American Fidelity Co. v. State Ex Rel. Cobb

109 A. 99, 135 Md. 326, 1919 Md. LEXIS 156
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 9, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 109 A. 99 (American Fidelity Co. v. State Ex Rel. Cobb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Fidelity Co. v. State Ex Rel. Cobb, 109 A. 99, 135 Md. 326, 1919 Md. LEXIS 156 (Md. 1919).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Carpenter Company, a Virginia corporation, contracted with the State Hoads Commission of Maryland for the construction of two sections of concrete roadway in Cecil Comity. There was a separate contract for each of the sections. The bonds required by law to be given to the State of Maryland for the proper performance of the contracts, and for the payment of “all just debts for labor and materials incurred by the contractor in the construction and improvement of the road contracted for,” were executed by the American Fidelity Company, of Montpelier, Vermont, as surety. The total amount of indemnity provided by the two bonds was $119,022.45. The equitable appellee, Charles Cobb, Jr., at the request of the Carpenter Company, the contractor, paid a hill of $2,531.25 for cement used in the road work, and took an assignment of the account from the corporation by which the material was furnished. In this suit the assignee seeks to recover the amount of the claim from the surety on the contracting company’s bonds. The principal defense is that the claim was paid by a check for $3,600 issued by the Carpenter Company to Mr. Cobb and intended to be applied, so far as necessary, to the payment of the cement bill, hut which he in fact applied to other claims not included in the surety’s liability. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $2,401.10, the claim being credited with a dividend of $129.55 from the Company’s estate in bankruptcy. The defendant surety company has appealed.

*330 There are twelve hills of exceptions, eleven relating to- the admissibility of evidence, and one to the instructions. The first four exceptions are not pressed, as the rulings to- which they refer were clearly correct.

The fifth exception was taken to the action of the trial Court in allowing the plaintiff to testify that the security afforded by the contractor’s bonds was an inducement for his purchase of the cement claim. The witness had previously testified to that effect without objection. While this was not a material subject of inquiry, the statement objected to could not well have caused any prejudice to the defense, and its admission, therefore, was not reversible error.

No reference is made in the appellant’s brief to the sixth exception, and we see no reason to disturb the ruling to which it was reserved.

The seventh exception was taken to- the refusal to admit secondary evidence, offered by the defendant, to prove the contents of a telegram said to have been sent by the plaintiff to his son, Ohaides Cobb III, authorizing him to- represent his father in an attempted reorganization of the Carpenter Company and in reference to the claim now in suit. It was proposed by this proof to support the defendant’s theory that Charles Cobb III, who- was president of the Carpenter Company, and to. whom its cheek for $3,600 was delivered for transmission to- his father, was the agent of the latter with implied authority to- receive instructions, binding upon the principal, as to the application of that payment. Elsewhere in the record there is testimony on behalf of the defendant to the effect that the check was received by Charles Cobb III on the occasion of a conference in the office of the Company as to the appropriation, to various- purposes of a fund of about $18,000 which had been paid by the State Roads Commission on account of the Company’s contracts. The other participants in the conference were Mr. G. Y. Carpenter, who- was interested in the Company as an incorporator, and Mr. James E. Clark, whose firm, Clark-Havward Company, had a profit *331 sharing contract with the Carpenter Company under which Mr. Clark had an active part in the management of the construction work referred to, and in consideration of which he had become indemnitor of the surety on each of the bonds in question to the amount of $40,000. It was testified by Mr. Clark that the check for $3,600, to the order of Charles Cobb, Jr., was handed to Charles Cobb III on tbe occasion mentioned “with instructions” that it was to be applied to the payment of the assigned cement bill, and the balance to any other claims of the plaintiff against the Company. Lt does not appear that Charles Cobb III, as its president or in any other capacity, assented to the “instructions” or that they were authorized by the corporate debtor. There is no evidence from which it can be inferred that any direction as to the application of the check was communicated to the plaintiff, but the effort of the defense was to prove that he was represented in the transaction by his son to such an extent as to be bound by what was said to him as to how the payment should be applied. According to the proffer of the testimony to which tbe seventh exception was taken, the telegram referred to was sent more than six weeks after the delivery of the check which the defendant insists should have been applied to the cement bill held by the plaintiff as assignee. The reorganization to which the proffer referred was being undertaken because the Carpenter Company had gone into bankruptcy. It is difficult to see bow a delegation of authority at that time and under those circumstances' could tend to prove the existence of a similar agency a month and a half previously. But there is another objection to the proffered testimony. It was not designed to prove the contents of the original message, as delivered to the telegraph company by the sender, but was offered for the purpose of showing what was written in the copy received by the addressee. If the copy itself had been produced, it could not have been admitted a.s secondary evidence except upon proof that it was “a correct transcript of a message actually authorized by the *332 party sought to he affected by its contents.” Smith v. Easton, 54 Md. 145. In view of this deficiency in the proffer, it is unnecessary to decide whether a sufficient foundation was laid for the introduction of secondary evidence of the telegram.

In order to discuss the eighth exception we must refer to a feature of the case to which we have not yet alluded. Sometime after the Carpenter Company had gone into bankruptcy Mr. Clark gave his individual note to the plaintiff for the amount of the cement bill now in litigation. The note was given as the result of negotiations between Mr. Clark and Charles Cobb III. As explained by the latter witness, the occasion for the note was the conditional sale of the cement account by the plaintiff to Mr. Clark under an agreement that the account should be transferred to him if the note was paid at its maturity, but this condition was not, performed. It was testified by Mr. Clark, on the other hand, that he gave the note in connection with the effort to reorganize the Carpenter Company and because Charles Oobb III stated his inability to secure the financial aid of his father to that end unless he was conciliated by the payment of the cement bill, and the understanding was that if the company was reorganized and proved to be successful, it would take care of the note, otherwise the amount would be paid in equal proportions by Charles Cobb III, G. Y. Carpenter and the witness. The eighth exception was reserved to the exclusion of testimony that Charles Oobb, Jr., did not furnish the money which he was to contribute under this agreement towards the reorganization of the company, which was therefore not accomplished.

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Bluebook (online)
109 A. 99, 135 Md. 326, 1919 Md. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-fidelity-co-v-state-ex-rel-cobb-md-1919.