375 P.2d 63 | Or. | 1962
The case is. before the court on application of the respondent Rogers (plaintiff below) to correct the mandate, and objections to such application filed by the appellant United Development Co. (defendant below) and Richard G. Harper.
On April 18, 1962, the court rendered a decision affirming a judgment for $26,837.16 in favor of the respondent, 230 Or 564, 370 P2d 624. The mandate
The relevant facts are as follows: The Harper undertaking was filed with the clerk of the circuit court on December 9, 1960, the same day that the appellant filed notice of appeal. On December 13 the respondent filed exception to the sufficiency of the surety and a motion requesting the court to set the time and place for the surety to justify. On December 19 the court ordered the surety to appear before it and justify on December 21 at 9 a.m. The motion and the order each recited as authority therefor OES 140.140. At the time appointed counsel for the parties appeared but the surety did not. No record was made of the proceedings then taken other than as disclosed by an order of the court dated December 28, 1960, which reads:
“This matter having come on upon plaintiff’s Exception to Sufficiency of Surety herein, and it appearing that the defendant Hnited Development Co. desires to cause to be furnished an undertaking*188 with, a sufficient corporate surety, in lieu of justification of the individual surety, Richard G. Harper; now, therefore,
“IT IS ORDERED that the proceedings with respect to said Exceptions to Sufficiency of Surety are continued to January 6, 1961.”
The next matter that appears of record is the serving and filing on January 6, 1961, of the undertaking for costs on appeal, heretofore mentioned, with the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company as surety.
Under our statute the appellant is required to serve and file an undertaking within 10 days after filing of the notice of appeal and within five days after service of the undertaking the adverse party may except to the sufficiency of the sureties therein. ORS 19.038. The undertaking, with one or more sureties, must be to pay all damages, costs and disbursements which may be awarded against the appellant; If, however, it is desired to stay the proceedings, the undertaking must further provide that if the judgment or decree appealed from is for the recovery of money or of personal property or the value thereof, if the same or any part thereof is affirmed, the appellant will satisfy it so far as affirmed. ORS 19.040. “Within five days after the service of the undertaking, the adverse party or his attorney may except to the sufficiency of the sureties in the undertaking, or he shall be deemed to have waived his right thereto.” ORS 19.038 (2).
If the sufficiency of the sureties is excepted to by the respondent they must justify as in bail on arrest. ORS 19.038 (3). Notice of justification of the sureties before a judge of the circuit court, or county court, or clerk of the court where the action is pending, at a time and place specified, may be given by the appellant
No notice of justification was given by the appellant or the surety as provided for by ORS 29.580. As previously stated, the court in ordering the surety to appear and justify on December 19,1959, purported to act under ORS 140.140. That section has to do with the examination of bail concerning their sufficiency in criminal eases and has no application to the justification of sureties in an undertaking on appeal. As uniformly interpreted, the procedure for justification of such sureties is prescribed in the statute on civil arrest. ORS 29.510-29.740; Larsen et al v. Lootens et al, 102 Or 579, 194 P 699, 203 P 621; McDonald v. McDonald, 99 Or 225, 195 P 361; Logan v. Cross, 98 Or 274, 276, 192 P 656, 1119; Moorehouse v. Weister, 56 Or 126, 128, 95 P 497, 107 P 470, 108 P 121; Simison v. Simison, 9 Or 335. ORS 29.580 puts the burden on the appellant or the surety to give notice of the time and place for justification within 10 days after receipt of notice of exception. The respondent is not required to do anything after serving notice of exception and it is the surety who is authorized to fix the time and place for justification. If the surety so desires, he may choose to justify before a judge of the county court or clerk of the court where the action is pending, ORS 29.580;
The legal question presented must be determined without regard to these conflicting versions of Mr. Wells’ statements. It is not clear to us that it is material whether he informed the court that Mr. Harper could not appear or would not appear or whether he unequivocally promised to provide a corporate supersedeas bond or merely said that he hoped to do so. But whether material or not, this court is in no position to resolve the dispute and must limit its consideration to the record.
The controlling facts, as disclosed by the record, are that no notice of justification was ever given by
Our statute is silent upon the question of the liability of a surety on an undertaking on appeal who fails or refuses to justify. It provides that if the judge or clerk finds the surety sufficient he shall endorse an allowance thereon. ORS 29.600. It says nothing about the legal consequences to the surety if he is not found sufficient. Neither are there any decisions of this court which can be said to be definitive of the question.
The courts of only a few jurisdictions in this country have passed upon the question. The cases, many of them from New York, are collected in an annotation in 96 ALR 1371 to McColgan v. Scoble, 2 Cal2d 285, 40 P2d 483, 96 ALR 1368. In New York there are two lines of decisions arising under different statutes. One statute contained this provision:
“The effect of a failure so to justify and to procure an allowance [i.e., approval of the undertaking] is the same as if the undertaking had not been given.”
In Manning v. Gould et al, 90 NY 476, a case controlled by this statute, the court held that filing of exception
“If the sureties fail or refuse to justify after service of the notice of exception, the respondent may proceed as if no undertaking had been executed.”
