62 P. 438 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On September 24, 1898, the Easterly Harvesting Machine Company caused an execution to issue out of the district court of Shawnee county upon a judgment in its favor against J. E. Pratt, and the defendant in error, as .sheriff of said county, by his under-sheriff, W. H. Williams, levied the same upon certain live stock and corn growing in the field. A forthcoming or redelivery bond was given, sighed by said J. E. Pratt and his wife, Amanda J. Pratt, and the property left where it was when levied on. A notice was duly published for the sale on October 12, 1898, of the property levied on, and notice given the signers of the bond. At the time advertised for the sale a demand for said property is claimed to have been made and said demand refused. Suit was afterward brought by the sheriff on the bond before a justice of the peace, judgment thereon obtained, an appeal taken to the district court, a trial had to a jury, and a judgment again rendered in favor of the plaintiff. To reverse this the case is brought to this court.
The first question is : ' Did the bill of particulars upon which the case was tried state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action ? The bill of particulars shows that the judgment was rendered by the justice
"Was the sheriff’s return properly admitted in evidence? We think it was. It was a record required by law to be made, and it does not seem to be any more specific than the facts as claimed by the plaintiff below would seem to require.
The remaining assignments of error can all be considered together, as they each involve the validity of the main theory of the defense. Is it a defense to an action upon a redelivery bond to show that the sheriff agreed to a fiction that he should be considered to be in possession of property of which he was not in possession, so as to relieve the obligors from liability upon their bond ? This seems to us to be the only question in the case.
If these plaintiffs in error were liable upon the bond, it was their duty to deliver the property to the sheriff upon demand, and it was not the duty of the