
    Upton v. Philips & Howe.
    1. Error Coram Nobis. JSrror Apparent on the Hecord A writ of error coram nobis is not the proper remedy, where the error is apparent on the record.
    2. Replevy Bond. Good under Sections 3512, 773 of Gode. Replevy bonds may, at the election of the party, be given in double the amount of the debt or demand, and to perform the judgment of the court. In a bond so conditioned, the decree against the surety to pay the debt is correct. A bond not fixing the value of the property, or providing for its return, cannot be construed to be for the return of the property. Courts cannot look to hard cases. The legal result of the terms of the bond is to be enforced.
    PROM MONROE.
    Appeal -in error from the Circuit Court of Monroe county, January Term, 1871. E. T. Hall, J.
    Brown & Hicks, for plaintiff in error:
    1st. Where judgment is rendered by motion against a party having' a real defense, (no matter what may be the nature of that defense), and who had no notice of the motion, the party aggrieved is entitled, by express statute, to the remedy of a writ of coram nobis. Code, sec. 3117. And see to same effect, Gunn v. Neal, 2 Heis., 318.
    2d. Dixon, (with his surety), kept his covenant^ by abiding by and performing the order and judgment of the court, (in his favor), at September Term, 1867, as he had undertaken to do.
    
      3d. The final judgment should have given the ob-ligors the option of discharging the penalty of the bond, by Dixon surrendering himself into custody. The principle of the case of Polk v. Plvmmer, 2 Hum,, 500, (that covenants superadded to those required by statute may be rejected), does not apply where the covenants are in the disjunctive.
    Replevy bonds are subject to the rules prescribed in sections 773, 774 of the Code; i. e. we are es-topped from denying the validity of the bond and of the proceedings in which it was given, and upon the conditions being broken, Philips & Howe would be ■entitled to all the remedies which they would be entitled to upon a bond executed in conformity to the statute.
    We do not deny the validity of the bond, nor of the proceedings in which it was. given. Neither do we deny that if the conditions of the bond have in fact been broken, Philips & Howe are entitled to the same remedies, (such as a judgment by motion), as they would be entitled to upon the breach of the condition of a bond in strict conformity to the statute. But has the condition of the bond been broken ? That is the question, and not what is the remedy of Philips & Howe, if it has been broken. Philips & Howe received the benefit of the property attached — the saw I mill and the house and lot, and various other sums. After getting all this and the face of their bond besides, they ought not to complain.
    4th. The words “satisfied the order and judgment of the court,” etc., were intended to mean that the property attached should be forthcoming to satisfy any order of sale made by the court, agreeably to sections 3514, 3535 of the Code. The property was forthcoming and its proceeds applied to the judgments. This is all that could have been required under a bond in strict conformity to the statute. Code, sections 3514, 3535.
    Beian & Richmond, for defendants, said:
    The facts in this case necessary to be noticed are these: Philips & Howe, in an action for debt brought by them against William M. Dixon in the Circuit Court of Monroe county, attached certain property of said Dixon, which was returned to Dixon upon the execution of a replevy bond made by said Dixon and signed by plaintiff in error, as security. Upon the trial of said cause, Philips & Howe obtained judgment against Dixon, and judgment was rendered upon the replevy bond against the plaintiff in error for the amount of said judgment.
    Afterwards the plaintiff in error filed his petition for writ of error eorarn nobis, and a supersedeas issued to stay the collection of the judgment. Defendants in error moved the court to dismiss the petition, which was overruled. Thereupon plaintiff in error made an assignment of errors, to which defendants in error demurred. The Circuit Court sustained the demurrer and dismissed the petition, from which an appeal in error was prayed by Upton to this court.
    The court below erred in not dismissing the petition upon motion. The ground upon which plaintiff in error asks to have judgment reviewed or reversed is, that the judgment was rendered upon said bond by motion, and that he had no notice of the same. A surety in a replevin bond is bound by the result of the litigation with his principal. And if the court had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties, he is bound by the orders and judgment. See Wells v. Griffin, 2 Head, 568.
    Defendants in error insisc that upon the execution of said bond, plaintiff in error became a party to the proceedings, and was not entitled to notice, and by the provisions of the Code of Tennessee, see sections 3513 and 3514, the court properly rendered the judgment upon the bond, hence plaintiff in error did not bring himself within one of the three classes of cases provided in the Code for the correction of errors by writ of error aoram nobis. See Code, section 3116.
    2. The dmurrer was well taken to the errors assigned in the judgment. The writ of error aoram nobis only lies for error of fact upon which judgment is founded. In this case, the plaintiff in error' stated in his petition and assignment of errors, no fact contradicting the facts recited in the record, upon which the judgment was rendered.
    The errors complained of are, if anything, errors of law arisiug from a wrong construction of the bond upon which judgment was rendered, and are also apparent upon the face of the record, and must have been passed upon by the court at the time of the rendition of said judgment. Defendants in error insist that all other questions aside, they are entitled, upon a legal construction of said bond, and under the provisions of the statute, to a judgment upon said bond, and submit the following propositions of law:
    Illegal or senseless conditions in a bond may be rejected, and the court will so construe the bond as to make it effective for the purpose for which it was given.
    A bond will be construed most strongly against the obligor, where it is capable of more than one construction.
    The court, in construing a writing, will be governed by the intention and object of the parties in executing the same.
    Obligors on replevin bonds in attachment proceedings are estopped to deny the validity thereof. Stephens v. The Green County Iron Co., decided at the present-term of this court. The same principle will apply in this case.
    ' The statute settles the right of the defendants in. error to a judgment upon said bond. Section 3512 of the Code of Tennessee, provides that replevy bonds are subject to the rules prescribed in sections 773 and 774 of the Code.
    These sections provide that a bond which is not in the penalty payable or conditioned as prescribed by law, or is otherwise defective, such bond is not void or voidable, but stands in the place of the original bond, etc. The Legislature evidently intended by those provisions of the Code, to estop parties to a bond, upon the faith of which they had obtained property, from setting up any technical defense to ■ avoid the payment of the same.
    
