Zellars v. National Surety Co.

108 S.W. 548, 210 Mo. 86, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 50
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 27, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 108 S.W. 548 (Zellars v. National Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zellars v. National Surety Co., 108 S.W. 548, 210 Mo. 86, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 50 (Mo. 1908).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J. —

This is a suit on an appeal bond, in which the defendant is surety. In November, 1898, the plaintiff, then a minor, suing by his mother as his natural guardian, recovered a judgment in the Carroll Circuit Court for $4,000 against the Missouri Water and Light Company. An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court by the defendant in that case, who executed this appeal bond in the penalty.of $8,500 with the defendant in this case as surety. While that appeal was pending in this court, the General Assembly, by an act approved March 20, 1901, conferred on the St. Louis Court of Appeals and the Kansas City Court of Appeals jurisdiction of appeals and writs of error' in cases where the amount in dispute exclusive of costs did not exceed the sum. of $4,500, and directed this court to transfer all cases within that limit then pending here, which had not been submitted, to the proper court of appeals. In obedience to that law this court, April 17th, 1901, transferred this cause to the Kansas City Court of Appeals, where it was heard, and March 3, 1902, the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed. Afterwards, January 12, 1903, the plaintiff, having then attained his majority and the judgment being unsatisfied, brought this suit against this defendant' as the surety on the appeal bond. The suit resulted in a judgment in the circuit court in favor of the plaintiff for $5,332.60 and costs, from which judgment the defendant has appealed.

[90]*90I. The defendant contends that it is not liable as for a condition broken in the appeal bond sued on, because, it says, the bond, as by its terms will appear, was given to secure the payment of the judgment if it should be affirmed by the Supreme Court, not if it should be affirmed by the Kansas City Court of Appeals,. and since the judgment has never been affirmed by the Supreme Court there has been no breach of the condition. That contention raises the vital question in this case.

The bond in question is in these words:

“Know All Men by These Presents: That the Missouri Water and Light Company as principal, and the National Surety Company, a corporation, as surety, are held and firmly bound unto Mary Zellars, the natural guardian and curator of Isadore Zellars, in the penal sum of eight. thousand five hundred dollars ($8,500) good and lawful money of the United States, well and truly to be paid and for the faithful payment of which the above bounden obligors hereby bind themselves, their successors and .assigns firmly by these presents.
“The conditions of the above obligation are such, that, whereas, on the 18th day of November, 1898, in a certain action pending in the circuit court of Carroll county, Missouri, at Carrollton, at the November term thereof, wherein the said Isadore Zellars, by his natural guardian and curator, Mary Zellars, was plaintiff, and the said Missouri Water and Light Company was defendant, the said plaintiff recovered a judgment against the Missouri Water and Light Company in the sum of four thousand dollars and costs, and,
“Whereas, The Missouri Water and Light Company has appealed from said judgment and the order of said court to the Supreme Court of the State of Missouri, and,
“Whereas, the circuit court of Carroll county, Mis[91]*91souri, fixed the amount of said bond at $8,500 and allowed the appellant ten days in which to file said bond conditioned as by law required:
“Now, therefore, if the Missouri Water and Light Company shall prosecute its appeal with due diligence to a decision in the appellate court and'shall do and perform such judgment as shall be given by such court, or such as the appellate court may direct the circuit court to give, and if the said Missouri Water and Light Company shall also comply with and perform the judgment of the circuit court of Carroll county, Missouri, if the said judgment or any part thereof be affirmed by the appellate court and in so far as it may be affirmed, and shall well and truly pay all damages and costs that shall be awarded against it by. the appellate court, then the above obligation shall be null and void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”

Section 809, .Revised Statutes 1899, prescribes when an appeal may stay execution: “First, when the appellant shall be an executor, ” etc. (not applicable here); “second, when the appellant, or some responsible person for him, together with two sufficient securities, to be approved by the court, shall, during the term at which the judgment appealed from was rendered, enter into a recognizance to the adverse party in a penalty of double the amount of whatever debt, damages and costs, . . . have been recovered by such judgment, together with the interest that may accrue thereon, and the costs and damages that may be recovered in any appellate court upon the appeal, conditioned that the appellant will prosecute his appeal with due diligence to a decision in the appellate court and shall perform such judgment as shall be given by such court, or such as the appellate court may direct the circuit court to give, and if the judgment of such court, or any part thereof, be affirmed, that he will comply with and perform the same, so far [92]*92as it may be affirmed, and will pay all damages and costs which may be awarded against the appellant by any appellate court.” The bond in this case was conditioned in the language of the statute except that in the last part of the clause stating the condition it says: “pay all damages and costs that shall be awarded against it by the appellate court” whereas the. statute in that connection says “any appellate court.” But that is immaterial in this case because no damages or "costs were awarded by the appellate court. The vital clause in the condition of this bond is that the appellant will pay the judgment rendered by the circuit court if it should be affirmed. It is recited in the bond that the appeal was taken to the Supreme Court, but elsewhere in the bond the court whose judgment in the appeal is to be observed is designated as'“the appellate court.” Appellant contends that the Supreme Court having been named as the court to. which the appeal was taken all subsequent mention of the appellate court necessarily meant that court.

All statutory bonds are to be construed as though. the law requiring and regulating them was written in them. It will, therefore, help us to understand the force of the decisions interpreting appeal bonds to which we are referred in the briefs if we will glance back and observe the changes that have been made in our law on this subject.

Until the adoption of the • Constitution of 1875 there was but one court to which appeals from the circuit court could be taken, to-wit, the Supreme Court, but that Constitution created the St. Louis Court of Appeals and gave it general appellate jurisdiction in its prescribed territory. In certain classes of cases appeals could be taken from the judgment^ of that court to the Supreme Court; one of which was when the amount in dispute was more than $2,500; where the amount in' dispute was that sum or under, the judg[93]*93ment of the Court of Appeals was final unless there was some other ground giving this court jurisdiction.

In 1884 the Constitution was amended creating the Kansas City Court of Appeals with jurisdiction of the same hind as the St.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 S.W. 548, 210 Mo. 86, 1908 Mo. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zellars-v-national-surety-co-mo-1908.