4 Colo. App. 150 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
The chief inquiry here concerns the legal effect to be given to the. reseizure of goods by an officer, who has antecedently
The appellants argue many questions, but it would scarcely profit us to discuss the force and effect of a delivery bond, and determine to what extent its recitals are conclusive upon the sureties with reference to. the commencement of a suit, and the regularity of the attachment proceedings. These matters are well understood, and the court committed no errors with respect to its holdings on those subjects. An attack upon the judgment because of the failure of the entry to recite the confirmation of the attachment proceedings is not well based, for it has been decided in many cases that the attachment is never to be deemed abandoned becaus.e there is no recital in the judgment entry that the process is confirmed. New Haven Lumber Co. v. Raymond, 76 Iowa, 225.
The principal error on which the plaintiffs rely is set out, in different forms, in the seventh, eighth, and ninth assignments, and is based on the effect of the acceptance of a delivery bond by an officer after a seizure of chattels. The legal results flowing from the execution and acceptance of a delivery bond and the surrender of the property have been the subject of very conflicting adjudications. Authors who have written upon the subject of attachments are also at variance in their views upon this question. But within our jurisdiction the question has been set at rest by the well-considered case of Stevenson v. Palmer, 14 Colo. 565.
In that case Mr. Justice Hayt reviews the authorities, discusses the reasons of the conflicting rules, and ultimately reaches the conclusion that the execution of the bond and the surrender of the property do not destroy the lien of the
What the evidence might have shown concerning the disposition of this property, and whether the plaintiff would have been able to overcome the proof, which tended to show that possession of the goods had repassed to the sheriff, to whom the creditor was bound to look for his money, cannot be determined from the present record. It is quite possible that the evidence on this subject may seriously affect the relations and rights of the judgment creditor, the officer, and these sureties. According to the case as made, however,' sufficient of these goods repassed into the officer’s possession to satisfy Wallingford’s claim. Should the ultimate proof establish this fact to the satisfaction of the jury trying the case, and the-evidence show that the goods were sold by the officer, or otherwise so disposed of that they were lost to the defendant and the judgment creditor, the legal effect must be to satisfy the debt, and to compel the creditor to look to the officer alone for the satisfaction of his claim. Under such circumstances, it would not be possible, by these proceedings, to revive the liability of the sureties, from which they were relieved when the condition of their bond was complied with by the resumption of possession by the sheriff. It clearly appears from the record that all the goods were not reseized
Reversed.