This is an action by the defendant in an injunction suit to recover of the defendants, who were sureties on the injunction bond, the damages assessed and adjudged in his favor and against the injunction plaintiff. This action is the outgrowth, and we hope the finality, of litigation begun between these parties eleven years ago. For a history of the controversy, we quote from respondent’s brief:
“March 29, 1884, Kersey Coates, assignee of the Mastin Bank, brought an injunction against Elliott,. *581sheriff of Lafayette county, Orville A. Jones, George Nolan, administrator, and others, restraining the sale of certain property. Upon the trial of the cause, on motion of Orville A. Jones to dissolve the injunction, the same was dissolved, when said Jones filed his motion for an assessment of damages on the bond. This was done. On appeal to this court, the judgment dissolving the injunction was approved, but the cause was reversed for the reason that no assessment against the securities could be had, but that the damages sustained by this plaintiff must first be assessed in his favor against the principal, and in the event of its nonpayment, an independent suit thereon against the securities. Coats v. Elliot, 27 Mo. App. 510. In obedience to this mandate, the judgment was so entered up, which, on appeal to this court, was reversed, because the damages accruing after the dissolution of the injunction were included in the judgment. Teasdale v. Jones, 40 Mo. App. 243. But this court directed the entry of the judgment in favor of plaintiff for a certain amount, to be ascertained by calculation. This was done, and on appeal to this court, April 21, 1892, this judgment was affirmed. So that this is the fourth visit of this case to this court. The judgment not being paid, Jones brings this suit against the securities to recover the amount of the judgment assessing his damages.”
The petition sets forth the granting of the injunction thereof on hearing, and the assessment of damages in favor of plaintiff against the plaintiff in the injunction suit for the sum of $2021.86 and costs, by the circuit court of Johnson county, which was appealed by the plaintiff therein to the Kansas City court of appeals, where, on the twenty-first day of April, 1892, judgment was affirmed. The injunction bond is set out in full, *582the condition of which was: “Now, if said plaintiff shall abide the decision which shall be made thereon and pay all sums of money, damages and costs, that shall be adjudged against him, if the injunction shall be dissolved, then this obligation is to be void; otherwise to remain in full force.” It then alleges that there had been a failure by the plaintiff in the injunction, and by the defendants herein, to pay the said judgment or any part thereof.
The defendants demurred to the petition for failure to join, as coplaintiffs, the other obligees in the bond; Demurrer being overruled, the defendants declined to plead further, and on proof the court entered judgment for $2,421.15, being , the original judgment and interest, against the plaintiff in the injunction. Defendants appealed.
As will be seen, the defendants’ demurrer to the petition is based on the statutory ground of a defect of parties plaintiff; that, as the injunction bond was made to plaintiff and several other parties, then all must join in an action thereon. The well known rule is invoked, that, where an obligation is made to two or more jointly, all the obligees must sue upon it. The correctness of that rule of pleading must be conceded. But, in our opinion, it can not, under the circumstances of this case, be successfully used to turn this plaintiff out of court. While such non-joinder, if seasonably invoked, might have seriously interfered with the motion or proceeding whereby the plaintiff secured a judgment against the principal of these sureties, it is now too láte, and these defendants are estopped, by the judgment already entered against their principal, to deny this plaintiff’s capacity to sue,alone. From the petition it appears that after dissolution of the injunction, this plaintiff Jones (one of the defendants in said injunction suit) filed his separate motion for assessment of *583damages; the cause was heard, and, after.much litigation, he succeeded in getting a judgment against the injunction plaintiff, which judgment has become final and irrevocable. Here was the time and occasion for insisting that all the obligees in the bond should be joined in the assessment of damages on the bond. Ohnsorg v. Turner, 33 Mo. App. 486. And since the principal (said plaintiff in the injunction suit) neglected to avail himself of that defense, he and his sureties are forever precluded from raising the same question in an action based on said judgment.
The judgment on the motion to assess damages was not only conclusive as to the measure of Jones’ damages, but it established in him a separate, individual right severable, and, indeed, severed, from all or any claim of his co-obligees, together with the sole right to sue for the same. That matter then became res adjudícala, not only as to Jones and the injunction plaintiff, but was alike settled and determined as to the sureties on the injunction bond. The following authorities are in point: 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 523; 1 Freeman on Judgments, secs. 176, 180; Towle v. Towle, 46 N. H. 431; Methodist Church v. Barker, 18 N. Y. 463; Collins v. Mitchell, 5 Fla. 364; Jaynes’ Ex. v. Platt, 47 Ohio St. 262; Boyd v. Huffaker, 40 Kan. 634; Harvey v. Head, 68 Ga. 247.
These authorities sustain the position that the sureties, by signing the injunction bond, voluntarily assume such a connection with that suit that, in the absence of fraud or mistake, they are concluded by the judgment therein and estopped,.in a subsequent action on the bond, to dispute any fact fairly settled by said judgment. The sureties thereby became identified with their principal as privies, if not as quasi parties to the action. We have, then, the proper application of the rule so well stated by Mr. Greenleaf:
*584‘ ‘All privies, whether in estate, in blood, or in law, are estopped from litigating that which is conclusive upon him with whom they are in privity. And if one covenants for the results or consequences of a suit between others * * he thereby connects himself in privity with the proceedings, and the record of the judgment in that suit will be conclusive evidence against him;” or, as stated in Freeman on Judgments; (section 180): “The sureties upon an injunction bond assume such a connection with that suit that they are concluded by a judgment in it in a suit at law upon the bond, So far as the same issues are involved.”
In the well considered case of Methodist Church v. Barker, supra, the New York court of appeals dealt with the sureties in a case of this kind on the terms of their contract: “If a man,” says the court, “undertakes the payment of a judgment which may bo recovered against another, he owes the amount of the judgment when recovered, irrespective of its legal merits, because such is the nature of his contract. He can not go behind the judgment, if there be no collusion, and allege that it is contrary to law.” And so with the case at bar. These defendants, by their bond, covenanted and, in effect, agreed, that they would, in default of the plaintiff in the injunction suit, “pay all damages and costs that should be adjudged against him.” There was judgment for damages rendered against said injunction plaintiff, which he failed to pay, and hence the obligation of the sureties became absolute.
There was no error in overruling the demurrer to the petition. The judgment, therefore, of the circuit court is affirmed.
All concur.