184 P. 1012 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1919
This is an appeal from a judgment for the defendants in an action brought against them as sureties upon a bond given pursuant to the provisions of section
[1] The appellant argues at some length and cites numerous cases in support of the proposition that the subsequent bankruptcy of the attachment defendant did not relieve the bondsmen from their liability. It is unnecessary for us to discuss this point here, because it is conceded by respondents in their brief that the subsequent bankruptcy of Miller would not in itself release the defendants in the present action, if there were no other valid defenses to the bond.
[2] There are several points made in the briefs under different subdivisions, but they are all included in the main question presented. The record presents a conflict in the evidence on certain matters, arising by reason of the fact that the defendant, Hazel Miller, testified in direct contradiction to some of the recitals of the bond she had executed. The findings of the trial court on such matters are in direct conflict with the recitals of the attachment bond given by the defendants. The inquiry must then be, whether under the facts of this case the defendants may contradict by their testimony the positive recitals of the bond, which recitals they represented to the plaintiff to be true, and upon the strength of which the plaintiff relinquished what was at the time a very valuable right.
At the time the bond was given, the defendant, McIntosh, was the mother-in-law of Miller, and the defendant, Hazel P. Miller, was his wife. It appears that Mrs. Miller had loaned her husband about two thousand five hundred dollars, which had been used by him in purchasing the store, and that he had promised to repay this amount to her. She testified that at the time the attachment was threatened she and her husband were having domestic troubles; that her husband had gone to San Francisco, and she did not know where he was; that when she received notice of the contemplated attachment, she was ill at her mother's home; that she and her mother signed the bond of their own motion, upon the advice of their attorney and without any request from Miller so to do; that said bond was signed for the purpose of protecting *414
the interest that she (Mrs. Miller) had in the store; that the property was attached, and later released by the sheriff after he received the bond, and that she was in the store when the sheriff released it from the attachment. Upon this testimony, as against the positive recitals of the bond, as found by the court, the defendants base their argument that the bond was not given by the defendant in the attachment suit for his benefit, but was given by persons having no right under the statute to give such a bond, and for the benefit of such persons alone. The trial court accepted this view and found in accordance therewith. The bond itself is signed not only by the sureties, but by Frank N. Miller himself. It recites that "whereas the said defendant, Frank N. Miller, is desirous of giving the undertaking mentioned in the writ, now, therefore, the undersigned," etc. There is in the record the testimony of Guy R. Kennedy, identifying the signature of Frank Miller upon the bond, and this witness also stated that he saw Miller in Chico between the time the writ was issued and the bond was given. Mrs. Miller herself admits that the signature upon the bond looks like the signature of her former husband. The decisions of this state are to the effect that the recitals of such a bond are conclusive as between the parties thereto. (Pierce v. Whiting,
The case of Thayer v. Braden,
As to the contention that the bond was given to prevent an attachment and not to release one, the case of Preston v. Hood,
The judgment is reversed.
*416Brittain, J., and Nourse, J., concurred.