This provision was construed to mean that upon the failure of sureties to justify, the stay created by the undertaking was vacated and the respondent could proceed to enforce the judgment, but the sureties remained liable. Fried v. Rivkin, 96 Mise 697, 161 NYiS 94. The surety relied on the following language from the opinion in Manning v. Gould:
“The respondent cannot have the dual right to enforce the judgment pending the appeal as if no undertaking had been given, and at the same time treat it as valid security for the payment of the judgment.”
The court answered that “[t]his assertion must be read in the light of the law then under consideration” and that there was “nothing inherently wrong in permitting a judgment creditor to proceed against his judgment debtor pending an appeal, where sureties have faded to justify and when the judgment is affirmed against the sureties.” On the authority of the Rivkin case the California court in McColgan v. Scoble, supra, placed the same construction upon a statute which provided that “unless the sureties justify within a period of twenty days the execution is no longer stayed.” In an earlier case, Moffat v. Greenwalt, 90 Cal 368, 27 P 296 (1891), the court construed a statute similar to the New York statute involved in Manning v. Gould, supra, but came to a conclusion opposite
The courts in three other states where there were no special statutes governing the question have held that sureties who fail or refuse to justify after exception are no longer liable on their undertaking. Peterson v. Kjellin, 93 Minn 422, 101 NW 948; Rabb v. Thomas, 137 Ill App 255; State v. Sixth Jud. Dist. Court, 22 Mont 449, 57 P 89, 145, 74 Am St Rep 618. In the Montana case, involving a stay bond, the failure to justify was followed by issuance of execution, in the other two, involving bonds for costs only, by dismissal of the appeals. The Montana court stated in its opinion, obiter, that it was not the mere act of the respondent in excepting to the surety and the latter’s refusal to justify, but “the act of the respondents in levying the execution against the property of the judgment debtor” which relieved the surety of liability.
At common law, when bail were sued on their undertaking they could not defend on the ground that there had been an exception and failure to justify; their remedy was by motion to have their names struck out of the bailpiece or that an exoneretur be entered. Fulke v. Bourke, 1 W. Blackstone’s Reports 462, 96 Eng Rep 267 (K.B. 1764); Bramwell v. Farmer, 1 Taunt. 427, 127 Eng Rep 899 (C.P. 1809); Jones v. Tub, 1 Wilson’s Reports 337, 95 Eng Rep 649 (K.B. 1752); 1 Tidd’s Practice 258; Petersdorff, 10 Law Library 168; Ward v. Syme, 4 NY 171 (1850). In the
The question here is a close one. Little or no guidance may be found in decisions such as those from New York and California which are based on special statutes. Were the dictum of the Montana court to which we have referred to be followed, the surety should be held liable, but it was only dictum and cases cited by the court as authority for the statement do not, in our opinion, support it. We think that the surety’s release from liability follows from the fact that after his sufficiency had been excepted to and he refused to justify the plaintiff had the right to levy execution. That he did not exercise that right is not a controlling consideration. Nor can it be argued successfully that the plaintiff waived his exception, for release of the surety was accomplished when he failed to justify within the extended time fixed by the court for that purpose. There could be no waiver of the exception thereafter. Finkelstein v. Punie, 162 App Div 119, 147 NYS 317; Hoffman v. Smith, 34 Hun 485.
In our opinion the assumption is warranted that when the legislature enacted the statutes with which we have been dealing and made no provision respecting the liability of sureties who fail to justify after notice of exception, the matter was left as it was at common law. Obviously, there is no reason today for retaining the ancient procedure of striking the surety’s name “out of the bail-piece,” and he should'be permitted to assert his defense in any proceeding against
Decisions of this court cited by the plaintiff do not reach the question before us, but involve the right of the respondent to secure dismissal of an appeal because of technical failure on the part of the appellant to comply with the provisions of the statutes which require an undertaking on appeal. While such failure may be ground for dismissal of the appeal, the statutes of this state have always permitted the omission to be supplied where it is due to mistake and the appeal is taken in good faith. ORS 19.033; OCLA § 10-803 (4); In re First & Farmers National Bank, 145 Or 150, 166, 26 P2d 1103; Iltz v. Krieger, 104 Or 59, 202 P 409, 206 P 550; Chambers v. Everding & Farrell, 71 Or 521, 523, 136 P 885, 143 P 616; Newberg Orchard Association v. Osborn, 39 Or 370, 372, 65 P 81; Matlock v. Wheeler, 29 Or 64, 74, 40 P 5, 43 P 867. Further, where there was undue delay on the part of the respondent in raising the question, the defect has been held to have been waived and the undertaldng allowed to stand as sufficient to accomplish the purpose for which it was given, In re First & Farmers National Bank, supra; Iltz v. Krieger, supra. In the former case a surety was excepted to. He justified, but the notice of the time and place of justification was not in compliance with the statute. In the latter case, also, the surety justified, though not within the time required by law. In both cases motions to dismiss the appeals, belatedly filed, were denied on the ground that they came too late and the defect had been waived.
These were not cases of failure or refusal of a
For the foregoing reasons we think that the surety is not liable, and the motion to correct the mandate is denied.