Court Opinion

ID: 6144285
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-05 14:55:48.017846+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:47.917888
License: Public Domain

By the court, Masten, J.
To recover the possession of certain one hundred and twenty barrels of flour in the possession of one Bidwell, the plaintiff brought in this court against said Bidwell an action denominated in the Code " claim and delivery of personal property. (Code, chap. 2, title 7, part 2.)
The said Bidwell to retain the possession of said flour gave to the sheriff, pursuant to section 211 of the Code, an undertaking executed by the defendants in this action for the delivery of the said property to the plaintiff if such delivery be adjudged, and for the payment to him of such sum of money as might for any cause be recovered against the said Bidwell. The plaintiff recovered judgment against said Bid-well in said action that the plaintiff recover the possession of said flour or one thousand six hundred and twenty dollars' being the value thereof in case a delivery could not be had, together with forty-seven dollars and twenty-five cents damages for the detention of said property and also eighty-nine dollars costs of said action.
*72The plaintiff caused execution in due form to be issued upon said judgment, which was returned unsatisfied.
The said Bid well appealed from said judgment to the court of appeals and executed with sureties an undertaking pursuant to sections 334 and 335 of the Code.
The plaintiff thereupon brought this action upon the said undertaking given under section 211 of the Code.
The single question presented by the demurrer is whether the proceedings are stayed during the pendency of the appeal to the court of appeals.
The defendants contend that an undertaking pursuant to sections 334 and 335 stays the proceedings. The plaintiff contends that the undertaking should also have been under .336 to operate as a stay of proceedings.
The plan of the Code is thus .declared: “ the distinction between actions at law and suits in equity and the forms of all such actions and suits heretofore existing are abolished ; and there-shall be in this state hereafter but one form of action for the enforcement or protection of private rights and the redress of private wrongs, which shall be denominated a civil action.”—(Code, section 69.)
Writs of error in civil actions are abolished and appeals substituted. (Section 323.)
The provisions of chapter 2, entitled “ Appeals to the Court óf Appeals,” (sec. 334, &c.) in relation to the security to be given upon an appeal to the court of appeals to make the appeal effectual and to stay proceedings, are taken substantially from the provisions of the Revised Statutes'of 1830, prescribing the security to be given on appeals from the court of chancery to the court of errors (2 R. S. 605). And they are made applicable to all actions whether theretofore known as legal or equitable.
The Codifiers in their note to section 334 say: “ this section and those following relating to securities on appeals, are taken substantially from the Revised Statutes, with such *73modifications however both in language and effect as to make them conformable to our general plan (2 R. S., 605, 8.)
The language of the Code is frequently loose and does not show that carefulness and accuracy which so great a change should have secured.
It becomes our duty to apply to legal actions, provisions couched in language more easily understood when applied to equitable actions, but intended to be applicable to both kinds of actions.
Looking then at all of the provisions of the Code, I think it was intended that section 336 should embrace a judgment for the recovery of the possession of personal property in the action of “ claim and delivery of personal property.”
, One of the cases provided for in section 336 is when “the judgment directs the delivery of personal property”
The form of judgment in the action of “ claim and delivery of personal property” is prescribed by the Code, (section 277.)
If the property has been delivered to the plaintiff, the judgment is “for the possession,” if it has not been delivered to him, it is “for the recovery of the possession, or the value thereof, in case a delivery cannot be had,” and “for the damages” (in either case) “for the detention.” (Fitzhugh agt. Warren 9 N. Y. R., 559.)
The Code prescribes the form of executions upon different judgments,—(Section 289). The fourth subdivision of that section reads, “If it (execution) be for the delivery of the possession of real or personal property, it shall require the officer to deliver the possession of the same to the party entitled thereto, and may at the same time require the officer to satisfy any costs, damages or rents and profits recovered by the same judgment, put of the personal property of the party against whom it was rendered, and the value'of the property (personal and not real I suppose), for which judgment *74was recovered, to he specified therein, if a delivery thereof cannot he had.
The language of sections 207, 208, 211 and 215 tends to show that the Code deems a judgment like the one under consideration in an action of “ claim and delivery of personal property,” to be one u directing the delivery of personal property.
The judgment under consideration is “a judgment directing the delivery of personal property,” and also “ a judgment directing the. payment of money.
I am of the opinion that the undertaking given on the • appeal to the court of appeals, did not stay proceedings, and that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment on his demurrer to the answer.