248 P. 207 | Mont. | 1926
The affidavit for attachment is insufficient. (Duluth Brewing Malting Co. v. Allen,
The writ of attachment is defective. A motion to discharge on the ground that the writ does not conform to the demands of the complaint should be granted, where the amount stated in the writ is greater than that shown by the complaint to be claimed as due and owing. (Jenkins v. First National Bank et al.,
The contract is one of guaranty, not surety. (Square ButteState Bank v. Ballard,
The writ of attachment is not defective. (Wilson v.Barbour,
The contract is one of surety. (Jenkins v. First Nat.Bank,
"Bonds are to be treated as cumulative where this is the intention of the parties, and where a bond is expressly in addition to and exclusive of another bond for the same period, liability thereon accrues before the other bond is exhausted." (18 C.J. 588; United States F. G. Co. v. City of Pensacola,
Our statute provides that a plaintiff may have the property of a defendant attached "in an action upon a contract, express or implied, for the direct payment of money." (Sec. 9256, Rev. Codes 1921.)
1. It is insisted by the intervener that the bond in question[1, 2] is not such a contract as is contemplated by the statute above. It was given pursuant to section 4767, Revised Codes of 1921, and but for one paragraph it is similar to the bond considered in State ex rel. Barnett v. Reynolds,
Counsel for appellant say that this language "is a little ambiguous, and the word `cumulative' should be rejected as being *6 inconsistent with the main intention of the contract as disclosed by all other parts of it."
If the sentence, "and this obligation shall not be construed as being cumulative," should be disregarded, the bond would still be a bond in addition to the two corporation bonds, and the liability of the sureties would not be postponed until the corporation bonds were exhausted. (United States F. G. Co. v.Pensacola,
If it were the intention of Mr. Mills and his cosureties that their liability should not arise until the corporation bonds were exhausted, surely some language could have been found to express that intention with reasonable clearness. We are unable to deduce such intention from the language which was employed.
In the complaint it is alleged that when this bond was approved it was deemed "necessary to insure the safety and prompt payment of all such deposits," and, for the purpose of the motion to discharge the attachment, that allegation is admitted to be true.
But we are not at liberty to remake this bond; it is the sureties' bond, and for the ambiguity and uncertainty in it they must be held responsible. (Sec. 7545, Rev. Codes 1921.) We are not able to say what the paragraph in question means, if it means anything. In the absence of it, the bond is a contract for the direct payment of money (State ex rel. Barnett v. Reynolds, above; Jenkins v. First Nat. Bank, above), and the intervener has not convinced us that the presence of this paragraph changes the nature of the obligation from what it would be otherwise.
2. Complaint is made of the affidavit which was filed as a[3] prerequisite to the issuance of the writ of attachment, and of the writ itself.
Section 9257, Revised Codes of 1921, prescribes the matters which the affidavit must disclose, among them, the amount of the indebtedness over and above all legal counterclaims. The affidavit states that the defendants are indebted to the plaintiffs *7 "in the sum of $53,270.26, with interest figured on daily balances at the rate of 2 1/2% per annum, * * * all of which will more fully appear in the complaint on file in said action, reference to which is hereby made."
Counsel for appellant contend that the amount of the indebtedness is left open to computation; but the authorities hold generally that, under a statute like ours, an affidavit which alleges a specific indebtedness of the defendant to the plaintiff in a principal sum, is not vitiated by a reference to interest. Such an affidavit is sufficient to sustain the attachment to the extent of the principal sum at least. (3 Cal. Jur. 440; Tibbet v. Sue,
The complaint demands judgment against the bank for $53,270.26, against Mr. Mills for $35,000, and against each of[4] the other sureties for the amount for which he assumed liability. Section 9260, Revised Codes, provides: "The writ must be directed to the sheriff of any county in which property of such defendant may be, and must require him to attach and safely keep all the property of such defendant within his county not exempt from execution, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to satisfy the plaintiff's demand, the amount of which must bestated in conformity with the complaint," etc. It follows that, whenever a complaint demands different amounts from several defendants, the writ must conform to the complaint in that respect and direct the attachment of so much property of the respective defendants as will secure the amount alleged to be due from each one. (Kennedy v. California Savings Bank,
The writ is issued by the clerk of the court (sec. 9257), and the writ in question follows substantially the demands of the complaint. "When the writ so states the amount of the demand, in conformity with that portion of the complaint setting up such demand, the ministerial duty of the clerk in that behalf is duly performed, and the statutory requirement is satisfied." (Wilson
v. Barbour,
But it is contended that the writ does not conform to the demand made in the amended and supplemental complaint, and this[5] is true. After this action was commenced, and after the writ was issued, the two corporation surety companies paid $22,500, thereby reducing the indebtedness of the bank to $30,770.26; but, if the writ were valid at the time it was issued, it was not rendered invalid by what transpired thereafter.
Neither the affidavit nor the writ is subject to the particular objections made to it. The order is affirmed.
Affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY and ASSOCIATE JUSTICES GALEN, STARK and MATTHEWS concur.