220 P. 943 | Okla. | 1923
Mary Miozrany recovered a money judgment in a damage suit against the Osage Coal Mining Company. The coal company gave notice of appeal, and caused to be approved and filed in the case, a supersedeas bond, for which the National Surety Company, and Wm. Busby were sureties. Later the surety company advised the court clerk by wire that its general agent, who executed the bond was without authority to do so, and requested its release from the bond as surety. The trial court acted without notice on the request for release of the surety company, and entered its order requiring the filing of another supersedeas bond. Later the coal company caused to be filed and approved in the cause another supersedeas bond, as principal, with D.M. Hailey and J.H. Bolenger as sureties. The release of the National Surety Company from the first bond was without notice to the plaintiff in the coal company case. The coal company perfected its appeal in the damage suit to this court, which was affirmed. The coal company failed to pay the judgment as affirmed, and the plaintiff commenced her action against the principal and the National Surety Company, as surety on the first supersedeas bond filed in the cause, and also joined the sureties on the second bond. In the course of the trial of the cause, the plaintiff dismissed her action against all the sureties except the National Surety Company. The trial resulted in a judgment against the National Surety Company, plaintiff in this cause, for the amount of judgment and costs in the coal company case. The surety company appealed the cause to this court, which was affirmed in the case of National Surety Co. v. Mary Miozrany,
It is true that liability may sometimes resuit by the doing of an act aside from the requirement of the law, or orders of the court, by operation of equity. So, we will first determine whether or not the acts of the defendants were such as called into action any equitable rules in favor of the plaintiff in this cause. Plaintiff largely rests its right of recovery on equitable grounds, as shown by its reply brief. The equitable rule that successive sureties on judicial bonds are liable in the inverse order in which they become bound rests upon the principle that, the second bond being made without the consent of the first sureties, to continue the litigation for the benefit of the principal, the risk ought to be borne by the sureties, prolonging the litigation. The rule is reasonable, right, and justly shifts the burden, if any, where it ought to be born. But the application of the rule presupposes that the sureties signed a bond required by statutes or the valid order of the court which continued the litigation through another step, and that the bond by operation of law resulted in the involuntary forbearance of the creditor to collect his debts, during the interval. The first bond was a valid supersedeas bond and upon approval and filing in the cause, by operation of law, stayed the collection of the plaintiff's debt. The action of the trial, court in attempting to substitute the second bond being a nullity, the forbearance of plaintiff to collect her debt against the coal company during the pendency of the appeal was due entirely to the effect of the approval and filing of the first bond in the cause. It follows that there was no consideration for the second bond for which these defendants are sureties, as the stay of execution during the appeal of the coal company's case was effected by the first bond. The second bond was filed in the case aside from a requirement of the law, a lawful order of the court or the result of an agreement between the parties to this action. It therefore follows that the second bond did not deter the creditor in the collection of her debt, hence the *66 bond was without consideration and a nullity. The reason for invoking the equitable rule sought to be applied by the plaintiff is absent in this case Therefore it cannot support the right to recover on equitable grounds. The plaintiff further asserts that the defendants are liable on the ground of estoppel by reason of filing the second bond in the coal company case, which lulled the surety company into a sense of security during the appeal and the the in which it might have brought about its release from the first bond. The answer to this proposition is that the action of the trial court in attempting the substitution of the bond, resulting in a nullity, was a matter of law, and of which the law charged all the parties to the action with notice. In this respect, the parties to this action stand upon an equal basis. There was lack of privity between the parties and no obligation rested upon one set of sureties to act for the other. Matters of equal knowledge between parties cannot become the basis of an equitable estoppel in favor of one against the other.
The plaintiff must rest its right of recovery upon the rules of law. The second bond, not being required by law or the valid order of a court to stay the execution in the coal company case, was without consideration and a nullity. The bond being void, it cannot become the basis for a recovery against the defendants in this case. Carter v. Hodge (N.Y.)
It is therefore recommended that the judgment be affirmed.
By the Court: is so ordered.