Shushan v. Maloney
Shushan v. Maloney
Opinion of the Court
Relators are_ defendants in a partition suit in which A. B. Shushan is plaintiff, now pending in the civil district court. Before pleading to the petition defendants filed a rule to compel plaintiff to furnish a bond for costs. Plaintiff furnished the bond, after which defendants filed a rule to show cause why the suit should not be dismissed on the ground that the surety on the bond was not competent. The objection was not that the surety was not qualified financially, but that he was incompetent because of an interest which he was supposed to have in the suit. When the rule came up for trial, the defendants in the case, plaintiffs in the rule, were not present in court, nor was their attorney present. The rule was regularly tried, and, on proof that the surety was qualified, the rule was dismissed. Defendants, plaintiirs in the rule, moved for a new trial of the rule, which motion was regularly fixed for trial. Thereafter, before the motion was tried, defendants moved to transfer the case to the United States District Court, and all proceedings were stayed in the state court until the decree of the federal court declining jurisdiction was filed in the state court. Thereafter defendants’ motion for a new trial of the rule to dismiss plaintiff’s suit was fixed for trial. In the
The relief prayed for is denied at relators’ costs.
070rehearing
On Application for Rehearing.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- SHUSHAN v. MALONEY In re MALONEY
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 1. Costs Plaintiff, by filing a new bond for costs in partition suit, did not acknowledge that his original bond was invalid. 2. Costs Act No. 112 of 1916, § 3, limiting time for filing new cost bond to two days after service of notice of complaint, has no application to a case where there is no showing that a new or supplemental or additional bond for costs was necessary because of insufficiency of the original bond, but where plaintiff presumably filed a new bond to avoid any further dispute about .the sufficiency of the original bond and to avoid the consequent delay. 3. Costs &wkey;> 136 — Objection to cost bond waived by answer. Defendants’ application to the Supreme Court and to the Court of Appeal for exercise of supervisory jurisdiction in the matter of claimed insufficiency of plaintiff’s bond for costs came too late after defendants had filed their answer and put the case at issue upon its merits. On Application for Rehearing. 4. Costs &wkey;>134 — Abandonment of original bond for costs not acknowledgment that surety was not competent. Where, when motion to dismiss partition suit for insufficiency of plaintiff’s bond for costs was called for trial, plaintiff’s counsel announced that he had abandoned the bond for costs and had already filed a new bond-with another surety, such abandonment of the original bond was not an acknowledgment that the surety was not competent, and the trial court ruled correctly in refusing to dismiss the suit merely because the second bond for costs was not filed within the two days mentioned in Act No. 112 of 1916, § 3. •