128 Ky. 758 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1908
Opinion op the Court by
Appellee recovered a judgment for money against appellant. Without superseding the judgment, appellant has prosecuted this appeal.
The appeal does not affect the judgment until if is reversed. Hence, if the appellant were unable to give the supersedeas bond required by the Code in order to obtain a stay of the execution pending the appeal, he would be under the necessity of suffering his property to be seized and sold by the sheriff, with added costs and possible sacrifices. Yet in that event his right of appeal would not be affected, as otherwise the right of appeal would be valuable only to the rich, who could make the supersedeas bond, and to the very poor, who were execution proof. What one may be
Nor is there perceived any sound reason why theie should be a distinction in favor of those who pay as against those who replevy. It is said for appellee that the execution of the replevin bond merges the judgment; and so it does. Likewise the payment satisfies it. A judgment merged into a replevin bond is no more beyond the corrective process of the appellate court than one discharged by payment. It is argued by way of illustration that the execution of a replevin bond by one of the judgment debtors would operate to discharge a surety upon the debt not signing the bond, or to discharge a lien securing the debt. So would the payment of the judgment. We think the analogy is clear and the principle just that the replevy and payment alike do not affect the defendant’s right of appeal. Kellar v. Williams, 10 Bush, 216.