Notwithstanding the hardship upon the city which once was assured by two bondsmen and now is left with none, I believe the well-founded surety law requires that this order should be reversed and, therefore, I dissent. The city sued the Brooklyn, Queens County and Suburban Railroad Company for the cost of repaving Jamaica avenue and recovered a judgment of $70,913.95 in November, 1912. The defendant railroad company appealed from the judgment and gave an undertaking on appeal by this defendant, the National Surety Company, which was in the usual form, to the effect that the appellant did undertake that if the judgment or order appealed from should be affirmed the appellant would pay the sum recovered or directed to be paid by the judgment. The judgment was affirmed in the Appellate Division in May, 1913, and in the Court of Appeals in November, 1914. [City of New York v. Brooklyn, Q. C. & S. R. R. Co., 156 App. Div. 856; affd., 213 N. Y. 634.] Thereafter, after this affirmance in the Court of Appeals, the railroad company commenced an action against the city on a money claim for the value of toll rights as a plank road corporation which it had theretofore released to the municipal authorities on condition of being relieved of the expense of maintaining pavements on Jamaica avenue. In that action it demanded an iajimetioa against the city to restrain it from collecting the judgment heretofore
