Clausen v. Title Guaranty & Surety Co.

168 A.D. 569, 153 N.Y.S. 835, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8339
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 4, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 168 A.D. 569 (Clausen v. Title Guaranty & Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clausen v. Title Guaranty & Surety Co., 168 A.D. 569, 153 N.Y.S. 835, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8339 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

Present—Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Laughlin, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ.; Hotchkiss, J., dissented.

The following is the opinion of the referee:

Hamilton Odell, Referee:

The defendant is a corporation of the State of Pennsylvania, located in Scranton in that State, and during the times [571]*571mentioned in the complaint carried on what is described in the agreements between these parties as a “surety or guaranty insurance business.” From March 2, 1904, to March 2, 1908, the plaintiff had the exclusive general agency for the defendant in the several boroughs of the city of New York and in the county of Westchester, under two separate agreements, similar in their terms, one made March 2, 1904, and the other made on March 2, 1906, and each for a period of two years from its date. By each agreement the premiums on bonds issued through the plaintiff’s agency, after the deduction of specified expenses of the New York- office, were to be apportioned between the parties — the defendant to receive seventy-five per cent and the plaintiff twenty-five per cent thereof. Each agreement also contained provisions relating to the division of premiums on excise bonds and to brokerage commissions “on all business procured through brokers,” and to commissions received and commissions allowed to other agents in cases where the defendant was a cosurety with other companies.

The action is in equity for an accounting between the parties in respect of all the matters set forth in the complaint, and in its answer the defendant “. concedes that the action is within the cognizance of a Court of Equity and admits that the accounts passed between the plaintiff and the defendant should he opened and the respective rights of the parties readjusted.”

For a first cause of action the plaintiff alleges that his agency for the defendant, under the agreements mentioned above, came to an end on the 2d day of March, 1908, and that he then gave up to the defendant “the local office, office properties and the records of the business transacted during the period from the 2d of March, 1906, to the 2d of March, 1908, as well records covering the period from March, 1904, to March 2, 1906; ” that there then remained uncollected premiums on business procured in the plaintiff’s territory amounting to $59,000, to twenty-five per cent of which, less deductions for commissions (if any) paid to brokers and cosureties, the plaintiff was entitled; that after making all proper deductions, there will, on an accounting, be found due to the plaintiff at least the sum of $12,000, no part of which has been [572]*572paid to the plaintiff, though demanded, “ and the same has been received by defendant and applied to its own use.” This claim is denied by the defendant and a counterclaim is interposed by it, in which it is alleged that between March 2, 1904, and March 2, 1908, certain surety bonds of the defendant, other than excise bonds, were issued by the plaintiff in the territory for which he was general agent under the said agreements, for which premiums were charged and accrued, “which premiums were uncollected by the plaintiff at the expiration of the term of plaintiff’s said agency agreement.” That said premiums amounted to $58,621.75, no part of which was paid by plaintiff to defendant within the second calendar month succeeding the issue of the various bonds for which said premiums were due, or at any time thereafter; that of the said premiums the defendant has succeeded in collecting only the sum of $36,687.68; that “ by reason of the failure of the plaintiff to collect and pay over to the defendant the premiums aggregating said sum of $36,687.68, the defendant has been deprived of the use of the several amounts which should have been paid by him to the defendant on account of said premiums, from the expiration of the second calendar month succeeding the issue of the bond for which each of said premiums was due, to the date of the collection of each of said premiums by defendant; ” that the interest on said several sums amounts to $2,246.08; that said premiums, to the amount of $21,934.07, remain uncollected and have become in a large part uncollectible; that defendant is entitled to recover from the plaintiff, in addition to said interest, seventy-five per cent of said sum of $21,934.07, or $16,450.55, with interest on the several sums making up that amount “ from the respective dates on which the same should have been paid by the plaintiff to the defendant, namely, in each case from the expiration of the second calendar month succeeding the issue of the bonds upon which such sums accrued as premiums” — and also for brokerage commissions and commissions allowed to cosureties, amounting to $807.25.

Eeference to the 5th clause or section of the said agreements is necessary to a correct understanding of this counterclaim. It reads as follows:

[573]*573“He [Clausen] shall collect all premiums for bonds issued through said office in the territory mentioned herein; he shall account to the company for all premiums so collected, and shall render statements of such premiums and remit to the company such premiums on or before the twentieth (20th) day of each month for the business done during the preceding month, less the commission and expenses as aforesaid, which shall be accounted for, however, in the said monthly statement; provided, however, the premiums for all bonds issued shall be accounted for and paid by the agent to the company within the second calendar month succeeding the issue of the various bonds. The agent shall report immediately all bonds written and forward all applications to its home office for record.”

The defendant’s contention is that by this clause the plaintiff guaranteed to the defendant the payment of all premiums on all bonds issued by him as the defendant’s agent, and became personally liable to pay to the defendant the premium on each bond within sixty days after the bond was issued. The clause is, perhaps, if strained and separated from the context, susceptible of such a construction, but in my judgment, reading the clause in the light of the facts disclosed by the testimony, such a construction is neither reasonable nor fair, and would not truly express the meaning and intention of the parties "to the contract. The learned counsel for the defendant says in his brief: “The circumstances are that Clausen was granted extraordinary powers and extraordinary compensation, which were so great that they can only be explained by his guaranty of all premiums. He was allowed to write any bonds in his own discretion, but he guaranteed the collections, and for this he was granted extraordinary pay and extraordinary allowance of expenses; ” but I have found no proof in the case that either the powers or the compensation granted to Clausen were in any particular unusual or in excess of powers and compensation granted by the defendant to other agents under similar conditions. It is true that Mr. Watres, the president of the defendant, testified that it was always his understanding “ that during the running of the first contract Mr. Clausen was the guarantor of the premiums,” and “I never had any doubt in my mind as to the meaning of the contract in that regard,” [574]*574and that it was “not only the operation of my mind, but the operation of the minds of the men who drew and arranged that contract.” There is a suggestive absence here, and in all the testimony, of any statement or claim that Clausen had a like understanding of clause 5.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 A.D. 569, 153 N.Y.S. 835, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clausen-v-title-guaranty-surety-co-nyappdiv-1915.