Opinion by
Head, J.,The learned court below made, absolute a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense, and from that order comes this appeal.
The plaintiff, sometime ago, had instituted an action of replevin in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County to recover possession of certain personal property. As a result of that action he finally obtained a money judgment against Lintott, the principal in the bond, upon which the present action is founded. That judgment remains unopened, unappealed from, and unreversed. It, therefore, finally adjudicated the right as between the plaintiff and the particular defendant named.
In the action of replevin referred to, the defendant chose to give a counterbond and retain the possession of the property sought to be recovered. In that bond the two remaining defendants in the present action became sureties for the principal defendant. The plaintiff having, as stated, obtained a final judgment against the principal in the bond, then brought the present action in the Municipal Court founded on the said judgment, to recover from the sureties the amount thereof. An affidavit of defense was filed by the sureties which, upon consideration, was deemed insufficient by the learned court below.
We are unable to escape the conclusion that the action of the court below was right and proper. The reasons for this conclusion, or some of them at least, may be briefly set forth. The whole of the defense advanced is nothing more than an attempt on the part of the sureties to avail themselves of the benefit of a certain claim which, as they allege, their principal had against the plaintiff in *403the action. It nowhere appears that such claim, if any there be, was ever assigned or transferred to the sureties. If it existed at all at the institution of the present action, it was the property of the principal defendant and still remains so.
But even if it had been formally assigned to these sureties, it must be clear their rights could rise no higher than the right of the assignor, the defendant in the original action, against whom final judgment has gone. So far as he is concerned, this action is analogous to one of scire facias sur judgment, where it is well known no defense may be advanced save one that has originated since the entry of the original judgment. As we pointed out when the case was formerly before us in another aspect, Commonwealth for use v. Lintott, 64 Pa. Superior Ct. 328, the original action of replevin furnished to the defendant therein a complete remedy to adjudicate any claim he may have had against the plaintiff for repairs, storage, etc., connected with the automobile which was the subject of that action. He declined to advance any such claim and allowed a money judgment to be obtained against him in a court which had full jurisdiction of the entire question and, in a form of action, that furnished him a complete remedy for the adjudication of such a claim. We were of opinion then and we are now, that any such claim on the part of the defendant in the action of replevin was presumably adjudicated in that action and, therefore, extinguished by the judgment which was the end of it. ’
Prom this it follows that the principal in the present bond could make no such defense in the present action, as the one here set up by his sureties. If he could not make it, it is impossible to see how their rights can be any higher or greater than would be his. Were the Municipal Court in the present action to undertake to adjudicate and determine that the plaintiff could recover nothing because of what is advanced in the affidavit, it would amount to a nullification of the final judgment of *404another court of at least equal jurisdiction, because it would deny to the plaintiff the fruits of such judgment as against those who solemnly undertook to make good any default of their principal in the payment of any sum that might be determined to be due from him to the plaintiff in the action of replevin.
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.