9 Mo. App. 464 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1881
delivered the opinion of the court.
A bill in equity was filed in the St. Louis Circuit Court, the general object of which was to subject certain real estate, the separate property of Anne E. Gawtry, a married woman, to the payment of a personal contract alleged to
“ No bail in error was required at common law ; so that the defendant, by bringing a writ of error, might have delayed the plaintiff of his execution without giving any security, either for the prosecution of such writ, or for the payment of the debt or damages recovered by the former judgment in case it should be affirmed, or the writ of error should be discontinued, or the plaintiff in error non-suited therein.” 2 Tidd’s Pr. 1147. This inconvenience has been remedied in England by statute. In the third year of James I. (3 Jac. I., chap. 8) it was provided that no supersedeas should be sued upon an execution unless the person in whose name the writ of error is brought shall first be bound with two sufficient sureties, such as the court wherein the judgment was given shall allow of, by recognizance to be acknowledged in the same court, in double the sum adjudged to be recovered by the former judgment. This statute was con
The statute in force in Missouri provides that “ the court from which the appeal is prayed shall make an order allowing the appeal; and such allowance thereof shall stay the eqecution in the following cases : * * * Second, when the appellant or some responsible person for him, with two sufficient securities, to be approved by the court, shall, during the term at which the judgment appealed from was rendered, enter into recognizance to the adverse party in a penalty double the amount of whatever debt, damages, and ■costs, or damages and costs, have been recovered on such judgment, together with the interest that may accrue thereon, and the costs and damages that may be recovered in any appellate court upon the appeal, conditioned,” etc.
It is our opinion that under the existing law in this State, as the party aggrieved may appeal without giving bond, so, on appeal, he may tender, and the court should allow him to file, a bond with such penalty as seems good to the appellant. The court is concerned with the sufficiency of the sureties ; but not at all, we think, with the amount of the-penalty in the appeal-bond. The appellant fixes that at his own risk. If either party desire to raise a question as to the sufficiency of the bond to work a stay of execution, we know not how this can be done otherwise than by some application to the court touching the issuing or recall of the execution.
It is our opinion that it was the duty of the Circuit Court to receive'and file the bond offered in this case, if otherwise good, without regard to the amount of the penalty.
As the facts- are admitted, the peremptory writwill issue.