Imel v. Van Deren

8 Colo. 90
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 Colo. 90 (Imel v. Van Deren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Imel v. Van Deren, 8 Colo. 90 (Colo. 1884).

Opinion

Beck, C. J.

This was an action upon a replevin bond, and having been instituted before the adoption of the Code of Civil Procedure, is to be determined according to the former practice, and the statute then in force.

The bond was conditioned as required by section 6 of the chapter on replevin, in Revised Statutes, 1868, p. 538. The required conditions are, “to prosecute such suit with effect, and without delay, and make return of the property, if return thereof be awarded, and to pay all damages which may be adjudged against him for the detention thereof, and to save and keep harmless such officer in replevying such property.”

Section 8 of this chapter provides: “If at any time the condition of any such bond, as required by section 6, be broken, the officer to whom such bond was executed, or the defendant in the action of replevin, in the name of such officer, to his own use, may maintain an action on such bond, for the recovery of such damages as may have been sustained by reason of the breach of such condition.”

Section 14 provides that in an action upon a replevin bond, where the merits of the case have not been determined in the action of replevin, the defendant may plead .such fact, and also his title to the property in dispute in the replevin suit, “except in cases where the plaintiff in such action of replevin shall have voluntarily dismissed his suit or submitted to a non-suit therein.”

The pleadings consist of declaration, pleas, replication and rejoinder, but it is only necessary to consider such of the averments of the respective pleadings as are involved in the issues.

The substance of the allegations on the part of the plaintiff is, that defendant Imel had instituted an action of replevin against said Jones, for the recovery of certain [92]*92goods and chattels alleged to belong to Imel, which Jones was then holding as constable, by virtue of a writ of attachment issued by a justice of the peace, in the case of Morgan v. Slavens and Stevens, and which Jones had seized as the property of said Slavens and Stevens. That said Imel, together with the defendant Huber, as surety, executed to the plaintiff Van Deren, as sheriff, the bond in question, which was conditioned as required by statute. That said sheriff thereupon took said property from the possession of Constable Jones, and delivered it to Imel, who thereafter dismissed his replevin suit at his own costs.

The breach of the bond assigned is, that Imel failed to prosecute his replevin suit with effect, and failed and refused to return the property replevied.

The pleadings on the part of the defendants, though inartificial in form, are to the effect that the property attached consisted of two horses, harness for the same, and one wagon. That defendant Imel claimed to own the horses and harness, but that the question of the ownership thereof was, at the time of the institution of these suits, in controversy between said Imel and Slavens. Afterwards, and before the dismissal of the replevin suit, said controversy was settled by Slavens executing his promissory note to Imel in payment of said property, in the sum of $250.

Also, that the claim of Morgan, for which he had attached all the above mentioned property, amounted to the sum of $48.65, and that he took said wagon in full satisfaction of his claim and costs, leaving no lien or claim against the said horses and harness, and that thereupon the said Slavens and Jones agreed with said Imel, that if he would dismiss the replevin suit at his cost, no action should be brought upon the replevin bond, whereupon defendant dismissed said suit.

Plaintiff denied the allegation that Jones was a party to any agreement not to sue upon the replevin bond.

[93]*93It is not controverted that there was a breach of that condition of the bond which, required the replevin suit to be prosecuted to effect; but the substantial issue presented by the pleadings is, whether the plaintiff sustained any damages by reason of such breach.

A jury being waived, the court found the issues for the plaintiff, upon the trial, and assessed his damages at the sum of $319, for whicli sum judgment was entered. The question for our decision is, Were the findings and judgment of the district court warranted by the law and the evidence?

The plaintiff appears to have ignored the issue joined upon the pleadings, and to have relied wholly upon the aforesaid breach of the condition of the bond, and upon the fact that defendant Imel had voluntarily dismissed his replevin suit.

After introducing in evidence the replevin bond, the motion and order of dismissal, and proving by Constable Jones that the horses and harness were taken from his possession by Sheriff Van Deren, and that their value w'as the sum of $220, the plaintiff rested. Thereupon defendants moved for a non-suit, which motion was denied; when the defendants introduced their testimony.

In considering the questions arising as to the correctness of the rulings and judgment of the court, it must be borne in mind that the only condition of the bond broken was the condition to prosecute the suit to effect. No return of the property was awarded, hence there was no breach of the condition to “ make return of said property, if return thereof shall be awarded.”

Nor was there a breach of the condition “ to save and keep harmless the said A. J. Van Deren in replevying said property,” since no such breach was either alleged or proven.

The several conditions required by the statute to be inserted in the bond are to be treated as separate and [94]*94independent. 2 Sutherland on Damages, p. 42; Humphrey v. Taggart, 38 Ill. 228.

The only question arising upon the pleadings and the law is the question of the amount of damages sustained by reason of the failure to prosecute the replevin suit to effect.

As we have seen, section 8 of the act provides that the officer to whom the bond was executed (Sheriff Van Deren in this case), or the defendant in the action of replevin (Jones, the present plaintiff), in the name of such officer, to his own use, may recover such damages as have been sustained.

This action, then, is brought for the use of the constable who had executed Morgan’s attachment writ, and it is the damages accruing to him .that form the subject of inquiry.

The pleadings concede that this plaintiff was not the owner of the property, and that his only claim thereto was possession under his writ. He volunteered the statement, when being examined as a witness for the defendants, that he held three writs; but this statement has nothing to do with the case, for the reasons that no mention is made of such fact in the pleadings, and no damages claimed save those growing out of the attachment proceeding of Morgan v. Slavens and Stevens. Upon the record before us, it must be held that the extent of the plaintiff’s special interest in the property in question, at any time, was its custody, to answer any judgment, which might be recovered in said attachment suit.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Colo. 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imel-v-van-deren-colo-1884.