By the Court,
Makcy, J.. The principal questions m this cage re]ate t0 alleged defects in the declaration. The plaintiffs in error seem to have applied to it the rules of pleading in a replevin suit, and to have confounded them with those relating to suits on replevin bonds.
It was not, I apprehend, at all necessary for the plaintiff below to aver in his declaration the making of an affidavit of the amount of rent due, as required by the act concerning distresses for rent in the city of New-York, (Statutes, vol, 3," 1§6 c.) In an avowry in a replevin suit it may be necessary, but not in declaring on the replevin bond. The same remark disposes of the objection to the declaration, that it does not allege the title or estate of which the defendant in the action of replevin was seised. This is requisite in an avowry, but not in the declaration in a suit on a replevin bond.
The declaration should set out concisely all the proceed-, ings in the replevin suit, and the failure in fulfilling the condition of the bond ; but it is not necessary to state the avowry or cognizance. (Saunders on Pleading & Ev 769, 70. 5 T. R. 195. 2 Chit. Pl. 460.) In the suit on the replevin bond, the court cannot entertain questions as to the sufficiency of the pleadings in the replevin suit, especially as these pleadings are not spread, and by long practice and approved mode of pleading, are not required to be spread upon the record in the suit on the replevin bond.
It is urged, on the part of the plaintiffs in error, that the defendant should have stated in his declaration in the court below the avowry or cognizance, as otherwise it cannot appear that he was entitled to an assignment of the bond. Whatever force this objection might have in proceedings under the British statute, I think it can have none in proceedings under our replevin act. The statute of 11 Geo. 2. ch. 19, sec. 23, authorises the assignment of the replevin bond to the avowant or person making cognizance; but our statute is broader; it allows assignments to defendants, avowants and *59Gognizors. (1 R. L. 94.) All that is necessary, therefore, to shew upon the record, to entitle a person to prosecute in his own name upon a replevin bond is, that he was the defendant in the replevin suit, and had a judgment therein.
It is further urged, that the defendant having taken the common law judgment for the return of the replevied goods, and having neglected to avail himself of the statute providing for an inquiry by the jury into the amount of rent in arrear and the value of the goods distrained, and to take judgment in the replevin suit therefor, must proceed according to the common law, against the sheriff to get a return of the goods» and is not at liberty to avail himself of the provision of the statute authorizing the assignment of the bond.
There are many cases in the books to shew that where the plaintiff takes judgment for the return of the goods, he is entitled to an assignment of the replevin bond. The case of Gwillin v. Holbrook, (1 Bos. & Pul. 410,) where the judgment in replevin was in this case, simply for a return, the plaintiff prosecuted as the assignee of the replevin bond, and his right to sue in that character was not questioned. In a late case, Turner v. Turner, (2 Brod. & Bing. 107,) the plaintiff, after a judgment for the return of the goods, took an assignment of the bond; and the court say, that although it appears from the declaration that a return of the goods, &c. was awarded, yet the avowant has his election whether he will proceed by a writ de retorno hdbendo, or by the course he has pursued; namely, the issuing a writ of inquiry under the statute. It is true, that in this case, in addition to taking the common law judgment de rotorno hdbendo, the plaintiff had executed a writ of inquiry, and had judgment for his costs and the arrears of rent. This case not only shews that after the plaintiff has taken the common law judgment for a return, the replevin bond may be assigned; but it refutes the position of the plaintiffs in error, that the proceedings under the statute to assess damages and award execution, are a supersedeas or a defeasance of the bond. The court expressly say, that it is clear from the language of the act, that the legislature meant to give the avowant, or person making cognizance, a further and additional security, and to *60place him in a better situation than he was in under the law as p st0od before the act was passed. Our statute does not confine this advantage to an avowant or cognizor, but extends it to every defendant in replevin incase of a distress r J i tor rent.
Before the act authorizing the assignment of replevin bonds, defendants in replevin suits who had obtained judgments, were driven to pursue their remedies by intricate proceedings against sheriffs, if- insufficient pledges had been taken ; or to carry on their suits, in case the pledges were sufficient, in the name of the sheriffs. To remove -the delays and inconveniences of such a course of proceeding, the act was passed. The object of allowing the assignment was, to aid in enforcing the common law judgment, and not merely, as is contended on the part of the plaintiffs, to procure the appéárance of the plaintiff in replevin. The books are full of cases in which it appears that assignments of bonds have been taken, and suits maintained upon them in the name of the assignees, where the plaintiffs in the replevin suits have appeared therein, and even after judgments have been obtained against them according to the provisions of the statute of 17 Charles 2 ch. 7. In Perreau v. Bevan, (5 Barn. & Cress. 284,) after a full discussion and an extensive view of the cases, it was decided that the plaintiff in a replevin bond suit having elected to proceed under the statute, and after he had actually proceeded under it to execution, was not confined to that remedy alone, but might take an assignment of the replevin bond and go against the sureties, or might proceed against the sheriff (who in that case had lost the bond) for his' negligence in losing it.
Another objection urged against the -sufficiency of the declaration is, that it does not shew a forfeiture of the bond. The bond, it is said, is not forfeited till there has been a default in not returning the property, and that the sureties are not bound to return it until properly called on for that purpose by a writ de retorno habendo. This objection proceeds upon a mistaken notion as to the condition of the bond. It is not merely for the return of the goods, but it is that the plaintiff in replevin shall prosecute *61his suit with effect. The bond is forfeited, and the defendant in the replevin suit may take an assignment of it when he has obtained judgment against the plaintiff in the replevin suit. (5 Barn. & Cres. 284. Carthew, 248. 519. 1 Bos. & Pul. 140. 2 Wilson, 41.)
Having adjudged that the objections to the declaration are not well founded, the plea is next to be considered. If the bond is forfeited, as the authorities show it is, by the unsuccessful prosecution of the replevin suit, the plea, which only sets up a return of the goods to the sheriff according to the condition of the bond, is no answer to the action. It does not answer for the non-fulfilment of that part of the condition which relates to prosecuting the replevin suit with effect. Besides, the plea does not, I think, state a sufficient return. The return mentioned in the bond is not a re-delivery of the goods to the sheriff; but is the return orderered by the judgment of the court in the replevin suit; and that judgment is a return to the person from whom they had been taken by the sheriff.
The only remaining question to be considered in this case is whether, there is any error in entering judgment for the penalty of the bond without assigning breaches and assessing damages. If a replevin bond is within the operation of the 7th section of the act for the amendment of the law, (1 R. L. 518,) the entry of the judgement, as it is on the record in this case, without assigning breaches and assessing damages, is erroneous. Replevin bonds have been put on the same footing with bail bonds, and are considered not to be within the meaning of that act (3 Maule & Selw. 155. Dunlap, 390.) It is also stated by Mr. Sellon, that the penalty of the bond, if forfeited, is a debt, and judgment must be entered to the full "extent of it. (2 Sellon, 177.) The sureties are answerable to the amount of the goods replevied, and this amount is ascertained before the bond is given; there is, therefore no necessity for a jury to inquire into the matter.
*62There is another reason for exempting replevin bonds from the operation of the act for the amendment of the law. The very act which directs the bond to be given, and makes ^ ass’Sna^e’ provides, “ that the court may by rule give sucli relief to the parties upon such bond as shall be agreeable to justice.” (1 R. L. 94.)
I am therefore of opinion that the court decided correctly, that the plea was insufficient; and that there is no error in entering the judgment in the court below to the full amount of the bond.
Judgment affirmed.