Bolt v. Milane
Bolt v. Milane
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
*401 Appeal from the direction of a verdict for the plaintiff. The instant action at law, which we shall call the second action, is against the sureties on a written undertaking executed pursuant to section 262 of the Code of Procedure, and commonly called a replevy bond. That undertaking was made by one Sullivan and the defendants, his sureties, to secure the return of a mule in an action which we shall call the first action by Bolt against the principal, Sullivan; and that action was for the recovery of judgment on a note made by Sullivan to Bolt’s assignors, and the recovery of the possession of a mule conveyed by mortgage of Sullivan to Bolt’s assignors to secure the payment of the note debt.
There are nine exceptions, but they all have to do with very few questions. We shall compass the points made by the appellant without specification of the exceptions.
The first action was plainly to recover judgment on a note executed by Sullivan, and to get possession of a mule conveyed by Sullivan to the note creditor to secure the payment of the note. Upon the trial of that action the Court gave judgment against Sullivan for $349.99, and for the possession of the mule to be' sold and the proceeds applied to the judgment debt. There is no room for the appellants’ contention that the judgment was only for the recovery of a mule; it was more than that, and it was also the fruit of proper allegations for a money judgment.
*402
It is true the sureties had the right in the defense of the second action to prove payment of the judgment in the first action. But they have not done that, except by an attempted constructive payment. They contend that the delivery up of the mule to Bolt operated to satisfy the judgment for $349.99. The contention is not sound; part payment of a debt does not satisfy the whole debt.
The defendant, Milam, testified that the mule brought $150, and that the defendants paid on the judgment in addition to that $139 in money, making a total pajnnent of $289 on the judgment for $349.99..
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Bolt v. Milam Et Al.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Judgment—Collateral Attack.—Judgment cannot be attacked by referring to it, in an action on-a bond given in the action in which it was rendered, as a nullity, and asking' privilege of reforming it. 2. Replevin'—-Action on Bond—Evidence.—Plaintiif, in an action on replevin bond, may put in evidence the judgment roll of the action in which the bond was given. 3. Replevin—Bond op Dependant—Breach.—Redelivery bond, given pursuant to Code Civ. Proc. 1912, sec. 262, to secure return of the property to defendant in the action, is breached when judgment is rendered for the plaintiff. 4. Replevin—Bond op Dependant—Defenses—Pleading.—Defense, in action on bond of defendant in replevin for balance of judgment i after deducting proceeds of sale of property returned, that sale was not regular, not being pleaded, is not available. 5. Replevin—Bond op Defendant—Liability op Subeties.—Sureties on redelivery bond of defendant in action on note and for mule mortgaged to secure it, conditioned according to Code Civ. Proc. 1912, sec. 262, are liable for balance of judgment on note after deducting returned mule.