delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit originally brought by the defendant in error against the Semmes-Kelly Company in the Supreme Court of the District to recover $10,596.45 for goods sold. There was an attachment of a stock of goods that were worth much more than the judgment finally recovered, but never were, formally appraised, and the next day the plaintiff in error as surety to the Semmes-Kelly Company signed an undertaking to release thé property attached, in the form provided in the District Code, § 454. By that instrument it in terms submitted to the jurisdiction of the court and undertook ‘to abide by and perform the judgment of the court in the premises in relation to said property, which judgment may be rendered against all the parties whose names are hereto subscribed.’ By § 455 if the judgment goes for the plaintiff ‘it shall be a joint judgment against both the defendant and his surety or sureties in said undertaking for the appraised value of the property. ’ After a second trial, judgment was entered against the SemmesKelly Company and the plaintiff in error for $9,937.90, that sum being found to be far less than the value of the property, as we have said. 40 App. D. C. 239.
The jurisdiction of this court is invoked upon a contention that the above §§ 454 and 455 as applied deprive the plaintiff of its property without due process of law. In
American Security & Trust
Co. v.
District of Columbia,
There is no occasion to discuss it in this case. That a man may contract to be bound by a judgment in which he has no right to be heard and that a statute may authorize him to make himself a party to such a judgment was decided, if it needed a decision, in
Beall
v.
New Mexico,
Writ of error dismissed.
