Curry v. Equitable Surety Co.

27 Colo. App. 175
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1915
DocketNo. 4154
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Colo. App. 175 (Curry v. Equitable Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curry v. Equitable Surety Co., 27 Colo. App. 175 (Colo. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Hurlbut, J.,

rendered the opinion of the court.

November 21, 1912, plaintiff Curry (plaintiff in error) instituted an action against defendants, The Equitable Surety Company and The F. A. Trinkle Automobile Company, upon a re-delivery bond previously executed by them in an attachment.suit begun June 14, 1911, hereinafter more particularly referred to. The automobile company filed no pleadings in the case at bar. Judgment was rendered in favor of defendant, The Equitable Surety Company. .

It appears without controversy that on June 14, 1911, said Curry began an action against the said automobile company and R. A. and Julia R. Trinkle, and sued out in aid thereof a writ of attachment which was levied upon certain personal property situated in the City of Denver; that on October 8, 1912, judgment was rendered in said action in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $2822.22, also sustaining the attachment; that on June 19, 1911, the automobile company as principal and The Equitable Surety Company as surety executed a re-delivery bond in accordance with the provisions of the code, whereupon the property attached was released by the sheriff; that subsequently, and on July 27, 1911, said Curry instituted another action against the automobile company, F. A. and Julia R. Trinkle [177]*177and J. A. Pierce, and also sued out in aid thereof a writ of attachment, under which a levy was made by the sheriff; and that on the following, day the said Pierce, the automobile company and the surety company executed and delivered a re-delivery bond similar to the one hereinbefore mentioned, whereupon thé property attached was again released by the sheriff. This latter action did not' culminate in a judgment, the plaintiff being non-suited at the trial, and the attachment released. Other facts pertinent to the subject-matter, if necessary to be noticed, will be hereinafter mentioned.

The main question presented for determination by the court, and which is decisive of this ¿ppeal, is: Did the mere levy of the writ of attachment issued in the action begun July 27th, upon a portion of the same property previously attached (under the writ issued in the action of June 14th), and resumption of possession thereof by the sheriff, release the defendant surety company in toto or pro tanto from liability under the re-delivery bond which is the subject of this action? We think the record sufficiently shows that the able trial judge disregarded all other questions of law, and considered the issue as stated as controlling all others presented at the trial. If we properly interpret his findings and conclusions, he held as a matter of law that the sheriff, having under the writ of attachment in the action of July 27th re-seized a portion of the property previously attached by him under the former writ of June 14th (the plaintiff here having been plaintiff in both of said actions), thereby released the surety company from liability under the re-delivery bond which is the subject of controversy in the case at bar. He supports his position by citing a number of authorities, among which we find the case of Schneider v. Wallingford, 4 Colo. App., 150, 34 Pac., 1109. There is a marked distinction between some of the facts of that case and those of the case at bar. There the sureties upon the re-delivery bond were private indi[178]*178viduals, not engaged in the surety business for profit, as in the case before us. No -second re-delivery bond appears to have been executed in the subsequent actions in that case, nor re-delivery of the property to defendant, as was done in the case at bar. It does not appear from that opinion what disposition was made by the sheriff of the property attached in the subsequent actions, but it is shown that the defendant sureties in that suit áttempted at the trial to adduce evidence tending to show that the identical goods surrendered to the attachment defendants on the execution of the delivery bond had subsequently come into the possession of the officer who levied the original writ. The trial court rejected the proofs so offered by defendants and gave a directed verdict for plaintiff. The court of appeals held such ruling to be reversible error, following and citing with approval the case of Stevenson v. Palmer, 14 Colo., 565, 24 Pac., 5, 20 Am. St., 295, which latter case held that the execution of a re-delivery bond and surrender of property thereunder did not destroy the lien of the attachment. In the Wallingford case it was said, in substance, that the lien could not be divested by a sale of the property by the attachment debtor, nor seizure and disposition of it by an officer under process; that the lien continued until judgment, and if the plaintiff’s claim culminated in a judgment and execution for its enforcement, the property would still be treated as in the custody of the law, and subject to the original attachment lien; and, further, that if after surrender of the property to the defendant, under -the redelivery bond, the officer re-seized the goods under subsequent writ of attachment or execution, it thereby became subject to'disposition under the prior attachment lien, which had been acquired by the levy thereunder, and the officer was charged with the duty of applying the proceeds of sale thereof to the satisfaction of such lien. The court further said:

[179]*179“What the evidence might have shown concerning the disposition of this property, and whether the plaintiff would have been able to overcome the proof, which tended to show that possession of the goods, had re-passed to the sheriff, to whom the creditor was bound to look for his money, cannot be determined from the present record. It is quite possible that the evidence on this subject may seriously affect the relations and rights of the judgment creditor, the officer and these sureties. According to the case as made, however, sufficient of these goods re-passed into the officer’s possession to satisfy Wallingford’s claim. Should the ultimate proof establish this fact to the satisfaction of the jury trying the case, and the evidence show that the goods were sold.by the officer, or otherwise so disposed of that they were lost to the defendant and the judgment creditor, the legal effect must be to satisfy the debt and to compel the creditor to look to the officer alone for the satisfaction of his claim.”

It is conceded in the instant case that under the second writ of attachment the sheriff- re-seized sufficient property, formerly attached, to have paid the judgment obtained in the first case, although plaintiff contends that the attachment of the property under the writ of July 27th was against his consent, and in violation of his instructions. The point of difference between counsel, as to the force and effect of the Wallingford case, is clearly defined. Defendant contends that as the sheriff, under the writ of July 27th, re-seized sufficient property antecedently attached to pay the- judgment, such levy ipso facto discharged the surety company from liability under, the -re-delivery bond we are now considering; while plaintiff insists with zeal that such re-seizure by the sheriff did not as a matter of law release the surety as claimed, but at the most established only a prima facie case for the surety company, and that such prima facie case could be overcome by plaintiff, through the introduction of proof showing that the sheriff did not sell [180]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 Colo. App. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curry-v-equitable-surety-co-coloctapp-1915.