Chapman v. Nieman

276 S.W. 302
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 8, 1925
DocketNo. 228.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 302 (Chapman v. Nieman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chapman v. Nieman, 276 S.W. 302 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, C. J.

This is a suit brought by appellants, J. L. Chapman, in his official capacity as commissioner of banking, and the Eirst State Bank of Malone, to recover of appellees, Robert A. Nieman, as principal, and Maryland Casualty Company, as surety, the sum of $2,000 on a fidelity bond executed by them in favor of said bank, by the terms of which bond appellees obligated themselves to indemnify said bank against such pecuniary loss as it might sustain of money or other valuable securities embezzled, wrongfully abstracted, or willfully misapplied by said Nie-man in the course of his employment in said bank.

Said bank was on the 6th day of March, 1923, declared insolvent and closed, and said commissioner took charge of all the assets of the same in his official capacity.

Nieman was employed as bookkeeper in said bank, but he also acted as assistant cashier, and was in charge of the same in the absence of the cashier. Such absences occurred frequently. There was testimony tending to show that the cashier of the bank had abstracted and appropriated funds belonging to it in the sum of $43,000; that said funds had been so abstracted and appropriated by him in various amounts and at various times, beginning about the time Nie-man was employed in the bank or shortly thereafter, and continuing from time to time *303 until the closing of the same; that the system of bookkeeping used was known as the loose leaf system, with the account of each depositor on a separate leaf or sheet; that, as the cashier appropriated the funds of the bank from time to time, he would remove one or more of such sheets containing the record of deposits amounting to the sum so appropriated, thus leaving the assets and liabilities of the bank apparently in balance, and that the sheets so removed constituted the so-called “dummy ledger” ; that said cashier frequently forged cheeks purporting to be signed by certain depositors, and caused the same to be entered on the books of the bank and charged against such depositors on the leaf ■ or sheet showing their accounts, re-' speetively, the effect of which was to reduce the apparent liability of the bank to its depositors apd to aid in making the assets and liabilities of the bank as shown by its books balance at the close of business each day.

There was also testimony that statements were issued and mailed monthly to each depositor, showing the state of his account with the bank, and that the cashier required all such statements to be turned over to him fqr examination before mailing. There was also testimony that the cashier required Nie-man to notify him at once when an examiner from the department appeared at the bank for the purpose of examining the condition of the same. The bank was examined several times during this period by examiners from the department of banking, but the insolvency of said bank and the abstraction and appropriation of its funds by its cashier were not discovered until the examination which resulted in the closing of the same.

There was no evidence that Nieman personally ever appropriated any of the funds or securities of the bank, or that he ever received any benefit from the funds or securities appropriated by the cashier. He denied any knowledge of the existence of the “dummy ledger” prior to the day before the closing of the bank, and claimed to have discovered it in the vault at that time by accident. There was no direct evidence contradicting his testimony on this point. There was testimony that on the occasion of the. examination which resulted in the closing of the bank Nieman admitted that he knew of the shortage therein since shortly after his employment began, and that he and his assistant had helped conceal the same on the assurance of the cashier that he would make it good and that they would not get into trouble. There was also testimony that the existence of the dummy ledger was disclosed by Nieman, that he produced it on request, and that he, with the aid of his assistant, in about 30 minutes’ time computed therefrom the amount of shortage with approximate accuracy.

Nieman testified that he kept the books of the bank and had done so for three years; that he made or caused, to be made and mailed to every depositor a statement of his account each month; that said statements correctly showed all the transactions affecting such accounts, respectively, and that hé never knew of any discrepancies except in a few instances with reference to the last statements sent out just prior to the closing of the bank; that he was familiar with the signature of every depositor and familiar with the state of each account by reason of daily handling of the books; that, beginning in the fall of 1922, he observed the cashier frequently write checks against the accounts of depositors and sign them himself; that he received such cheeks and ran them through the books in the regular course like other checks signed by the depositors in person; that about that time the cashier told him he was short some $25,000, but that he had fixed it up, but he did not say how; that a negro woman had deposited some money in the bank, and, so far as he knew had not checked on the same; that when she did present a check he examined the books and they showed she had checked out all the money, but she denied having done so, and the cashier drew his personal check in her favor for the amount; that he knew there were a number of notes in the note ease that were made and signed by the cashier, and. were duplicates of notes that had been put up at the Federal Reserve Bank, and that such notes were furnished to the examiner and examined by him every time an examination of the bank was made.

The -court instructed a verdict in favor of appellees, and his action in doing so is before us for review in this appeal.

The obligation assumed by appellees by the execution and delivery of the bond sued on was to ‘indemnify the bank for any pecuniary loss suffered by it by reason of three distinct classes of acts, to wit, embezzlement, wrongful abstraction, or willful misapplication of its funds or securities, each of which would constitute a breach of Nieman’s duty as an employee. Appellants do.not claim that the acts of Nieman shown by the evidence in this case constituted embezzlement. Wrongful abstraction, as used in said bond, means an unauthorized and illegal taking or withdrawing of funds or securities from the possession and control of the bank and the appropriation of such funds or securities to the benefit of the taker, or to the benefit of another with his knowledge and consent. Willful misapplication, as so used, means a willful, unauthorized, and illegal application of the funds or securities of the bank to the use and benefit of the person making such application, or the use and benefit of another with his knowledge and consent. Maryland Casualty Co. v. Farmers’ State Bank & Trust Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 258 S. W. 5S4, 586, 587, and *304 authorities there cited. In such cases it is not necessary that the employee shall have derived any personal profit or advantage from his breach of duty. It is sufficient if his actions have resulted in the abstraction or misapplication of the funds or securities of the bank or affirmatively contributed thereto, and another with his knowledge and consent has profited thereby. Nor is it material just what culpable act or acts constitute the breach of duty on the part of the employee.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-nieman-texapp-1925.