| Mich. | Jan 28, 1879

Graves, J.

Waterhouse sued Phillips by attachment on a bond in replevin previously made to him by Phillips and one Catharine Woodell in a suit by the latter, against Waterhouse in justice’s court. In this action on the bond, which was also in justice’s court, Waterhouse recovered, and the circuit court affirmed the judgment on certiorari. Phillips then brought error. Several questions are mooted in the record which will not be noticed. It will be sufficient to refer to a single point.

The return of the justice shows what evidence he had before him and all of it, and it thence appears that no judgment was introduced and no execution in replevin shown. An execution was put in evidence, but it is an execution for damages “sustained on occasion of the non-performance of certain promises and undertakings,” and does not purport to be in tort. Under the statute an execution in the action is required to fix liability on the replevin bond, and here there was no such execution. This is a fatal defect as ruled in Williams v. Vail, 9 Mich., 162" court="Mich." date_filed="1861-04-11" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/williams-v-vail-6632454?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6632454">9 Mich., 162. The record discloses that besides this execution foreign to the case no other proof was put in except the bond. Hence there was a total lack of evidence.

*274We do not inquire whether proof of a judgment in replevin was a necessary prerequisite. It would certainly be much safer to make the proof than to omit it.

The judgment of both courts must be reversed with costs.

The other Justices concurred.
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