State v. Candland

Utah Supreme Court
State v. Candland, 25 Utah 172 (Utah 1902)
70 P. 403; 1902 Utah LEXIS 51
Bartch, Baskin, Hart

State v. Candland

Opinion of the Court

BARTCH, J.

Prom the record herein it appears that one H P. Morrey was convicted of an offense in one of the district courts, and sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary. He thereupon appealed to' this court, and executed and filed a statutory appeal bond, with the defendants herein as sureties. We held the conviction and sentence to be illegal and void on the ground that the trial court acted without jurisdiction, After the return of the remittitur a new information was filed, and, upon the accused failing to appear and plead thereto, his bond was declared forfeited, and thereafter this action was brought to recover the penalty of the Undertaking from the sureties. The court below held the bondsmen liable, and this appeal is from the judgment.

The contention of the appellants, in the first instance, is that the court had no jurisdiction to try the case (State v. Morrey, 23 Utah 273, 64 Pac. 764) in which the bond was given, and that all its proceedings had therein after plea were void, and created no right and. imposed no burdens or penalties, and that, therefore, the State cannot recover. Morrey was tried under an information filed by the district attorney pursuant to-the act approved March 9, 1-899.. Sees. Laws *1741899, c. 56, p. 77. In State v. Beddo, 22 Utah 432, 63 Pac. 96, that act was .declared void in so far as it .was amendatory and designed to confer, among other things, power upon the several' district attorneys to file informations in "criminal cases;, and the doctrine of that case was reaffirmed in Mof-rey’s appeal, and the conviction and sentence of Morrey were therein held to be-void for want of jurisdiction of the court to try the cause. But whether or not the bond in question was also void, and released the sureties, is a question which wedeem-it unnecéssáryto decide fróiñ the'view'we have taken of this case. Eor the purposes of this decision we piay. treat the bond as valid, and then the decisive question presented is, were any of the obligations of the undertaking violated? If this must be answered in the negative — and we think it must — then the appellants are not liable, for the law is well settled that sureties will not be held liable beyond the terms' of their bond or undertaking. In Lang v. Pike, 27 Ohio St. 498, it-was said: “No principle is more firmly settled in this State than this; that sureties' may stand on the very terms of a. statutory bond or undertaking: So clearly has this doctrine been announced and acted upon, that it may be ' regarded as entering into the condition of such an undertaking that it will not be extended by the" courts -beyond the necessary import of the words used. It will not be implied that the surety has undertaken to do more or other than what is expressed in such obligation.” People v. Chalmers, 60 N. Y. 154; Bishop v. Freeman, 42 Mich. 533, 4 N. W. 290. The bond, so far as material here, reads: “Now, therefore, we, W. I>. Oandland and Webb Green, of Mt. Pleasant, San Pete county^ Utah, jointly and severally hereby undertake that the above-named defendant, H. P. Morrey, will surrender himself in execution of the judgment upon its being affirmed or modified, or upon the appeal-being dismissed, or that, in case the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial, he will appear in the court to which said cause may be remanded, -and- submit himself to the orders-and *175process thereof, or, if he fails to perform either of these conditions that he will pay to the State of Utah the sum of one thousand dollars.” It will be noticed that the undertaking here is that Morrey will surrender himself in execution of the judgment upon its being affirmed, or modified, or dismissed, or upon the judgment being reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial. These were the conditions upon which the sureties bound themselves to deliver the defendant or pay the penalty 'of the bond. That none of them were violated appears from the judgment of the appellate court, which' reads: “This case must be reversed and remanded to the court below to be disposed of in accordance with law. It is so ordered.” State v. Morrey, 23 Utah 273, 64 Pac. 764. As will be observed, the order thus made doés not fall within the terms or conditions of the bond, and we are of the opinion that the trial court erred in holding the sureties liable.

This case' must, therefore, be reversed, with cbsts, and remanded, with instructions to the court below to enter judgment in favor of the defendants. It is so ordered.

BASKIN, J., and HART, District Judge, concur.

Reference

Full Case Name
THE STATE OF UTAH v. W. D. CANDLAND and WEBB GREEN
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published