      There was no error in not providing in the judgment, that the same might be satisfied by a return of the property attached, because the penalty of the bond was not in double the value of the property attached, but in double the amount of the debt due at the time. Section 3514 of the Code of Tennessee evidently contemplates that where a judgment has been rendered for the full penalty of the bond, it can only be satisfied by surrendering the property attached, in case the bond is in .double the value of the property so attached, as provided in section 3509; but in case the bond is in double the amount of the debt, and judgment is rendered for the penalty, then the same can be satisfied by payment of the debt. In this case the judgment was taken for the amount of the debt, instead of the penalty of the bond — the bond having been given in double the amount of the debt, as nearly as could be calculated at the time. Consequently, substantial justice is done — at least there is no error of which the plaintiff in error can complain.
   McFakgand, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Philips & Howe sued W. M. Dixon in an action of debt, and afterwards sued out an ancillary attachment, which was levied upon a steam saw-mill and a house, as the property of the defendant. Thereupon, Dixon, with the plaintiff in error Upton as his surety, entered into a replevin bond, and. the property was released to Dixon.

Upon the trial Philips & Howe recovered a judgment against Dixon for $2,909.01 and costs, and the court rendered judgment for this amount against said Dixon, and Upton as surety upon the bond, and awarded execution. Thereupon Upton sued out a writ of error ooram nobis, and assigned what he assumed to be errors of fact, in the proceeding — the substance of which was, that the judgment is not authorized by the bond. A demurrer was sustained to this assignment of error, and the writ of error ooram nobis dismissed ; and from this judgment Upton has appealed in error, and at the same time he has by writ of error brought up the original cause, and the questions involved are therefore before us in both aspects. "Without discussing the matter -at length, we are of opinion that a writ of error ooram nobis is not the mode of correcting an error, of the character assumed to have been committed in these proceedings. The relief granted upon this proceeding is confined to errors of fact occurring in proceedings of which the person seeking relief had no notice, or where he had no opportunity to defend, or was prevented from making his defense by accident, surprise, mistake, or fraud, unmixed with fraud upon his own part. Code, section 3116; 1 Swan, 341.

The replevin bond constitutes part of the record, Code 3513, and whether or not" the bond authorized the judgment rendered in this cause, is a question arising clearly upon the record, and did not depend upon any fact outside of the record and not then known to the court — and in truth it is not alleged that any such fact existed; but the entire substance of the defense is, that the judgment was not the one authorized by law upon the bond. Therefore we hold that the writ of error coram nobis was properly dismissed.

The question then arises upon the record of the original cause. Code, sec. 3509, enacts that “ The defendant to an attachment suit may always replevy the property attached, by giving bond with good security, payable to the plaintiff, in double the amount of the plaintiff’s demand, or at the defendant’s option, in double the value of the property attached, conditioned to pay the debt, interest and costs, or the value of the property attached, with interest, as the case may be, in the event he shall be cast in the suit.”

Section 3510 provides, that the officer levying the attachment shall take the bond, fix the value of the property and judge of the sufficiency of the security. Section 3514 is as follows: “The court may enter up judgment or decree upon the bond, in the event of recovery by the plaintiff, against the defendant and his sureties for the penalty of the bond, to be satisfied by the delivery of the property or its value, or the payment of the recovery, as the case may be.”

We understand these provisions to mean that the defendant has the right to have his property restored to him upon giving a bond — that bond might be, at the defendant’s election, either in double the amount of the plaintiff’s demand and conditioned to pay the debt, interest and costs in the event of the plaintiff’s recovery; or it may be in double the value of the property attached, conditioned to pay the value of the property attached, in the case the plaintiff recover.. This option is given to the defendant for his benefit; for it may happen that property of a very large ■amount may be attached for a very small demand. In such case the defendant, in order to obtain a surrender of his property, shall not be- required to give a bond in double the value of the entire property, and conditioned to pay the value; but he may have his property returned, upon giving bond in double the amount of the plaintiff’s demand, and conditioned to pay the same, if recovered. On the other hand, a very small amount of property may be attached for a very large debt, or various articles of property may be attached — in such case the defendant is not required to give bond for the whole debt, but may have his property returned upon giving bond for double its value.

