This is a motion to dismiss appellant's appeal, which grows out of the following facts: Appellant's notice of appeal from an order of court made and given on the thirteenth day of March, 1899, was served and filed on the fifteenth day of March, 1899. On the fifth day thereafter — that is, on the twentieth day of March, 1899 — the appellant procured to *Page 71 be executed an undertaking upon appeal reciting that, whereas Margaret J. Bullard has appealed to the supreme court, etc., that in consideration of the premises and of such appeal, etc. This undertaking bore date the twentieth day of March, 1899, and the jurat of the notary thereon is of the same date. On the twenty-first day of March, 1899, appellant's attorney served and filed a second notice of appeal, and on the following day, March 22, 1899, this undertaking was filed. The first appeal had lapsed for failure to file the undertaking within the statutory period, and this motion to dismiss is directed against the second appeal upon the ground that no undertaking thereon had been filed. To this appellant makes answer that until the filing of the undertaking it has no force, effect, or validity, and that when filed it is an undertaking in reference to the condition of things at that time existing; therefore, that this particular undertaking filed upon March 22d must be construed to have reference to and to be an undertaking upon the appeal, notice of which was given upon March 21st. But we think this position untenable. It is required of a valid undertaking upon appeal that it shall refer with definiteness to the particular appeal to which it relates, and, if it fails so to do, it is ambiguous and insufficient. (Sharon v. Sharon, 67 Cal. 185; Home etc. Co. v.Wilkins, 71 Cal. 626; Pignaz v. Burnett, 121 Cal. 292.) At the time when the sureties upon this undertaking entered into it but one appeal had been attempted, but one notice of appeal had been given, and the undertaking clearly and distinctly refers to that. It is the right of the surety to stand upon the strict letter of his undertaking. He can be held to no different contract from that into which he has entered. In this case the undertaking of the sureties was to stand responsible for damages and costs which might follow the prosecution of a particular appeal clearly referred to in their undertaking. By the construction which appellant seeks the undertaking would be wrested from its natural language and held to apply, not to that appeal which was subsisting at the time the contract was entered into, but to another appeal, no step in which had been taken at the time the sureties executed their bond. It is true, as appellant says, that the attorney became the agent of the sureties for the purpose of filing the undertaking, and that it takes validity and *Page 72 effect from the date of the filing. But the agency of the attorney was to file the undertaking in the particular appeal to which it made reference, and the validity which the undertaking has as of the date of its filing is a validity in reference only to the particular appeal in question.
We conclude, therefore, that there has been no undertaking as required by law filed after the notice of appeal of March 21st, and that this motion to dismiss should be granted.
It is ordered accordingly.
McFarland, J., and Beatty, C.J., concurred.