Cutts v. Spear

8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 445
CourtLorain County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMay 7, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 445 (Cutts v. Spear) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lorain County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cutts v. Spear, 8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 445 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Washburn; J.

On motion' for new trial.

Plaintiff, as receiver, representing the Citizens National Bank of Oberlin, Ohio, sued the defendants, A. B. Spear and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., on a bond given by them to said bank in which said bonding company guaranteed the fidelity of the cashier of said bank. The term of the bond was from February 5, 1903, to February 5, 1904, and was continued in force by a renewal certificate from February 5, 1904, to February 5, 1905. The cashier, A. B. Spear, and the president of the bank had certain dealings with C. L. Chadwick, otherwise known as Cassie Chadwick, between February 5, 3903, and December 1, 1904, in which the bank lost more than $150,000, practically all of said transactions occurring' during the first year covered by said bond and none of them being discovered within six months after the expiration of said first year. Some of the directors of the bank learned as early as October, 3904, that said Chadwick had obtained at least $150,000 of the bank’s funds by means of alleged loans which the cashier and president had made to said Chadwick and which they represented to have been made in good faith and upon what they supposed was good security, and that said security was then doubtful and later proved to be . worthless.

The three or four directors who had this information, and the cashier and president kept the matter secret from the other directors and made a vain attempt to collect the notes given by said Chadwick until the bank failed, the first Monday in December, 1904.

When the bank failed all of the directors learned that these overloans had been made and that the security was probacy worthless, but there was no evidence tending to show that anyone except the cashier and president, who were parties to the conspiracy, if there was one, knew that the books of the bank had [447]*447been juggled, or that any conspiracy existed, or that the' transactions with said Chadwick were fraudulent or dishonest so far as the cashier was concerned, except that at the meeting of the directors just before the bank failed the cashier, on being questioned', said that said loans had been made for the benefit of himself and the president of the bank, and not for the benefit of the bank.

A receiver took charge of the affairs of the bank at once and early in January, 1905, notified the defendant bonding company that said transactions of Spear, the cashier, were dishonest and fraudulent within the terms of said bond, and claimed that the bonding company was liable to the bank for $15,000, the amount of said bond, and in February, 1905, filed proof of loss; and later, and within the time limit of said bond, this suit was begun.

The claim was also made that said Spear, during the first yearly term of said bond, in September, 1903, appropriated to his own use $20,000 of the funds of said bank.

During the trial evidence was introduced tending to prove that when these loans were made a conspiracy existed between said Chadwick and the cashier and president of said bank, and that the cashier and president personally profited thereby, and that the transactions were not regularly entered upon the books of the bank as legitimate transactions should have been, and that from time to time false entries were made, and that the books were juggled for the purpose of concealing said transactions.

The trial resulted in a verdict for the full amount of the bond and interest, and this matter is now before the court on a motion for new trial.

, Two propositions only will be considered in this opinion: first, whether the transactions complained of were such as were covered by the terms of said bond, and, second, whether they were discovered within the time limited for their discovery by the terms of said bond.

The terms of the bond, so far as these questions are concerned, are as follows:

“The company shall, during the term above mentioned, or any subsequent renewal .of such term * * * make good and reimburse to the said employer, such pecuniary loss as may be [448]*448sustained by the employer by reason of the fraud or dishonesty of said employe in connection with the duties of his office or position, amounting to embezzlement or larceny, and which shall have been committed during the continuance of said term, or any renewal thereof, .and discovered during said continuance or any reneioal thereof or within six months thereafter, * * * the company’s total liability on account of said employe under this bond or any renewal thereof, not to exceed the sum of $15,-000.”

The claim made in the petition was that said bank had suffered a pecuniary loss in the sum of $150,500 by reason of the fraud and dishonesty of A. B. Spear in connection with the duties of his office and position as cashier of said bank, amounting to embezzlement or larceny, in that said A. B. Spear conspired with, aided and assisted one C. L. Chadwick in fraudulently obtaining from the bank on certain dates certain sums of money by certifying as good, checks offered by said Chadwick on said bank and by issuing .to said Chadwick drafts on the New York depository of said bank, payable to. the order of said Chadwick, when, as a matter of fact, said Chadwick had no funds in said bank and the bank was -not indebted to her in any way or in any sums whatever, nor had the directors or officers of said bank authorized Spear to loan said Chadwick the sums aforesaid or any part thereof, all of which was well known -to said A. B. Spear and said C. L. Chadwick at the time; and it was further claimed that said Spear on or about September 28, 1903, unlawfully and without any right so to do, appropriated to his own use 'the sum of $20,000, being the property of'said bank.

The claim of the defendant is that unless such transactions constituted technical embezzlement or larceny they were not covered by the terms of said bond and that the petition failed to charge embezzlement or larceny and the proof failed to establish either.

Passing the question of whether or not the proof established technical embezzlement or larceny, let us consider what was meant by the parties when in making said contract they used the language “fraud or dishonesty of said employe amounting to embezzlement or larceny.” If only technical embezzlement or larceny was meant, then the expression “fraud or dishonesty [449]*449amounting to,” was entirely superfluous, and such a construction must necessarily give no force aúd effect to those words. In my judgment the language of the bond meant more than just technical embezzlement or larceny; it meant such dishonest and fraudulent conduct resulting in loss as was “equivalent” to embezzlement or larceny.

Was there at the time this contract was made a species of fraud and dishonesty more or less common among cashiers which, while not technically embezzlement or larceny, “amounted” to the same thing ? If there was, isn’t that what was meant by the above expression, which would otherwise be meaningless? Misapplication of the funds of national -banks by cashiers, under circumstances where it was impossible to convict them of embezzlement or larceny, occurred so frequently that Congress was led to amend the embezzlement and larceny statute so as to make misapplication of the funds of a bank amount, so far as penalty was concerned, to the same thing as embezzlement or larceny. See U. S. Stats., Section 5209.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cutts-v-spear-ohctcompllorain-1909.