Washington County brought an action against the Weiser National Bank to recover the sum of $137,866.32 upon a depository bond, the bond being signed by the Bank as principal and by a large number of individuals as sureties. In addition to the Bank the individuals who signed as sureties were made defendants. A writ of attachment was issued, and the property of the defendants *Page 621 attached. The main action was tried before the court and a jury and judgment entered, January 15, 1925, in favor of defendants. Notice of appeal from the judgment was served, and filed in the district court March 4, 1925. On May 4, 1925, on motion of defendants the court entered an order dissolving the attachment, from which this appeal was taken.
Appellant relies upon one specification of error, viz., that the court erred in dissolving the attachment pending the appeal.
From an examination of the record it is noted that the appeal from the judgment entered in the main action, which was in favor of respondents, defendants in the court below, was filed 49 days after the entry of judgment. The notice of appeal was not accompanied by the filing of an undertaking, the county being relieved from the necessity of so doing by the provisions of C. S., sec. 7238. (2 Cal. Jur. 364, sec. 142.)
Under the plain provisions of C. S., sec. 6809, a judgment in favor of defendant dissolves an attachment, a holding adhered to by the courts of California in passing upon a similar statute. (Primm v. Superior Court, 3 Cal. App. 208,84 P. 786; Loveland v. Alvord C. Q. M. Co., 76 Cal. 562, 18 P. 682;Hamilton v. Bell, 123 Cal. 93, 55 P. 758.) If, however, an appeal be perfected within the time prescribed by C. S., sec. 7159, the attachment in such case may be continued in force. The latter section provides for the stay of all proceedings in the court below whenever an appeal is duly taken, but specifically excludes from the operation of such provisions the continuation of an attachment, unless an undertaking be executed by the appellant in double the amount of the debt claimed, and the appeal be perfected within 20 days after the entry of the order appealed from.
C. S., secs. 6809 and 7159, are to be construed together, and so construed, an attachment may be continued in force pending an appeal by filing the appropriate undertaking as prescribed in the latter section, and by perfecting the appeal within 20 days after the entry of judgment in *Page 622 favor of defendant. Thus the dissolvent force of the judgment, under C. S., sec. 6809, is neutralized by the perfected appeal, provided the additional undertaking is filed and the appeal perfected within the time specified in C. S., sec. 7159. (Primm v. Superior Court, supra.)
It is conceded that appellant county would not be required to execute an undertaking as prescribed in C. S., sec. 7159, in order to have the lien of the attachment preserved pending the appeal of the main action, but there is nothing to justify a construction of the statute so as to relieve it from a compliance therewith in regard to the time in which the notice of appeal must have been filed, if the attachment were to remain in force. Appellant was given the option either to take the steps which would preserve the lien of the attachment or not. (Flagg v. Puterbaugh, 101 Cal. 583, 36 P. 95.) The fact, therefore, of its failure to serve and file notice of appeal within 20 days after the entry of judgment in favor of respondents must be held, ipso facto, to have worked automatically a dissolution of the attachment. It was unnecessary for respondents to move for a dissolution of the attachment upon the failure of appellant, within 20 days after the entry of judgment in favor of respondents to serve and file notice of appeal therefrom, since that purpose was accomplished by appellant's failure to act and the operation of the statute. The appeal can, therefore, serve no useful purpose, and must be held for naught. Costs awarded to respondents.
Wm. E. Lee, C. J., Givens and Taylor, JJ., and Hartson, D. J., concur. *Page 623