This is an action on a bond to dissolve an attachment given in the case of Ella F. Patch v. Maurice J. Cashman and others. The bond is joint and several and is signed by Cashman and Pond, copartners, as principals, and by the defendants Robbins and O’Connell as sureties. The original action was brought against the defendants Pond and Cashman to recover the amount paid them by the plaintiff for the purchase of certain stocks, on the ground that the defendants made false representations *501to her. The original declaration alleged certain oral misrepresentations made to the plaintiff by one Annis, an agent of the defendants. Afterwards an amendment to the declaration was allowed which added other counts relating to' the same transaction, wherein it was alleged that certain other misrepresentations were made by means of printed, circulars exhibited by the defendants to the plaintiff.
Before the trial in the original suit, Pond, by consent of the plaintiff and without notice or knowledge or assent of the defendants Robbins or O’Connell, filed an amendment to his answer, in which he set up for the first time that he was not a partner with Cashman. The original answer and the amendment were filed by Pond after the bond had been executed and delivered. The trial judge in the original action found that Pond was not a partner and judgment was entered in his favor, and against Cashman.
The bond given by Pond and Cashman as principals described themselves as copartners and Robbins and O ’Connell as sureties. The condition of the bond is as follows: “Now, therefore, if the said Cashman, Et al shall within thirty days after the final judgment in the aforesaid action, pay to the plaintiff therein the amount, if any, which she shall recover in such action . . . then this obligation shall be void, otherwise it shall be and remain in full force and virtue.” The terms of the bond do not expressly require that the final judgment shall be a judgment against all the defendants in the original action, nor can such a construction be inferred. The judgment required to be obtained is a final judgment “in such action.” It follows that a final judgment against Cashman alone in that action is sufficient to establish liability against the sureties.
It was said by Colt, J., in Leonard v. Speidel, 104 Mass. 356, at pages 359 and 360, “The present case does not show, nor is it perhaps material, what property was attached. The joint property of all, or of any two of the defendants, or the separate property of one or more of them, was subject to attachment. And it may be that only the property of the defendants against whom judgment was rendered was in fact taken. If the separate property of the defendant *502who eventually prevailed was under attachment, and he wished to escape liability upon any judgment which might be had against his codefendants, then in order to dissolve the lien upon his property he should have given a separate bond, to secure only the judgment which might be recovered against him.”
Campbell v. Brown, 121 Mass. 516, was an action on a bond given to dissolve an attachment similar in form to that in the case at bar. In the original action, brought against Brown and Murphy, their joint property was attached. Brown desired the attachment dissolved and gave a bond for that purpose in which Murphy did not join, and the property was delivered to Brown who obtained judgment in his favor, and judgment was obtained against Murphy on default. It was held that Brown was liable on the bond; and it was said at page 519, “By its proper construction, the bond rendered the obligors liable to pay any judgment which the plaintiffs might recover, whether against Brown or Murphy, or both.”
The contention of the sureties that they signed the bond as sureties in consequence of the representation made to them that Cashman and Pond were partners, and that, having signed it under a mistake of fact, they cannot be held liable, cannot be sustained. This defence is not open to them as there is no evidence to show that the plaintiff or any one acting for her made any representations to them respecting the partnership. So far as appears neither the plaintiff nor any one representing her had any knowledge as to whether Cashman and Pond were partners, apart from the fact that they were so described in the bond and from Pond’s statement made in the plaintiff’s presence that he was a partner. It was not material what induced the defendants to sign the bond so long as the plaintiff was not responsible therefor. Hudson v. Miles, 185 Mass. 582. Ford v. Shapiro, 207 Mass. 108, 111. Gordon & Dilworth, Inc. v. Abbott, 258 Mass. 35, 39.
The amendments to the original declaration were allowed without notice to the sureties on the bond. It is the contention of the sureties that such allowance without notice to them introduced a new cause of action, thereby releasing *503them from liability. It is expressly found by the trial judge that the counts in the amendments “related to the same transaction as the one alleged in the original declaration but set up additional representations of fact made by the defendant, particularly by means of certain printed circulars, and the falsity of these representations.” It is manifest that the amendments to the declaration related to the same cause of action for which the suit was originally brought. G. L. c. 231, § 138. The sureties were not thereby released. Smith v. Palmer, 6 Cush. 513. Doran v. Cohen, 147 Mass. 342. Morton v. Shaw, 190 Mass. 554. Savage v. Welch, 246 Mass. 170, 180. Weinstein v. Miller, 251 Mass. 503, 506.
The contention of the sureties that they are discharged by reason of the plaintiff’s consent to the allowance of the motion of the defendant Pond to amend his answer by alleging specifically that he was not a partner of Cashman is not tenable. The allegation in the amendment could have been made as a part of the original answer; the amendment did not. in any way affect or change the legal liability of the sureties. The nature of the claim upon which the suit was brought imposes no different liability on the sureties than it would impose if the amendment had not been presented or allowed.
In Dalton v. Barnard, 150 Mass. 473, the original action was brought against two defendants as copartners; a bond was given to dissolve that attachment in which the defendants were described as principals and one Smith as surety. During the pendency of the original action the plaintiff, without notice to or knowledge of the surety, discontinued as to one of the defendants and obtained judgment against the other. In a suit upon the bond it was held by this court that judgment should be entered for the plaintiff against all of the defendants. It was said at page 475, “Such discontinuance does not change the identity of the action, and the judgment recovered against only one of the defendants is the same judgment described in the bond. Nor is the surety injured, for both defendants are principals in the bond and stand between him and harm. If the surety desired to escape liability for a judgment against only one of the defendants he should have given a bond limited to a *504judgment against both. Poole v. Dyer, 123 Mass. 363. Campbell v. Brown, 121 Mass. 516. All of the defendants are liable upon the bond.” See also Prior v. Pye, 164 Mass. 316. Decisions which hold that a surety on a bond given to dissolve an attachment is discharged by an amendment, allowed after the bond was given, which joins a new party as a plaintiff or defendant without notice to the surety as provided in G. L. c. 231, § 138, are plainly distinguishable from the case at bar. See Tucker v. White, 5 Allen, 322; Mathews Slate Co. v. Sweeney, 219 Mass. 285; Frank v. Millen, 226 Mass. 71; Werlin v. Equitable Surety Co. 227 Mass. 157. The decision in Eveleth v. Burnham, 108 Mass. 374, cited by the defendants, is not pertinent to the facts in the present case.
It follows that the requests of the defendants Robbins and O’Connell which were refused could not properly have been given. The exceptions of the defendants must be overruled .and judgment entered for the plaintiff in accordance with the order of the trial judge.
So ordered.