11 Kan. 167 | Kan. | 1873
This was an action on an attachment bond given under §213 of the code. The plaintiffs in error were the sureties on the bond. A special werdict was demanded on all the issues of fact.under § 7 of the act of 1870. (Laws of 1870, p. 173.) The error alleged is, that the facts as found by the special verdict do not authorize the judgment rendered. The rule by which this question must be determined is found in § 285 of the code. The facts must be so presented as that nothing remains to the court but to draw from them conclusions of law. But the facts to be presented by a special verdict are only the facts that are necessary to be offered in evidence. What is admitted in the pleadings, need not be proved, and need not be returned in a special verdict. The pleadings put certain questions in issue; on these only the jury pass. If a fact admitted in the pleadings is necessarily involved in a general verdict, the jury are instructed to consider that fact as true. The first defect alleged is, that the verdict fails to show that the property attached was restored to the owners. The action was on an undertaking given by plaintiffs in error as sureties to procure the release of an attachment. The law provides that upon giving the bond the attachment shall be discharged, and restitution made of the property attached. (Code, § 213.) The fact is found that upon the giving of the bond the same was approved by the court, and the property was released from the attachment. Was it a necessary fact to establish the liability of the sureties on the undertaking, that it should not only appear that the property was released from attachment, but that it should be restored to the owner? We think it was. The law makes a distinction between a release of the property from attachment, and the return thereof to the owner. As we find this distinction made by the statute we cannot ignore it. And it is not difficult to perceive a great difference between the two acts. When the proper bond is given the law discharges the attachment. The bond becomes the surety of the attaching-