In the event the plaintiff recover, the judgment to be rendered upon the bond depends upon the terms and conditions of the same, whether it be of the one case or the other as above explained. In either case the judgment must be for the penalty of the bond. If the bond be in double the amount of the plaintiff’s demand, conditioned to pay the same, interest and costs, then the judgment should be for the penalty of the bond, to be satisfied by the payment of the recovery. If the bond be for double the value of the property attached, conditioned to pay its value, then the judgment should be for the penalty of the bond, to be satisfied by delivery of the property or its value. •This is the plain and obvious meaning of the sections of the statute quoted.

The question then, is, under this construction what may be the proper judgment to render upon the bond in this case ? The plaintiff’s demand, as set forth in his affidavit, was $2,563.35 and interest. The bond is payable to the- plaintiffs, Philips & Howe, and in the penalty of $5,200. The condition is as follows: “The condition of this obligation is such, that whereas the property of said Wm. M. Dixon has been attached at the suit of the said Philips <fe Howe, and the same is returned to him on the execution of this bond. Now if the said ¥m. M. Dixon shall appear at the next Circuit Court for Monroe county, on the 2d Monday of September next, at the return of said attachment, and abide by and perform and satisfy the order and judgment of said court or surrender himself into custody, then the above obligation to be void.”

It is very clear that this bond is not in accordance with the requirements of the statute in either respect.

By section 3512 of the Code, it is provided that replevy bonds are subject to the rules prescribed in sections 773 and 774 of the Code. Section 773 provides that official bonds, not in the penalty payable or conditioned as prescribed by law, or is otherwise defective, are not void, but stands in the place of the official bond, and subject to the same remedies. Section 774 provides, that where an officer or other person, who is required' by law or the course of judicial proceedings to give a bond for the performance of an act or the discharge of a duty, receives money "or property upon the faith of such bond, he or his sureties are estopped to deny the validity of the bond or. the legality of the proceedings under which the money or property was obtained.”

Under these provisions it is clear, as we have held at the present term in the case of Stephens v. The Greene County Iron Company, that the bond is valid, and the defendant and his security are estopped to deny the validity or proceedings, and the plaintiffs in the cause are entitled to the same remedies as if the bond were in accordance -with the statute. But the question remains, is this to be taken as a bond for double the plaintiffs’ demand, conditioned to pay the debt, or a bond in double the value of the property attached, conditioned to pay the value of the property or return the same? As we have seen, the law directs the officer to take the bond, to fix the value of the property, and he should perhaps fix the value of .each article of property separately. In this case, the bond does not show whether the penalty is the double value of the propty attached, nor does it show that any value was fixed upon the property. It does show that the penalty is a few dollars more than double the amount of the plaintiff’s demand, as stated in his affidavit. It is argued that Dixon was ready to comply with the terms of his bond, that is, appear at the return term of the attachment, and abide by the judgment of the court, or surrender himself into custody. It is said that at the return term of the attachment the only .judgment rendered by the court in the ease, was to sustain a demurrer, and Dixon was ready to abide by this judgment or surrender himself into custody.

This construction of the bond would render it nugatory and deprive the parties of the remedy which the law gives when the bond is properly executed. These provisions, when thus construed, must be rejected, especially the provision that he shall surrender himself into custody — this is unnecessary, and without meaning.

The defendant has seen proper to execute a bond in double the amount of the plaintiff’s demand; the condition that the law required to be annexed to this bond was, to pay the plaintiff’s demand, if he recover. The condition, of the bond is, that the defendant shall abide by and perform and satisfy the judgment of the court, which, in ordinary acceptation, is understood to mean, that he shall pay the judgment, if one is recovered. Was it error in the court not to affix to this judgment a condition, that it should be satisfied ;as to the surety by a return of the property or its value? If there was anything in the bond from which we could construe it to be conditioned to pay the value ■of the property or return the same, then this might be done; but there is no language that will bear this construction, and we are constrained to hold this to be a bond .in double the plaintiffs’ demand, conditioned to pay the same, if the plaintiffs recover.

It is said that this is a case of great hardship— that in reality the entire property attached has been ■sold under execution and applied to the judgment, leaving a large balance due, and that the plaintiffs ■have had the benefit of all the property they held under their attachment. This is a hardship that we •cannot relieve against. The liability of the parties depends upon the bond and the law regulating the same.

If they executed a bond covering the plaintiff’s demand, and conditioned to pay the same, when in reality the property attached was only of half value sufficient to pay it — in the absence of fraud or other equitable defense, there can be no relief.

Affirm the judgment.  