. 119, sec. 22.) In the trial of the replevin case herein involved the judgment was in the alternative, requiring the return of the property or the payment of the amount of the judgment, interest, etc., for the payment of which the property involved had been taken by the sheriff on execution. The plaintiff in the replevin proceedings did not return .the property within the time fixed by the judgment, nor did he pay the alternative judgment rendered аgainst him. If the plaintiff in replevin was of the opinion the amount of the alternative judgment was greater than the value of the goods by him held, it was within his power to secure indemnity for himself and his securities against the payment of such judgment by complying with .the portion of the order of the court direсting the return of the goods. He did not elect so to do, but retained the goods, and died before suit was brought on his replevin bond.
The bond conformed .to the requirements of the statute, and required the sureties on the bond to answer “for the payment of all costs and damages occasiоned by wrongfully ■suing out said writ of replevin.” The bond was given in view of the provisions of the statute authorizing the'alternative judgment, and such statutory provisions entered into and become a part of the bond. The measure of damages of the appellee coroner was the amount оf the alternative judgment entered in the replevin suit.
The value of the interest of any of the.partners had no proper place in the hearing in the case at bar. The amount of the alternative judgment was fixed and determined by the affirmance of that judgment in this court, (Janes v. Gilbert,
The further condition of the bond was, .that the plaintiff in replevin, and his sureties, would “make return of the property if return of the property shall be awarded, and save and keeр harmless such coroner in replevying said property.” We are of the opinion no great hardship is laid on sureties on replevin bonds who place themselves behind a groundless action whereby property in .the lawful custody of a sheriff for the payment of an execution is taken from him and placed in the exclusive control and possession of a pretended claimant, by requiring such sureties to pay the amount of money for which such property was rightfully held, as liquidated damages for the default of the principal in failing to make return.
The rulings of the court on the propositions of law were in harmony with these views. The judgment of the Appellate Court is correct and is therefore affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
