67 Mo. 654 | Mo. | 1878
Lead Opinion
— This was a suit against the widow and minor child of one James H. Welch on a certain appeal bond, on which said Welch was surety. An agreed statement, or abstract of the record, has been filed, reciting the following facts: “James H. Welch, with othei’s, in his life-time — to-wit, on the 24th day of June, 1870 — became surety upon an appeal bond given in the case of the Kansas City Hotel Company, of Kansas City, Mo., against Joseph Seigmunt, wherein judgment had been rendered in the Kansas City court of common pleas, binding himself, his heirs, executors and administrators in the sum of $2,200, and conditioned that if said Seigmunt would pros-ecute his appeal from said judgment in said bond named with due diligence to a decision in the Supreme Court, and perform such judgments as the Supreme Court might give or direct the Kansas City court of common pleas to give, and if such judgment should be affirmed that he would
Reversed.
Rehearing
On Motion for Rehearing.
— The statute referred to in the motion for a rehearing, which has been filed in this cause, was not overlooked by us in arriving at the conclusion heretofore announced. The sections referred to have been in force certainly since 1845, and perhaps from an earlier date, and they are evidently the provisions referred to by Judge Scott in his opinion in Whittelsey v. Brohammer, 31 Mo. 107, as having been inadvertently adopted in this State without the necessary supplemental legislation. Section 7 of the statute of uses and trusts (Wag. Stat., page 1352) declares that the heirs and devisees of every person who shall have made any covenant or agreement shall be liable, •&c., “ in the cases and in the manner prescribed by law.” But no provision has been made by law on the subject, and. hence, as Judge Scott observed, we are left for our guidance to the ancient common law. This strikes us ás a hard case, but we cannot usurp the province of the Legislature.