The appellant, plaintiff below, sought to restrain the enforcement of an execution and' upon the trial court sustaining the demurrers filed by the defendants, plaintiff declined to plead further and final judgment was rendered dismissing the bill, from which judgment plaintiff appeals.
It appears that Charles H. Thorpe, C. Q. Thorpe and International Electric Piano Company sued John P. Young, Henry H. Oberschelp, Henry H. Oberschelp, trustee, Charles Morrow and F. C. Sharp, as defendants, in the circuit court of St. Louis, to restrain said Young from foreclosing a chattel mortgage before it became due, and that the court granted a temporary injunction upon the filing of a bond in the sum of $3000, with the Southern Surety Company as surety.
When the cause came on for trial, June 4, 1912, the plaintiffs, Thorpe, et al., were not present, nor was their attorney, Mr. Garesche, who had brought the original suit. Mr. Garesche, however, came in during the proceeding, but took no part therein.
The injunction was dissolved and a judgment entered against the plaintiffs. The same day, and simultaneously with the action of the court in dismissing the case and entering judgment against the said plaintiffs, the defendants, through their attorney, filed a motion to assess damages upon the injunction bond, and delivered a copy of the motion to Mr. Garesche, who acknowledged receipt thereof in writing as attorney for plaintiffs.
On June lltli, a stipulation was duly filed waiving the right of a trial by jury, on the motion to assess damages. This stipulation was signed by Mr. Garesche as attorney for the said plaintiffs, as well as by Mr. Obersehelp as attorney for the defendants. The motion was accordingly placed upon the law docket.
On June 17,1912, the motion to assess damages on the injunction bond came on for hearing. It appears that neither of the plaintiffs nor Mr. Garesche were present at the hearing of the motion. The court entered judgment against the said plaintiffs in the sum of $3300, and
On or about July 19,1912, the Southern Surety Company filed a motion to vacate the judgment upon the ground that it had only then learned 'of the judgment, and that it had no knowledge or notice either of the judgment in the principal suit-or of the motion to assess damages, the setting or the hearing thereof, and because it had thereby been deprived of an opportunity to file a motion for a new trial. The motion to vacate was heard and overruled. From this order the Southern Surety Company appealed to the Supreme Court. Said appeal was dismissed by the Supreme Court.
Shortly after the dismissal of the appeal in the Supreme - Court the defendant Young, through his attorneys, caused an execution to be issued against the appellant, Southern Surety Company, which company thereupon filed its petition in the Circuit Court of St. Louis to restrain the defendants, respondents here, from enforcing said execution. Thereafter each of the defendants in the case filed a demurrer to said petition, which demurrers were sustained. Upon plaintiff’s declining to plead further, final judgment was rendered dismissing the bill, from which judgment the Southern Surety Company took this appeal.
While the appellant raises several points here, the question, the solution of which will dispose of the case, is whether or not notice of a motion to assess damages on an injunction bond, served upon the attorney of record for plaintiffs after judgment dissolving the injunction is given in favor of the defendants is good and'sufficient notice to the plaintiffs in the case, when such motion is filed and heard before the expiration of the term in which such' judgment is rendered.
It has been repeatedly held that notice is required in all cases where the motion for the assessment of damages on the injunction bond is heard at a subsequent term to that in which the judgment dissolving the injunction was' given. [See Konta v. St. Louis Stock Ex
In the instant case, however, we find that the motion to assess damages was not only filed but was also tried during the same term in which a judgment dissolving the injunction was given. Inasmuch as the judgment did not become final until the expiration of the term in which it was rendered, and there being a presumption of law that the relation of attorney and client continues until the termination of the- litigation and the end of the term at which final judgment is rendered (Grames v. Hawley, 50 Fed. Rep., 319; Swift v. Allen, 55 Ill. 303; Pulitzer Pub. Co. v. Allen, 134 Mo. App. 229, 113 S. W. 1159), we hold that the attorney of record in the injunction case continued attorney for plaintiffs until the expiration of the term in which the judgment was rendered, and that notice to such attorney of record, of the filing of the motion to assess damages, was notice to plaintiffs, and that under the circumstances in this case the signing of the stipulation by such attorney of record, waiving a jury for hearing of the motion, was binding on plaintiffs. *
In other words, we hold that no new or further employment of counsel was necessary to authorize the attorney of record for appellants in the injunction suit to represent plaintiffs in defending the motion to assess damages upon the injunction bond, where such motion is filed and heard during the same term in which the judgment dissolving the injunction was given.
The fact that the surety had no notice of the motion to assess damages is immaterial in the case. Section 2525, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1909, does not require such notice. The court has jurisdiction over the surety from the moment the bond is filed with the clerk, and if the injunction is dissolved, the surety “under clearly implied provisions of the statute,” is practically in court to answer for a breach of the bond. [Nolan v. Johns, 108 Mo. 431, 18 S. W. 1107; Joplin & Western Ry. Co. v. Railroad, 135 Mo. 549, 37 S. W. 540; Sutliff v. Montgomery, 115 Mo. App. 592, 92 S. W. 515.]
In view of what we have said above it follows that the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.