Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Yellow Cab Transit Co.

1946 OK 260, 173 P.2d 432, 197 Okla. 581, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 608
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 8, 1946
DocketNo. 32064.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1946 OK 260 (Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Yellow Cab Transit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Yellow Cab Transit Co., 1946 OK 260, 173 P.2d 432, 197 Okla. 581, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 608 (Okla. 1946).

Opinion

CORN, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered upon a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff, Yellow Cab Transit Company, in an action by plaintiff to recover $1,801.92 on a fidelity bond issued by defendant (the Fidelity & Casualty Company of New York).

Plaintiff, an Oklahoma corporation, operates as a common carrier (interstate) of freight by truck. Operations require maintenance of freight terminals at some points, while at other points only dock facilities are maintained, operated by what plaintiff designates as “commission agents.” These agents furnish their own facilities for taking care of plaintiff’s business in the particular locality. Such agents are employed by written contract, are permitted to engage in other business without devoting their entire time to plaintiff’s affairs, and receive their compensation on a basis of an agreed sum (10c per cwt) for handling both incoming and outgoing freight. The business handled is required to be reported to the company on a weekly basis. Plaintiff’s agents are bound to collect and remit freight charges on both incoming *582 and outgoing freight, and are permitted to deduct the amount due them for commissions from the amount of the freight charges collected.

July 5, 1940, plaintiff employed'one Carl F. Westfall as its commission agent at Champaign, 111., under written contract as above mentioned. As part of his employment Westfall was required to make a fidelity bond, premium to be paid by plaintiff. This bond, indemnifying plaintiff against loss on Westfall’s account, provided (quoting only the pertinent portion) as follows:

“. . . against the loss of any money or other personal property (including money or other personal property for which the Employer is responsible) through the fraud, dishonesty, forgery, theft, embezzlement, or wrongful abstraction of any Employee named in the schedule forming part of this bond, directly or in connivance with others, while such Employee holds any position at any place in the service of Employer while this bond is in force. . . .
“4. This bond shall terminate: . . .
“(b) As to any employee upon the death or retirement from the service of the employer of the employee.”

The amended petition, upon which this cause was tried, alleged Westfall’s contract of employment and defendant’s execution of the bond covering him; that while acting as plaintiff’s agent he received funds of the plaintiff, but, in violation of the trust, wrongfully abstracted and failed to account for $1,801.92, through fraud, dishonesty, forgery, theft, embezzlement, or wrongful abstraction, directly or in connivance with others, causing loss to plaintiff in this amount. Proof of loss was alleged to have been made, and defendant’s refusal to indemify plaintiff for such loss. Judgment was asked for this amount.

By answer defendant admitted execution of the fidelity bond but alleged that at the time of the loss Westfall was not plaintiff’s agent, and that his relationship as agent had terminated. The fact and amount of the. loss were not denied.

The record evidence reflects substantially the following state of facts. West-fall became plaintiff’s agent at Cham-paign, 111., on July 5, 1940. That a portion of the collections which made up the amount of the shortage had been made subsequent to December 3, 1941, but prior to the date of the alleged robbery January 29, 1942, but such collections had. not been reported in the weekly reports required to be made.

There was testimony that Westfall carried a listing in the February, 1942, telephone directory at Champaign as plaintiff’s agent in that city, although Mrs. Elsia Westfall, his wife and only witness for defendant, testified that her husband left the business October 10, 1941, to work in a war plant in another town.

One Edmundson, office manager of the Illinois Glove Company, and one of plaintiff’s large shippers in that region, issued all checks in payment of plaintiff’s freight charges. He testified that in a conversation had with West-fall subsequent to October 27, 1941, when he issued a check in payment of some charges, payable to plaintiff at Oklahoma City, Okla., Westfall directed him thereafter to make checks payable to him personally.

This witness also testified he had never done business with Mrs. West-fall, but Westfall had come to pick up checks in payment of the freight charges. Further, the witness testified he had seen Westfall several times when he came to pick up the checks or to discuss and adjust losses in shipments, and that this had occurred as late as the latter part of November, 1941.

There was testimony of other witnesses showing Westfall had purchased a used car, applying on the purchase price a check of the Illinois Glove Company, payable to Westfall, dated November 3, 1941, and endorsed by C. F. Westfall.

*583 Additional testimony of plaintiff’s auditor established that Westfall, or his wife who actively assisted him in handling the business, pursued a systematic course of withholding from the required weekly reports certain collections, reporting only non-money-producing freight bills. His testimony also was that at a town such as Champaign the billings would be about 60 per cent money producing and 40 per cent non-money producing (or prepaid freight in and C.O.D. out). The evidence showed two reports made to plaintiff prior to the alleged robbery contained approximately 90 per cent money-producing freight bills, these two reports covering all of the reported loss.

Elsia M. Westfall, wife of plaintiff’s agent, was the only witness who testified in behalf of the defendant. She testified they lived above the office and handled the business; that October 9, 1941, her husband went to another city to work in a war plant, giving up his agency; that plaintiff’s district manager called and she asked if plaintiff wished to change agents, but was advised to continue as she had been handling the business anyway; that she discussed with this party (plaintiff’s district manager, Mr. Engelbrecht) the necessity for her being bonded and he advised her it was not necessary. The witness also testified notice of the fact that her husband had given up the agency was given to the auditor for plaintiff, a Mr. Utterback.

The plaintiff’s testimony was that Utterback was not in Champaign, 111., at any time between September 21, 1941, and January 21, 1942, following the alleged robbery, covering the period witness specified in her testimony concerning the acquiescence of plaintiff in-Westfall’s surrender of the agency and the agreement had with company officials that she continue to handle the business.

The witness testified in substance that she prepared her report and counted the money and then took her dogs outside the building. When she returned the cash box containing $2,156 had been robbed. She notified the police and wrote to the bonding company to ascertain if she was bonded and was advised she was not. She then testified she continued to act as agent until February 2, 1942, when plaintiff’s officers checked her out.

At the close of all the.

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Bluebook (online)
1946 OK 260, 173 P.2d 432, 197 Okla. 581, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-casualty-co-v-yellow-cab-transit-co-okla-1946.