Court Opinion

ID: 4939338
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:23:17.685002+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:48.104702
License: Public Domain

Cornish, C. J.
Action of debt against principal and sureties on a bond to release attachment of personal property given under R. S., Chap. 86, Sec. 79. The condition of the bond is in these words: “Now therefore, if we the said obligors or either of us shall within thirty days after the rendition of judgment or after the adjournment of the court in which it is rendered or after the certificate of decision of the Law Court shall be received in the County where the cause is pending, pay to the plaintiff or his attorney of record the amount of any judgment including costs, recovered in said suit against said defendant or defendants or either of them this deed shall be void.” This condition follows the provisions of the statute.
The original writ on which the attachment was made was entered at the February Term, 1922, of the Cumberland County Superior Court, and on March 8, 1922, judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff, and on April 17, 1922, an execution in the sum of $217.35 debt and damage and $15.51 costs was duly issued.
On March 29, 1922, an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against the Outlet Clothing Company and on April 26, 1922, that company was duly adjudged a bankrupt. Neither the defendant, the principal obligor, nor the sureties having paid this judgment, this suit was brought. The defense is that the bond “was given to take the place of an attachment and said attachment was vacated and made null and void by reason of the bankruptcy of the defendant within four months of the date of said attachment, and that by reason thereof the said writing obligatory is null and void.” This defense is specious. The bankruptcy proceedings had no effect whatever upon the attachment because that had already been vacated by the giving of the bond. There was no attachment upon which bankruptcy proceedings could operate. Had no bond been given the attachment would have been dissolved by the bankruptcy, but another state of facts existed. The defendant in the suit instead of availing himself of bankruptcy proceedings at the- time saw fit to *408vacate the attachment in another way and executed the bond to supersede it. His sureties signed with him and their legal obligations ■ were thereby fixed by the terms of the bond itself. They bound themselves absolutely and unqualifiedly to pay the judgment within thirty days aifter rendition. “So says the bond.” There is no exception in case of bankruptcy. None is implied and the court can insert none. It can only enforce the contract made by the parties. The condition has not been complied with and the penalty follows: •
This precise question has been before the Massachusetts Court in a very recent case, and after full consideration judgment was rendered for the obligee in the bond. Guaranty Security Corporation v. Oppenheimer, 137 N. E., 644, (decided January 4, 1923). Reason and authority unite in requiring the same result in the pending cause.

Judgment for the plaintiff. The amount to be determined by the Justice at nisi prius.

So ordered.