Arkansas Fuel Oil Co. v. National Surety Corporation

184 So. 560, 191 La. 115, 1938 La. LEXIS 1351
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 27, 1938
DocketNo. 34767.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 184 So. 560 (Arkansas Fuel Oil Co. v. National Surety Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arkansas Fuel Oil Co. v. National Surety Corporation, 184 So. 560, 191 La. 115, 1938 La. LEXIS 1351 (La. 1938).

Opinions

ROGERS, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment sustaining exceptions of no cause of action filed to the petition by Mel Dietlein and the National Surety Corporation. The suit was brought by the Arkansas Fuel Oil Company, as assignee of the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation, against Mel Dietlein, Alfred Perry and the National Surety Corporation,, as the assumer of a certain primary blanket fidelity bond issued by the National Surety Company of New York, covering the employees of the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation, the assignor of the Arkansas Fuel Oil Company, for an alleged shortage of $2,077.14 in the funds of plaintiff’s bulk sales station in the city of Opelousas. Alfred Perry could not be found for service of citation and no appearance was made for him in the suit.

The exception of no cause of action filed by the National Surety Corporation is predicated on the contention that the petition affirmatively shows that the shortage in the funds of plaintiff’s bulk sales station was caused by certain fraudulent and dishonest acts of Alfred Perry, and that the allegations of the petition and the recitals of the exhibits attached thereto disclose that Perry was not an employee of plaintiff within the terms of the bond, and, hence, no liability for the alleged shortage attaches to the defendant surety company.

The substantial grounds of plaintiff’s action appear to be set forth in Article I'V of *119 its original petition as amended by its supplemental petition, reading as follows:

“Petitioner represents that while ‘the said primary blanket fidelity bond was in full force and effect, said Mel Dietlein and said Alfred Perry were employees of the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation, at its storage plant and warehouse at Opelousas, St. Landry Parish, Louisiana, and known as a bulk sales station from which gasoline, oil and other petroleum products were sold and distributed at wholesale in the City of Opelousas, Louisiana, and adjacent territory; that the said Mel Dietlein was employed in the capacity of branch manager and the said Alfred Perry was employed in the capacity of clerk, helper and truck driver by the said Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation at its said station; that it was provided in the agreement, photostatic copy of which is annexed for reference only, and marked Exhibit ‘C’, between the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation and Mel Dietlein, that said Dietlein, as branch manager, would be responsible for all stocks, equipment and funds coming into his possession and liable also for any shortage or shortages of stock, equipment, supplies or funds which - might develop from periodical audits made by the said employer; that while the said Mel Dietlein and the said Alfred Perry were both employees of the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation, and while the said primary blanket fidelity bond of the said surety company was in full force and effect, through an audit conducted by the employees of the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation, a shortage in the stocks, accounts and cash of the said Opelousas bulk station of the employer was discovered and amounting to the total sum of Two Thousand Seventy-seven and 14/100 ($2,077.14) Dollars, as will be shown on the trial hereof; that said shortage was brought about by the said Perry’s systematically making sales for cash to various persons, unknown to petitioner, and reporting such sales to petitioner' as having been made on credit to persons to whom said Perry was authorized by petitioner to make sales on credit. That upon petitioner’s insistence that the said Perry and Dietlein make collections of the false balances thus shown to be due by such authorized customers of petitioner, the said Perry would make remittances to petitioner in most cases, but the funds thus remitted were obtained by engaging again in the same practice of making false charges to authorized credit customers.
“Petitioner alleges on information and belief that the course of wrongful conduct hereinabove described was begun by the said Perry at least as early as February 28th, 1934, and continued steadily until the time of its discovery on February 12th, 1936, as hereinafter' alleged in > detail. That the entire amount of the shortage, hereinabove described, accrued through false and fraudulent reports and invoices, and through misapplication of funds collected belonging to petitioner, and through embezzlement of monies and goods committed by petitioner to the care of said Dietlein and Perry, all said wrongful acts having taken place during the time between February .28th, 1934, and February 12th, *121 1936; that said shortage was discovered by the employer on February 12th, 1936, on which date said Alfred Perry confessed and acknowledged and assumed full and sole responsibility for the said shortage in the stock, accounts and cash, and gave to the employees of the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation his written statement sworn to before a Notary Public on said date; that said shortage within the meaning and intendment of said primary blanket fidelity bond' amounts to larceny, theft, embezzlement, forgery, misappropriation, wrongful abstraction, willful mis- • application and to fraudulent and dishonest act or acts committed by the employee or employees of the said employer.”

If the Branch Manager’s Commission Agreement contained nothing further than is alleged in the above article of plaintiff’s petition, it is possible that for the purpose of the surety’s exception the allegations of the article would be sufficient to constitute Perry an employee of the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation. But in addition to what is set forth in plaintiff’s petition, the branch manager’s, agreement provides, among other things, that Dietlein shall operate the.bulk station of the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation “upon the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth, subject to such rules and regulations as the Corporation (employer) may announce from time to time;” that he shall devote his entire time and energy to the employer’s business; that he “shall furnish adequate delivery equipment, including trucks, etc., satisfactory • to the Corporation ;” that he shall pay all operating expenses, including heat, light, power, water, telephone, etc., and carry adequate insurance of every kind “considered advisable by the Corporation;” and that “The Branch Manager (Dietlein) shall maintain an adequate and competent force, said force to meet the approval of the Corporation, it being understood that the Branch Manager (Dietlein) shall pay all salaries and expenses of such force.”

The allegations of the petition when read in connection with the recitals in the branch manager’s contract plainly show that the only person with whom the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation had contractual relations was Dietlein, the branch manager. Notwithstanding the allegations of the petition to the contrary, the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation had no contract whatever with Alfred Perry. Under his contract with the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation, Dietlein was obligated to operate the Corporation’s bulk sales station at Opelousas and to maintain and pay the force required for that purpose. And it is clear that Perry was a member of the force employed by Dietlein under the provisions of his .agreement with the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation.

The fact that Perry was required to “meet the approval” of the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation did not make him an employee of the corporation within the terms and intendment of the bond herein sued on.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Texas Co. v. Higgins
118 F.2d 636 (Second Circuit, 1941)
Monetti v. Standard Oil Co.
195 So. 89 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 So. 560, 191 La. 115, 1938 La. LEXIS 1351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-fuel-oil-co-v-national-surety-corporation-la-1938.