City Bank v. Bangs

The Chancellor.

The objection that this application should have been made to the vice chancellor, is not well taken in the present case. The fund in controversy having’ been paid into court while the suit was pending before the chancellor, it can only be paid out upon his order, founded upon the vice chancellor’s decree.

I think, however, that the counsel for Bangs is under a mistake in supposing that the appellants were required to give security for the payment of the fund in court, in order to stay the proceedings upon the decree. The statute is indeed general in its terms, that if the decree directs the payment of money, a bond with sureties shall be given, in double the sum decreed to *287be paid, in order to make the appeal a stay of proceedings on the decree. But this provision of the revised statutes, evidently was only intended to apply to those cases in which some of the parties in the cause were directed, by the decree, to pay money, or were personally charged with the payment of a loss which had arisen, or which might arise, in relation to a fund in court. In this case there is no probability of any loss upon the fund in court, except such as may arise from the difference in interest between the legal rate and that which the fund now produces. And such loss maybe recovered, under, the present bonds, as damages to be awarded against the appellants on the appeal; provided the penalties of the bonds are sufficient to cover such damages, as well as the costs on the appeah This court has probably erred in adopting a rule by which the penalty in the appeal bond is fixed at an amount which, in many cases, will be insufficient to cover the costs and damages that may be awarded to the respondent. It is sufficient, however, for the appellants to show that they have complied with the standing rules of the court.

The respondent also objects that the appellants have not given security, as required by the eighty-second section of the statute, (2 R. S. 606,) for the payment of the amounts directed to be paid by them, respectively, for their proportions of the master’s bill. This objection appears to be well taken. A decree directing a party to a suit in chancery to pay costs to the adverse party, out of his own property, or out of a fund in his hands, is a decree directing the payment of money. In the analogous case of a writ of error, to reverse a judgment where nothing but costs have been awarded against the party suing out such writ, the plaintiff in error must give security for the payment of the costs recovered against him in the court below, if he wishes the writ of error to operate as a stay of the proceedings of the adverse party for the collection of such costs. (2 R. S. 595, § 27.) And there is no reason why a different rule should be adopted as to the stay of proceedings in this court for the collection of costs. An appeal from the decree in such a case does not therefore stay the proceedings of the adverse party, so far as relates to the collection of the costs, unless a bond for the stay of proceedings *288.is given ; either separately or in connection with the usual appeal bond. If the costs have not been taxed, at the time of entering, the appeal, the officer who approves the bond for the stay of proceedings, must fix the penalty thereof in such a sum as he shall consider to be at least equal to double the probable amount ofthe costs directed to be paid by the decree appealed from. And where such bond is taken ill connection with the ordinary appeal bond, required by the eighteenth section of the statute, the amount of the penalty must be increased accordingly. In that case, also, the condition of the bond must be made to conform to both sections of the statute; so as to ensure the payment of the costs, or other sum of money, directed to be paid by the appellant, in the court below, as" well as the costs and damages occasioned by the appeal.

As this is a new question arising upon the construction of a recent statute, and as these appeals have been brought in' good faith, and not for the mere purpose of delay, the appellants are to have twenty days to give additional bonds, to stay the proceedings against them respectively, upon the decree. Such bonds to be approved Of, as to the amount, and the sufficiency of the sureties, by the vice chancellor of the first circuit. And neither party is to have costs as against the other, on this application.