American Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. National Surety Co.

157 P. 877, 91 Wash. 307, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1062
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1916
DocketNo. 12976
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 157 P. 877 (American Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. National Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Savings Bank & Trust Co. v. National Surety Co., 157 P. 877, 91 Wash. 307, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1062 (Wash. 1916).

Opinion

Parker, J.

The plaintiff, American Savings Bank & Trust Company, seeks recovery upon a fidelity insurance bond given to it by the defendant, National Surety Company. The cause proceeded to trial in the superior court sitting with a jury, when, at the close of the evidence introduced on behalf of the plaintiff, the court, upon motion of counsel for the de[308]*308fendant, granted a nonsuit in its favor and dismissed the action. From this disposition of the case, the plaintiff has appealed to this court.

On November 80, 1912, respondent executed and delivered to appellant the bond sued upon, which, so far as necessary for us to here notice its terms, reads:

“The National Surety Company (Surety) in consideration of the payment of an annual premium computed at an agreed rate, and payable on the 1st day of March, during each and every year that this bond shall continue in force, hereby agrees to make good within sixty days after satisfactory proof thereof to American Savings Bank & Trust Company, Seattle, Wash., employer, any loss which the employer may sustain by reason of any act of personal dishonesty, forgery, theft, larceny, embezzlement, wrongful conversion or abstraction, on the part of any employee named in the schedule hereto attached, or hereafter added to said schedule by an acceptance notice, executed by the surety, as herein provided, in any position in the employer’s service and committed after the 1st day of March, 1918, as to any employee set forth in said schedule, or after the date of such acceptance notice, as to any employee so added to said schedule, and before the termination of this bond, as to any employee covered hereby. The surety’s liability hereunder shall, in no event, exceed, on behalf of any one employee, the amount set opposite the name of such employee in said schedule, or said acceptance notices.
“Provided, that the employer shall not have had at the date hereof, or at the date of adding any new employee to said schedule, any knowledge of any of said employees, having been guilty of any act of personal dishonesty in any position in the employer’s service, or in the service of any other person, firm or corporation, and shall have notified the surety (at surety’s expense) by telegraph and registered letter giving all known particulars, addressed to its Home Office, No. 115 Broadway, New York City, within ten days after becoming aware of any such act or facts indicating such act by any of said employees, or any such loss, and shall have, within ninety days after discovery of any such loss, filed with the surety an itemized statement of such loss, and produced for investigation all books, vouchers and evidence in the employer’s possession and rendered every assistance (except pecuniary), [309]*309to aid in bringing such employee to justice which the surety may require; .
“The liability of the surety hereunder shall immediately terminate as to subsequent acts of any employee, (a) Upon discovery by the employer of any default hereunder by such employee; (b) Any employee leaving the services of the employer; (c) thirty days after receipt by the employer of written notice from the surety of its desire to terminate same, as to any or all of said employees.
“Upon the termination of this bond by discovery of default on the part of any employee, the premium paid as to such employee, shall be deemed fully earned.”

The schedule attached to the bond contains the names of appellant’s employees, eighteen in number, with the amount set opposite the name of each employee showing the extent of respondent’s liability for “any act of personal dishonesty, forgery, theft, larceny, embezzlement, wrongful conversion or abstraction” on the part of such employee. It appears from the schedule that the limit of respondent’s liability as to each of these employees ranges from $1,000 to $10,000.

Appellant alleges in its complaint, in substance, that, while the bond was in force, there was wrongfully converted and abstracted from its funds the sum of $8,500, and that, at the time this sum was so abstracted, three certain employees of appellant named in the complaint, whose names appear in the schedule attached to the bond, and no others, had access to the funds from which the $8,500 was so taken. It is not alleged in the complaint as to which one of appellant’s employees took the money; nor is it alleged, except possibly inferentially, that the money was taken by any of the three employees who had access to appellant’s funds. In other words, there is no direct allegation in the complaint as to who' abstracted this money from appellant’s funds. The complaint was demurred to by counsel for respondent, which demurrer was by the court overruled, and thereafter an answer was filed tendering issue upon the facts.

[310]*310We may assume that, upon the trial, the evidence introduced in appellant’s behalf tended to show that one or the other of two of appellant’s employees who had access to its funds took therefrom the $8,500 in question. This evidence, however, went no farther than to show that these two employees had equal means of access to the particular funds from which the money was taken. We think the evidence shows without contradiction that a third employee also had equal means of access to these funds, though we put that aside for the purpose of argument, in order to follow more closely the argument of counsel for appellant. No claim is made by counsel for appellant that the evidence shows, or tends to show, which one of these employees took the money, but their argument proceeds apparently upon the theory that it is enough that the evidence tends to show that one or the other of these two, or at the most three, employees took the money without tending to show which one took it. As said in their brief:

“Whatever may be the individual opinion of the representatives of the plaintiff as to whose wrongful act is responsible for the loss of this money, we are not called upon for an expression, because we are insured against the act of both of them. But we do say this in all candor: That when money disappears from a safe to which two men and only two have the combination, some explanation is required; and human nature is so constituted that in the absence of some explanation the conclusion will be drawn that one or the other misappropriated the money.”

So we have the same condition shown in the evidence as is shown by the allegations of the complaint, to wit, that some one of several employees, without any showing as to which one, abstracted this $8,500 from appellant’s funds. Indeed, appellant seems to have studiously avoided charging its loss to the dishonesty of any particular employee.

Now if appellant had been indemnified against the dishonesty of each of its eighteen employees by a separate wx-it[311]*311ing, instead of by a single writing, referring to each employee and specifying separately the amount of respondent’s liability for the dishonesty of such employee, as this bond plainly does, an action upon such a writing could not be successfully maintained by allegations and proof which pointed with no greater certainty to the dishonesty of such employee than the allegations and proof in this case point to the dishonesty of some single employee. The complaint, as well as the evidence, in such case would be insufficient to sustain a cause of action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 P. 877, 91 Wash. 307, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 1062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-savings-bank-trust-co-v-national-surety-co-wash-1916.