75 Colo. 115 | Colo. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question here before us is the right to recover of the surety on an appeal bond, notwithstanding the discharge in bankruptcy of the principal pending the appeal.
The parties appeared in reverse order in the trial court and are hereinafter so designated. Plaintiff recovered judgment in the county court against one Hopke. The latter appealed, and defendant became surety on his bond. Pending the appeal Hopke filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy and listed the claim of plaintiff who was duly notified and made proof thereof. In that proceeding Hopke was regularly discharged. When the cause came on for trial in the district court Hopke failed to appear and plaintiff moved for the entry of an order affirming the judgment of the county court. Evidence was taken and a judgment entered reciting that Hopke had “failed and re
Section 16 of the bankruptcy act of 1898 provides that the discharge of the bankrupt shall not discharge his surety. The same is true of our own statute, section 6288 C. L. 1921.
This bond recites that it shall be void only if Hopke “shall prosecute said appeal with effect and without delay and shall pay all costs and whatever judgment may be awarded.” Hopke did not pay this judgment. The principal risk against which such bonds are intended as a protection is insolvency. To hold that the very contingency against which they guard shall, if it happen, discharge them, seems to us bad law and worse logic. The liability of the surety in such cases is upheld by numerous authorities. Brown & Brown Coal Co. v. Antezak, 164 Mich. 110, 128 N. W. 774, 130 N. W. 305, Ann. Cas. 1912 B, 778; Fisse v. Einstein et al., 5 Mo. App. 78, and cases therein cited. Others to the contrary may be found but we are unable to assent thereto. 1
The supersedeas is denied and the judgment affirmed.