Maryland Casualty Company v. Marshall

10 S.W.2d 485, 226 Ky. 62, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 26, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 10 S.W.2d 485 (Maryland Casualty Company v. Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Casualty Company v. Marshall, 10 S.W.2d 485, 226 Ky. 62, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 29 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman—

Affirming.

As these two eases involve the same question, they will he disposed of by one opinion.

These suits arise out of two earlier suits, which reached this court under the style of Wallins Creek Collieries Co. v. Marshall and Wallins Creek Collieries Co. v. Ward, reported in 217 Ky. 647, 290 S. W. 519. In those cases Marshall and a number of other employees of the Wallins Creek Collieries Company, employed at mine A of the Collieries Company, and Ward and a number of other employees of the Collieries Company employed at mine B, sued the Collieries Company for a claimed breach of contract. Marshall and his coemployees were joined as parties plaintiff in their suit, and Ward and his coemployees were joined as parties plaintiff in their suit. A judgment was entered in each suit for the plaintiffs, but the judgment in each suit was several, and not joint. The Collieries Company undertook to appeal to this court from those judgments under an order granting them such appeal by the lower court. In each suit the Collieries Company executed a supersedeas bond before the clerk of the circuit court, pursuant to section 748 of the Civil Code, with the present appellant, Maryland Casualty Company, as surety. The *64 appeals of the Collieries Company were dismissed by this court in the opinion referred to, because of the fact that, although the judgments, when added together in each case, were far in excess of $500, there was no one judgment in either case in favor of any employee for as much as that sum, and therefore this court had no jurisdiction of the appeal granted by the lower court. The reasons for that position of this court are fully set out in the opinion referred to.

In the meantime the Collieries Company was reorganized. These suits were then brought on the supersedeas bonds referred to, one by Marshall and his co-plaintiffs, and the other by Ward and his coplaintiffs, to recover the judgments awarded them in the earlier suits. The lower court granted them the relief they sought, and from the joint judgment in favor of all the plaintiffs, entered in each of these suits, these two appeals are prosecuted.

The appellant insists that the appellees are not entitled to a recovery, first, because the supersedeas bonds sued upon were void as statutory bonds, in that, as the lower court had no jurisdiction to grant the appeals it did in the earlier suits, its clerk was without authority to take the bonds in question. It must be admitted that some of the earlier opinions of this court are not harmonious on this question. For instance, the case of Montgomery v. Montgomery, 117 Ky. 761, 78 S. W. 465, 80 S. W. 1108, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 2018, in effect held that, where this court has no,jurisdiction of the appeal granted by the lower court, the supersedeas bond executed before the clerk of the lower court is void as a statutory bond. On the other hand, the cases of American Accident Co. v. Slaughter, 101 Ky. 269, 40 S. W. 675, 19 Ky. Law Rep 418, and Nelson County v. City of Bardstown, 123 Ky. 836, 97 S. W. 765, 30 Ky Law Rep. 408, seem to hold that, under such circumstances, it is a good statutory bond. But, be that as it may, this question among others has been definitely settled by us in the recent case of Wermeling v. Wermeling, 224 Ky. 107, 5 S. W. (2d) 893, which holds that a supersedeas bond executed before a circuit clerk, upon an order of the circuit court granting an appeal, which is void because such circuit court had no jurisdiction to grant such an appeal, is a nullity and may be disregarded. It therefore follows that the appellant is correct in its contention that the bonds in these cases were not valid statutory bonds.

*65 It does not follow, however, that, as these bonds do not have the quality of statutory bonds, they are not good as common-law obligations and enforceable as such. In the case of Cotton’s Guardian v. Wolf, 14 Bush, 238, we said that a bond, although not good as a statutory bond, would be good as a common-law obligation if it were entered into voluntarily, for a valid consideration, and was not repugnant to the letter or policy of the law. Tested by these characteristics, the bonds involved in these cases were good common-law obligations. They were entered into voluntarily, as the Collieries Company and the Maryland Casualty Company had the options of paying the judgments against the Collieries Company, of permitting their enforcement through the processes of the court, of taking the chance that the plaintiffs would not undertake to enforce them until this court had passed upon them, or of attempting to stay them by the execution of the bonds, and it chose the latter alternative.

There was nothing repugnant to the letter or policy of the law in these bonds, as was the case in Florrance, Aclm’r, v. Goodin & Thomas, 5 B. Mon. 111, and Pacific Nat. Bank v. Mixter, 124 U. S. 721, 8 S. Ct. 718, 31 L. Ed. 567. In the latter case, an attachment bond was held not good, even as a common-law obligation; but this was because the federal statute expressly prohibited the issuance of an attachment against a national bank until after the rendition of a final judgment, which had not occurred in that case. In the Florrance case, an execution was issued on a void judgment and the officers were about to seize the property of the execution debtor when he executed the replevin bond in question. The court said that, as the judgments were void, the officers had no right to seize the property under the void executions, and to hold the replevin bonds good common-law obligations would be against public policy, for otherwise it would tend to encourage in the officers of the law the exercise of illegal power. In the instant cases, the judgments superseded were not void. Their enforcement would not have been illegal. There was no statute or public policy forbidding their enforcement, at least in the absence of a supersedeas. To hold the bonds which were executed good as common-law bonds does not encourage any officer in the exercise of illegal power, and so the Florrance case is not controlling.

We now come to the only troublesome question concerning the validity of these bonds as common-law obli *66 gations, and that is the question of consideration. It is argued that, inasmuch as these bonds were not bilateral in their promises, and inasmuch as the present appellees could have enforced the judgments appealed from at any time, since the bonds, being of no validity as statutory bonds, did not work the statutory effect of forcibly staying the execution of the judgments, therefore the Collieries Company and the appellant received no consideration 'for their undertaking expressed in these bonds. The cases of Stephens v. Miller, 80 Ky. 47, and Hardwick Woolen Mills v. Ball Brothers, 223 Ky. 185, 3 S. W. (2d) 175, are in direct conflict with this contention of the appellant. In the Stephens case an appeal was taken from a judgment of the justice of the peace to the quarterly court of Warren county and an appeal bond executed. Under the statute the quarterly court of Warren county had no jurisdiction' of such an appeal. Despite this fact, judgment was rendered against the appellant in the quarterly court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 S.W.2d 485, 226 Ky. 62, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-company-v-marshall-kyctapphigh-1928.