Case Name: Small et al. v. Kennedy, Administratrix
Court: Appellate Court of Indiana
Jurisdiction: Indiana
Decision Date: 1895-02-20
Citations: 12 Ind. App. 155
Docket Number: No. 1,416
Parties: Small et al. v. Kennedy, Administratrix.
Judges: 
Reporter: Indiana Court of Appeals Reports
Volume: 12
Pages: 155–157

Head Matter:
No. 1,416.
Small et al. v. Kennedy, Administratrix.
Appeal Bond. — Approved by Clerk. — When Valid. — Waiver.—Estoppel. —An appellee may insist that the statute regulating the approval of appeal bonds be followed, yet he may waive this right; and when he has expressly waived it, and the opposite party has acted upon the waiver, filed his bond (which was approved by the clerk of the court) and received the full benefit of it, appellant will be estopped to deny its validity.
From the Hamilton Circuit Court.
F. J. VanVorhis, W. W. Spencer, T. J. Kane and R. K. Kane, for appellants.
W. S. Shirley, W. Fertig and H. J. Alexander, for appellee.

Opinion:
Gavin, J. —
The appellee averred, in her complaint, the recovery of a judgment in the circuit court by the decedent, of whose estate she is administratrix, against the appellant Small, from'which a term-time appeal was prayed and granted, the amount of the bond fixed by the court and twenty days given to file it, with sureties to be approved by the clerk, this latter provision being made at the request of the appellant and with the consent of the decedent who, in open court, waived the approval of the bond by the court; that in accordance with this order and within the time fixed the appeal-bond sued on was filed and approved by the clerk with the consent and acquiescence of the decedent, who accepted and recognized the same as valid and in consideration thereof forebore to issue execution on said judgment pending the appeal; that said Small perfected his appeal as a term-time appeal without notice and without giving any other bond or asking for a supersedeas, and such proceedings were had in the Supreme Court as resulted in the affirmance of said judgment as to $772.39 thereof, which affirmance had been duly certified down and said judgment was wholly due and unpaid.
The complaint was tested by demurrer for want of facts. The only objection presented to it is that it is bad because it fails to aver that the bond was approved by the court, as required by statute. R. S. 1894, section 650, R. S. 1881, section 638.
The position assumed was that the bond was a nullity in the absence of such approval. In support of their position counsel cite section 247, Elliott's App. Proced., where it is said that "it must be approved by the court."
Counsel, however, fail to observe that in the foot note it is expressly stated by the authors that they are simply giving the law applicable when the appellee appropriately demands that the statutory course be strictly pursued, and "without any reference to consent or waiver express or implied."
While it is undoubtedly true that the successful party to a lawsuit may demand that the statute regulating the approval of the appeal bond be followed, yet it is equally true that he may waive this right, and when he has, as in this case, expressly waived it, and the opposite party has acted upon this waiver, filed his bond and received the full benefit of it, the plainest principles of justice and fair dealing would be violated by permitting the appellant to then say that his bond had not been approved according to law, and should not, therefore, be enforced. In this case the bond served every purpose for which it was intended. The appellant obtained by virtue of it every benefit possible to be received by pursuing the statutory course to the letter, and the appellants are now estopped to deny its validity. Both principle and the authorities are clearly against appellants' position. Pierce v. Banta, 9 Ind. App. 376, where the question is very fully considered; Buchanan v. Milligan, 125 Ind. 332; Easter v. Acklemire, 81 Ind. 163; Smock v. Harrison, 74 Ind. 348; Jones v. Droneberger, 23 Ind. 74; Elliott App. Proced., sections 369, 370.
Piled Feb. 20, 1895.
There is nothing in Ex parte Sweeney, 131 Ind. 81, which militates against or modifies Jones v. Droneberger, supra, upon this point.
Judgment affirmed.