(1) The only question raised by the pleadings is whether the defendants herein “failed”-in their appeal from the chancery decree, the execution of which they superseded by giving the bond here sued on. If defendants did not “fail” in the appeal, they did not breach the condition of the bond, and are not liable for the hurt that plaintiff suffered by reason of the appeal. On that appeal this court said: “The decree appealed from is affected with error, as separately assigned by Morrison, in that the court did not allow Morrison the legal rate of interest upon the principal sum to be paid to effect redemption. * * * The decree is affirmed in all respects, except that it will be corrected so as to include in the sum required of Formby to redeem interest at the legal rate from the date of the filing of the bill to the date of the decree confirming the report of the register. The decree is corrected, as indicated, and, as corrected, is affirmed.” — Morrison v. Formby, 191 Ala. 105, 67 South. 668.
The opinion and judgment of the Supreme Court on the appeal conclusively show that a substantial and material error was committed by the chancery court, whereby the complainant was allowed to redeem the land by the payment of more than $150 less than the amount required by law for that purpose. Until the legal amount was paid in full the respondent was entitled to hold the land, and complainant had no right to its redemption *552and enjoyment. In the face of the decree rendered, the respondent could enforce his rights in the premises only by an appeal from that decree, and its correction by the appellate court.
We think it is too clear for serious controversy that Morrison and his bondsmen did not “fail in said appeal.” On the contrary, they successfully impeached the correctness of the decree in a substantial particular, and secured the correction of the error. Whether for partial error a chancery decree is upon appeal corrected and affirmed, or reversed and rendered, is but a matter of form, and the choice is usually dictated by considerations of collateral convenience or policy. Certainly such a choice cannot determine, and is not intended to determine, the rightfulness or the wrongfulness of the appeal.
It will be noted that the obligation of the bond here exhibited is twofold, viz, to pay: (1) Such judgment as the Supreme Court may render in the premises; and (2) all such costs and damages as any party aggrieved may sustain by reason of the wrongful appeal and suspension of the judgment. The first obligation is absolute. The second is dependent upon the wrongfulness of the appeal.
(2) An appeal which does not reverse the judgment or discover and correct some error of judgment materially prejudicial to the appellant is a “wrongful appeal;” and, necessarily, an appeal which does discover and correct such an error is not wrongful. In either case the quality of the appeal is conclusively determined by the judgment of the appellate court, either by unqualified affirmance, on the one hand, or by reversal, or affirmance with substantial correction, on the other.
The contention of appellant that an appeal fails, and is therefore wrongful, unless it results in a technical reversal of the entire decree, cannot be sustained either upon reason or authority. Indeed, in a case like this, it might result in the practical denial of the right of appeal, since it might be incumbered by liabilities which would exceed the value of the interests sought to be protected.
The judgment and opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Crane v. Buckley, 203 U. S. 441, Sup. Ct. 56, 51 L. Ed. 260, is in line with our conclusion, and would alone be ample authority therefore. In accord, also, is Heinlen v. Beans, 71 Cal. 295, 12 Pac. 167, holding that an affirmance, to constitute a breach of a supersedeas bond, must be an affirmance *553of the judgment “as rendered by the court below,” and not as modified on appeal.
The authorities cited by appellant are not in point. Hopkins v. Orr, 124 U. S. 510, 8 Sup. Ct. 590, 31 L. Ed. 523, and other cases, simply hold that modifications of the judgment appealed from do not prevent the appellate court from rendering the judgment against the sureties in the supersedeas bond — a result in accord with one of the primary obligations of the bond, viz. to pay such judgment as the appellate court may render in the premises.
Rehm v. Halverson, 197 Ill. 378, 64 N. E. 388, was an action on a supersedeas bond given on appeal from the judgment of a justice of the peace in forcible detainer. The judgment appealed from was for the plaintiff for the entire building, and on appeal in the circuit court the judgment was only for the first floor and one-half of the basement. As the defendant by his supersedeas wrongfully withheld possession of a physically distinct part of the premises from the plaintiffu and as to such distinct part failed to vindicate his possession, the Illinois court held, and properly so, it would seem, that as to that distinct part of the premises the defendant had not “prosecuted his appeal with effect,” and that the bondsmen were liable to the plaintiff for damage resulting from its wrongful withholding.
Such a question, however, is not before us now. The instant case is obviously different, in that the subject-matter of the rights in conflict was not separable, and Formby was entitled to possession of the entire premises until the entire redemption money was paid as prescribed by law. The error in the decree affected the entire subject-matter of the suit, and the appeal was not wrongful, either in whole or in part.
Appellant cites also our own case of Babcock v. Carter, 117 Ala. 575, 23 South. 487, 67 Ann. St. Rep. 193, and lays much stress upon the following language found in the opinion: “The purpose of the appeal was the reversal of the judgment rendered by the circuit court, and the reversal was the effect to which the principal was bound to prosecute the appeal; otherwise the condition of the bond was broken and the liability of the parties upon it was free from all contingency.”
As applied to the judgment there involved — a judgment of a circuit court, single and not correctible for error except by reversal in toto — the language quoted was, of course, correct, but it is by no means opposed to our conclusion in the instant case.
*554- The trial court did not err in overruling the demurrers to the special pleas, and the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Anderson, C. J., and Mayfield and Thomas, JJ., concur.