Muscatine County v. Oliver

139 N.W. 1105, 159 Iowa 417
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 19, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 139 N.W. 1105 (Muscatine County v. Oliver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muscatine County v. Oliver, 139 N.W. 1105, 159 Iowa 417 (iowa 1913).

Opinion

Weaver, C. J.

The facts are not in dispute. One Seidlitz, having been found guilty in the district court upon a charge of contempt in violating the terms of a liquor injunction theretofore entered against him, was adjudged to pay a fine of $500 and costs, and that he be imprisoned in the county jail for a term of ninety days. To obtain a review of the record in that Case, and to annul said judgment against him, Seidlitz sued out a writ of certiorari from this court; and, to stay or- supersede the enforcement of said judgment pending the hearing upon certiorari, he filed a bond in the penal sum of $1,000, signed by the defendants herein as his sureties. The condition or obligation of said bond is contained in the following words: "Now, if the said appellant shall pay to the state of Iowa all costs and damages that shall be adjudged against . . . [him] on the final hearing of said petition, and shall appear and submit to the final order [419]*419of the Supreme Court or of the district court in this matter, this obligation to be void,” etc. The plaintiff brings this action upon said bond, alleging that the issues in the certiorari proceeding were decided against Seidlitz, and the judgment rendered against him in the district court was upheld, and affirmed, "but that said fine and costs remain unpaid, and recovery therefor is demanded upon such bond. Answering said petition, the defendants admit the execution and delivery of the bond, but deny that the matters alleged by the plaintiff constitute any breach of their said obligation, and that, as such sureties, they are in no manner liable upon said bond for the payment of the fine or costs adjudged against Seidlitz, unless it be for the costs accruing in the certiorari proceeding in this court, which do not exceed the sum of $27.50.

Upon the issue thus joined, trial was had to the court without a jury. It was stipulated or admitted in evidence that Seidlitz was adjudged guilty of contempt in the district court, and sentenced to pay a fine of $500 and costs, including an attorney’s fee, and that he be imprisoned in the county jail for a term of ninety days. It was also conceded that the certiorari proceeding in which the bond was given was decided adversely to Seidlitz, and that neither fine nor costs have ever been paid. Upon this agreed showing of facts, the trial court found and adjudged that defendants were liable upon the bond for the payment of the costs and attorney’s fees taxed against Seidlitz in both the district and Supreme Courts, but that they were not liable upon said bond for the payment of the fine. Judgment was entered accordingly, and both parties except and appeal.

1. Certiorari: supersedeas bond: scope of obligation. I. Reduced to its briefest terms, the question before us is solely one of the construction to be placed upon the obligation of the bond. For what do the sureties undertake to become liable? Certainly the bond was not intended as a mere idle form, having no office in, or effect upon, the course of the proceedings.

[420]*420Its meaning and effect cannot, of course, be extended beyond the fair import of the language employed; but, to clearly ascertain such import, the bond, like all other written contracts and undertakings, must be read in the light of the circumstances calling it into existence; the purpose it was intended to subserve and the statute authorizing it.

Seidlitz had been convicted upon a charge of contempt and sentenced, as we have seen, to pay a fine and to be imprisoned. That judgment he wished to have reviewed upon certiorari from this court. Under our practice, he could sue out the writ of certiorari without giving bond or security of any bind; but such proceeding would not stay execution for the collection of the fine or mittimus for his commitment to jail, and it would be possible for the judgment to be fully enforced and satisfied in the district court before a review of the record could be had in this court. To prevent this, he sought for and obtained an order staying or suspending the execution of the judgment against him, pending the disposition of the certiorari proceedings, on condition that he file a bond in the sum of $1,000. That it was intended as a supersedeas bond was beyond all question; and that it was so considered and given effect accordingly is perfectly clear. It is the contention of the defendants, however, that the terms of the bond obligate them for nothing more than the payment of costs in the certiorari proceedings and the submission of Seidlitz to any further order or judgment thereafter rendered against him in either court in such proceedings. Starting with this theory of the nature of the bond, it is then said that, except for the item of costs accruing in this court upon the certiorari proceedings, no judgment or order was thereafter rendered against Seidlitz in either court, and therefore, except for the costs last mentioned, there is and can be no right of recovery against the defendants. It may be conceded that, as applied to the first condition of the bond, which provides that Seidlitz “shall pay all costs and damages which shall be adjudged against him upon the final hearing of said [421]*421petition, ’ ’ the argument is sound, but as much cannot be said of its application to the second condition that he “shall appear and submit to the final order of the Supreme Court or of the district court in this matter. ’ ’ In the first place, counsel lay stress upon the concluding phrase “in this matter,” and say that “this matter” was the certiorari proceeding, as distinguished from the case for the review, of which that proceeding was instituted. This, it seems to us, is an inconsequential play upon words. The subject-matter of inquiry, under the writ of certiorari, was the judgment rendered against Seidlitz, and the proceedings in which said judgment has been entered. It is true that certiorari is begun or obtained by an original application in the court of review; but it is nevertheless a phase of this court’s appellate jurisdiction, by which certain judgments and orders of a court of inferior jurisdiction may be reviewed and set aside, if cause therefor be found. It is in all essential respects a chapter or part of the proceedings begun and tried in the inferior court. The effect of certiorari is to remove the record of the ease from the court below to the court of appellate jurisdiction; and it is that ease, and none other, which is considered and passed upon in pursuance of the writ. In short, we repeat that the matter under consideration, upon certiorari, is the,same matter which the trial court had before it, and the concluding phrase of the bond cannot be restricted more narrowly than is here indicated. Bearing upon this branch of the discussion, see Brown v. Powers, 146 Iowa, 729; Jones v. Mould, 151 Iowa, 599.

2. Same. Again, it is to be noticed that, even if we give the bond the restricted construction contended for by defendants, they are mistaken in saying that this court, in disposing of the certiorari proceedings, entered no judgment against Seidlitz other than that he pay the costs. On the contrary, this court, in express terms, affirmed the judgment of the district court. See Seidlitz v. Jackson, (Iowa) 125 N. W. 230. That this decision is a judgment, or [422]*422at least a reaffirmance of the judgment below, within the obligation and meaning o'f the bond, see Ela v. Welch, 9 Wis. 401.

3. Same.

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139 N.W. 1105, 159 Iowa 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muscatine-county-v-oliver-iowa-1913.