112 S.E. 321 | N.C. | 1922
Civil action, heard on appeal from judgment of clerk. The action is instituted by plaintiff, returnable to July Term, 1921, against Scott Dillingham as an individual and Scott Dillingham, Incorporated, to recover the sum of $2,000 due upon the purchase price of an automobile sold to defendants, and which sum defendants expressly promised to pay plaintiff. There was an attachment issued in the cause, which was duly levied on property of defendants, and defendants gave bond in the cause with J. L. Page as surety, to the effect that said defendants and surety would pay any and all sums that plaintiff should recover in the action, and thereupon the said attachment was dissolved and the property attached was redelivered to the defendants. It further appeared that the summons in the cause was issued on 1 July, 1921, returnable 15 July, and that a verified complaint was duly filed at the time of issuing the summons, and at a time for answering same, 1 August, defendants not being ready, time was extended to 5 October, and defendants still having failed to answer and complaint verified, as stated, showing money demand for sum certain, judgment by default was rendered against defendants and J. L. Page for the amount of the demand, etc., the appeal being taken. That on 6 October, the said surety moved before the clerk to set aside said judgment and to dismiss the action for that defendants Scott Dillingham, Inc., had been adjudged a bankrupt, and said case in bankruptcy was now pending in the U.S. District Court, and for that Jonathan H. Cathey had been appointed receiver against Scott Dillingham, the individual, in an action in the State Superior Court, motion was overruled and on appeal *609
taken the judgment was affirmed in the Superior Court, as stated. Defendant, the surety, excepted, and appealed, assigning errors.
It is objected to the validity of this judgment in denial of appellant's motion: that the complaint does not set out a cause of action in which judgment by default final can be entered, but the objection is without merit. The complaint being on a moneyed demand for a sum certain, with an express promise to pay the same, and so coming within the direct provisions of the statute on the subject. Bostwick v. R. R.,
There is nothing, therefore, in the State proceedings referred to that impairs or threatens the prior lien of plaintiff's attachment, and the judgment being against both defendants, the surety's obligation holds as to the liability of Scott Dillingham, the individual, and the judgment against appellant, therefore, should in no event be disturbed. 2 R. C. L., title Attachment, sec. 82, citing, among other cases, Pelzer Mfg. Co. v. Pitt,
We find no error in the record, and judgment denying appellant's motion is
Affirmed.
Cited: Cook v. Bailey,