Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. v. Scott

81 Ky. 540, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 3
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 12, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 81 Ky. 540 (Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. v. Scott, 81 Ky. 540, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 3 (Ky. Ct. App. 1884).

Opinion

OHIEP JUSTICE HABGIS

delivered the opinion oe the court.

Ryan as principal, with Scott and Leathers as his sureties, •executed bond to the appellant company in the penal sum •of $20,000, stipulating for the faithful discharge of duty by Ryan as the agent of appellant.

This action was brought by appellant on the bond, alleging as a breach thereof that Ryan as agent had collected and failed to pay or account for the sum of $20,427.64, received after the execution of the bond and before his discharge, and that he had not kept true and accurate accounts of his receipts and disbursements. These allegations were controverted by the sureties, who also pleaded various matters, which will be hereinafter considered, as a discharge from their obligation.

At the date (March 18, 1875) of the execution of the bond, Ryan and Carpenter, who had prior thereto been agents for the appellant, were liable for more than $21,000 [543]*543on their agency; but neither the appellant nor the sureties .had any actual knowledge of that fact. The appellant, however, could, by the use of proper business diligence, have discovered it. This is the first point to be determined. We are satisfied that the failure to use such diligence, and ■inform the sureties of the results before they became bound, was not a fraud, there being no purposed suppression of the fact, or intentional failure to investigate Ryan & Carpenter’s accounts to avoid learning their condition. The mere reappointment of Ryan as agent was not, in the absence of knowledge of the failure of Ryan & Carpenter, a representation of his financial honesty upon which the sureties could rely as a release from the obligation of the bond after its breach. It was more their duty than that of appellant to make inquiry of Ryan’s condition before they bound them.selves for him, and they can not, therefore, complain of appellant’s failure to investigate his accounts. They were entitled to good faith at the hands of appellant, no more. This they received in all that pertained directly to the execution of the bond, and as both were simply negligent, not fraudulent, in their conduct, the sureties have no legal or equitable ground for complaint on that score. (Magee v. Manhattan Life Ins. Co., 2 Otto, 97.)

The appellant did not solicit the sureties to execute the bond. There was no intercourse between them or its officers, prior to the execution of the bond, that would have required the disclosure by it of any fact which would have lead to the discovery of the condition of Ryan & Carpenter’s accounts, and the sureties did not seek 'any information .at the hands of appellant as to the state of those accounts.

And as the silence of the appellant, in the absence of ^knowledge of the indebtedness of Ryan. & Carpenter, could [544]*544not have amounted to an express affirmation or negation with reference to that fact, there is, according to Story’s Equity, secs. 214, 215, and the case of Ætna Life Insurance Company v. Mabbett and another, 18 Wisconsin, 698, an entire failure by appellees to make out the charge of fraud, the appellant nbt being guilty of suppressing or failing to-disclose any fact within its knowledge which, increased the risk of the sureties.

The circumstances prior to and attending the execution of the bond do not raise the inevitable inference of deception upon the part of appellant or its officers, and the fact alone of Ryan’s reappointment being insufficient to uphold the allegation of misrepresentation, there can be no doubt on this point. The bond was bindingly executed. (Hamilton v. Watson, C. and F. House of Lords Reports, 109.) In April, 1878, the appellant discovered the indebtedness of Ryan & Carpenter, for which they were jointly and severally-bound, yet, without notifying his sureties, retained Ryan as agent, entrusting business to him in the usual course until. November, 1878, when the appellant discharged him.

The authorities are conclusive that the sureties can not be held bound for any failure of duty by-Ryan occurring after the discovery in April, because the appellant failed to communicate the knowledge it had acquired to the sureties. And were authority obscure on this point, principle would sustain it, because nothing could be more repulsive to common honesty than for the appellant, with knowledge that the agent was violating his bond and putting to extreme hazard the rights of his sureties, to allow him to proceed in his course without notifying them of the facts, so they might refuse to consent, and take steps to protect themselves. Nor is it any answer that the appellant requested Ryan, who-[545]*545promised to do so,' to communicate his own dereliction to his sureties, for that shows no reasonable effort by appellant to inform the sureties. (Phillips v. Foxhall, L. R., 7 Q. B., 666; Sanderson v. Aston, L. R., 8 Excheq., 73; Franklin Bank v. Cooper, 39 Me.; Graves v. National Bank of Lebanon, 10 Bush, 23.)

Shortly after the execution of the bond Ryan began a course of business as agent, which was calculated to convince strangers that he and his son were partners in the agency.

It is contended by counsel that the appellant did not consent to the formation of the partnership, or know of its existence, if it even existed, which is denied. But there is a ■rule of common sense, as well as lawful and logical presumption, requiring that material acts and things, which from the facts themselves, or circumstances surrounding them, ought to be known, will be treated as understood; and it is applicable to the facts bearing upon this controverted point.

A brief recitation of them will be sufficient argument to show that the appellant knew, or ought to have known, of the existence of the partnership, and actually acquiesced in its conduct of the business of the agency.

The correspondence between Ryan and the appellant was principally in the name of Wm. Ryan & Co. The letterheads and envelopes used in the correspondence represented Wm. Ryan and his son, Wm. E. Ryan, as partners. They were so advertised by the appellant, or under its direction, by printing done at its home office. Remittances were sent by letter over the signature of Wm. Ryan & Co., and, by the sign of their office and ostensible mode of carrying on the business of the agency, the ordinary evidences of a partner[546]*546ship were held out to the world by them. It is not a satisfactory answer to the printed and other evidence of the existence of the partnership, brought home to the appellant, to say that the firm name of Wm. Ryan & Co. represented Wm. Ryan alone, that being the style in which he preferred to do business, when such representation is in contravention of the general reasonable and fair purpose of a firm name, and, if approved, would furnish an easy mode of disproving, with comparative impunity, the existence of a partnership, although conducted in the usual way and attended by potent public evidences of that relation. Great force is imparted to the allegation that the partnership really existed, and the appellant knew it by the fact that Ryan, at the beginning of his agency, applied, to the company’s officers to allow him to admit his son as an ostensible partner for the purpose of giving him social or commercial consequence.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Ky. 540, 1884 Ky. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-mutual-life-ins-v-scott-kyctapp-1884.