Cronk v. American Surety Co.

225 N.W. 454, 208 Iowa 267
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 14, 1929
DocketNo. 39366.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 225 N.W. 454 (Cronk v. American Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cronk v. American Surety Co., 225 N.W. 454, 208 Iowa 267 (iowa 1929).

Opinion

Morling, J.

Defendant Surety Company does not question the propriety of the pleadings or of plaintiff’s resort to equity, rather than to the probate court. Defendant in answer sets up two reports to the probate court, showing the deposit of funds in the First National Bank of Armstrong, and alleges their ap *268 proval. The reports and orders of approval, if made, do not appear in evidence.

Defendant Canon was appointed guardian in February, 1921, and the bond in question was given and approved during the next two months. lie received the money in controversy that same year, and without authority from the court, then deposited it in the First National Bank of Armstrong.

About February 19, 1925, Mr. Peisen, a representative of the defendant Surety Company, told the guardian (as Peisen says in affidavit in support of motion for new trial) that he should invest the funds to comply with Section 12772 of the Code of 1924. (This section provides that, where investments of funds are to be made by guardians or others, and no mode of investment is pointed out by statute, they may, under order of the court, be made in Federal, state, Federal farm loan, municipal, county, or drainage bonds, or bond and mortgage on real estate.) Defendant guardian testifies:

“Q. Mr. Peisen told you that the money was not safe, or in words to that effect, in the bank, and you better have a court order? A. Well, something along that line, — yes. Q. And you understood at that time that the First National Bank was unsafe, and you better protect yourself by getting the court order, — now isn’t that true? A. No, I don’t really think so, although I did not single out that bank. I thought the First National Bank was as strong a bank as there was in the country.
“The Court: You had some suspicion at that time, didn’t you? A. Yes. # * * I did have some suspicion that the bank might not be safe at the time the court order was obtained. The purpose of getting this order was because of the fact that a representative of the Surety Company came and warned me as to the condition of banks. At one time, I received a letter from the Surety Company to the effect that the money ought to be taken out of the banks. That was before the court order was obtained. * # * Q. You didn’t make any endeavor to take it out, even after he [Peisen] had advised you of the bad condition of the bank? (Objected to as assuming.) A. No.”

A letter set out in defendant’s motion for new trial, from the manager of the Surety Company to the attorney for defendant guardian, dated October 8, 1925, states:

*269 “On July 31st, you very kindly advised us that you were planning on securing a court order at your next term of court, authorizing the deposit in the bank, and that the account would be withdrawn in the form of a cashier’s check while this court order was being secured. Will you kindly advise * *

The answer of the attorney on this letter is:

“* * * I do not know what to do, as Mr. Canon does not want to acquiesce in the plan which you had suggested, as he says that the bank in which this money is deposited is perfectly sound and safe, and he does not want to do anything that would cast the least reflection upon this bank * *

A letter from the Surety Company ’s manager, dated October 27, 1925, says:

“ * * * Will you please explain to Mr. Canon that the action we have requested him to take is the same as we ask that all fiduciaries whom we bond to take and is not intended in any way as a reflection on his depositary bank. It is simply an additional protection that we feel that all fiduciaries should have. * * * ”

Defendant guardian also says:

“Q. You answered Mr. Johnston’s last interrogatories that you didn’t make any endeavor to remove the funds after Mr. Peisen told you banks were in an unsafe condition. Did he tell you anything about the First National Bank of Armstrong? A. Not singled out as a bank, but it was only generally speaking. Q. Did you have any information from any person that the First National Bank of Armstrong, Iowa, was in an unsafe condition? A. No. I did not make any personal investigation to ascertain whether or not the bank was in good condition. I didn’t talk with Mr. Robinson, bank cashier, very recently, but he told me, not a great while before this, that the bank was in better condition than it had been for several years. That was a month or so after they took over the State Bank. * ® * The conversation I had with Mr. Robinson was about six months after he took over the State Bank. It was after I got the court order. Q. You had been hearing rumors about this bank, had you not? A. I heard rumors about all the banks. There were rumors to the effect that this bank was insolvent, and not strong. I tallied *270 to Mr. Robinson about that very thing, and he said, ‘They will never close this bank.’ Those rumors had been going around Armstrong for several months. Q. And they had been going around there before you ever obtained this order, — isn’t that a fact? A. No, I don’t think so.”

The guardian says that Mr. Peisen “told me to take the money out of the bank. Later, a letter came, in which they offered to buy government bonds for me. Mr. Peisen did not suggest getting a court order at that time. The first time I heard about a court order was just prior to the time it was obtained. Q. And you obtained the court order then in order that you could protect yourself and the surety company, in the event that the money remained in the bank and the bank became insolvent, —isn’t that so? A. Yes. Q. And you talked it over with your attorney about that, didn’t you? A. Yes. * # * And you were afraid to leave this money in the bank in the First National Bank without having a court order to protect yourself, — isn’t that right? A. Yes. * * * And you never appeared before the court, asking for any designation, .until after the time that you knew that this bank was not in a safe condition.for the deposit of these funds, — is that right? A. Yes. * * *”

He also testifies that he told Mr. Peisen that “this bank is as good as any bank in the country. * * * I said I could not buy bonds with this money, and if I had them, I wouldn’t know where I could keep them. * * * It was after that * * * the head man of the Des Moines, Iowa, office of the Surety Company * * * said: ‘I am coming down to Estherville to see Mr. Bammer’ [guardian’s attorney] * * # in a few days another man came to see me, * * * and wanted to get a court order. * * *

“The Court: Just what did he say about that, can you remember? Just as nearly as you can, how he expressed it and what he said? A. Well, he said that that would relieve him of responsibility of this money, if the bank failed. * * * He said, ‘I will go back to Estherville with a blank,’ wherever Judge Davidson was, ‘and bring it over here, for you to sign.’ That was an application for order; so I walked up to the bank with him and signed the application. # * * He took it and went away, and the next day he came back, and then he had Davidson’s court order. * # *
*271

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Bluebook (online)
225 N.W. 454, 208 Iowa 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cronk-v-american-surety-co-iowa-1929.