49 Mo. 188 | Mo. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendant Thompson sued out a writ of attachment against the relator, West, under section 26 of the landlord and tenant act (Wagu. Stat. 881-2), and with the other defendants executed an instrument purporting to be a bond, as required by the section, but failed to seal the same. Upon a plea in abatement, West obtained judgment against him, and now brings suit upon the bond, and the chief defense is that it is no bond. The question is thus presented whether a statutory instrument purporting upon its face to be a bond, but without any sea.1 or scrawl, or other device adopted as a seal, can be sued on as a bond.
A bond is a sealed instrument, and we can have no idea of one without a seal or a substitute for one; and where the statute requires a bond it calls for an instrument with all its necessary requisites. It is true that a bond required by statute may vary from the statutory requirements and still be a good common-law bond (Grant & Finney v. Brotherton’s Adm’r, 7 Mo. 458; Gathwright v. Callaway County, 10 Mo. 664; State v. Thomas, 17 Mo. 503), but can there be a common-law bond without a seal'/ “ The common law intended by a seal an impression upon wax or wafer, or some other tenacious substance capable of being impressed.” (4 Kent, 452.) We have been very liberal as to what constitutes a common-law seal (Pease v. Lawson, 33 Mo. 35;
That an instrument purporting to be sealed, but without any seal or scrawl, cannot be sued on as a sealed instrument, was held in Grimsley v. Riley’s Adm’r, 5 Mo. 280, and I have never known the general doctrine of, that case departed from. We might, perhaps, under the code, get along with the pleadings, did not the statute require a bond, and were not the proceedings under the statute. As it is, the trial court committed error in admitting the instrument in evidence and in refusing a new trial. The judgment will be therefore reversed.