Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Singer

50 A. 518, 94 Md. 124, 1901 Md. LEXIS 94
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 5, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 50 A. 518 (Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Singer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Singer, 50 A. 518, 94 Md. 124, 1901 Md. LEXIS 94 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A branch of this litigation has been in this Court twice before sub nomine, Standard Horse Shoe Co. v. O'Brien, 88 Md. 335, and 91 Md. 751. Some time in eighteen hundred and ninety-seven Bernard J. O’Brien, who carried on business as O’Brien & Company, purchased several hundred kegs of horse shoes from the Standard Horse Shoe Company, but did not pay for them. Shortly afterwards O’Brien, being insolvent, executed an assignment for the benefit of his creditors to Frank O. Singer, Jr., trustee. Within a week thereafter the Standard Horse Shoe Company sued out a writ of replevin in the Superior Court of Baltimore City against O’Brien and Singer and took-thereunder from Singer four hundred and odd kegs of those horse shoes. O’Brien was returned non est. When the writ was sued out the plaintiff, the Standard Horse Shoe Company, filed, as it was required to do, a replevin bond in which Bernard J. O’Brien and Frank O. Singer, Jr., were named as the obligees and upon which the appellant in this case, the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, was the sole surety. The replevin case went to trial upon issues involving the plaintiff’s title to the horse shoes. In the view we take of the pending appeal it will not be necessary to advert any *126 farther to the pleadings or the contentions of the parties in the replevin suit. It is sufficient for the purposes of this discussion to say that the trial of the replevin case resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendants, O’Brien and Singer, for a return of the property seized under the writ of replevin. From that judgment an appeal was taken to this Court. Upon the hearing of that appeal the judgment of the Superior Court was reversed and a new trial was awarded. 88 Md. 333. The record was remanded and a new trial was had, which also resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendants for a return of the property or eleven hundred and eleven dollars and seventy-five cents, the value thereof, as ascertained by the jury, and one cent damages and costs. Another appeal was taken, but the judgment appealed against was affirmed, pi Md. 331. On July the seventh, nineteen hundred, the suit in the pending case was brought by Frank O. Singer, Jr., and Bernard J. O’Brien, to the use of Frank O. Singer, Jr., trustee of said O’Brien, against the Fidelity and Deposit Company, the surety on the replevin bond, to recover the value of the replevied property as ascertained by the verdict already mentioned. To the declaration several pleas were filed, but they were held insufficient by the Court below, and a judgment by default for the want of a sufficient defense was entered against the Fidelity Company. The latter demanded that the damages should be assessed by a jury. Accordingly a jury was empanelled and evidence was adduced and prayers for instructions to the jury were presented by both the plaintiffs and defendant. Some of the prayers of the plaintiffs were granted» but all of those submitted by the defendant were rejected, though one was modified by the Court and then granted as modified. To those rulings the defendant excepted and upon-the entry of a judgment against it, it brought up the record in this appeal.

Passing by the various questions raised by the several prayers, other than the one involved in the appellant’s fourth prayer, and passing them by because though they are quite interesting they are not necessary to be considered in dispos *127 ing of this appeal, we come at once to the appellant’s fourth prayer, which was rejected. By that prayer the Fidelity Company asked the Court to instruct the jury “that there is no legally sufficient evidence in this case to show that the plaintiffs suffered any actual damages by reason of the replevin suit mentioned in the bond which is sued on in this case, and that the verdict of the jury must be for the plaintiffs for nominal damages only together with costs.” The uncontradicted evidence showed that neither Frank O. Singer, Jr., nor Bernard J. O’Brien in their individual capacities claimed any interest in the goods replevied, but that Singer claimed the entire property in the goods as trustee for the creditors of O'Brien under the deed of trust hereinbefore alluded to. And the question is : Inasmuch as O’Brien and Singer as individuals had no interest in or right to the horse shoes seized under the writ of replevin, can a suit be maintained in their names for the use of Singer, trustee for the creditors of O’Brien, against the surety on the replevin bond? Whilst O’Brien and Singer are the obligees named in the bond, can a recovery be had upon the bond in a suit brought in their names for the use of Singer, trustee, if the latter is essentially a different person from Singer individually ? Singer as trustee is not named in the bond at all.

The contract of a surety on a replevin bond is a contract of indemnity and nothing more. Belt v. Worthington et al., 3 G. & J. 247. The surety undertakes and agrees to hold the obligee named in the bond harmless, that is, to see that the goods are returned or their value paid to the obligee by the principal in the bond, if the replevin suit be not prosecuted with effect and if the obligee be entitled to the goods or to their value. If the obligee has no interest in or right to the possession of the goods a deprivation of them or of the possession of them can do him no substantial injury. A surety is never bound beyond the terms of his contract, and this means, not only that he is not liable for a larger undertaking than he has assumed, but that he is not answerable to any other person than the one with whom the contract was made. *128 A replevin bond is not, like a trustee’s or executor’s bond, payable to the State for the use of anyone who may be or may become interested in the fund or in the estate, but is payable to the defendant in the replevin suit. Whilst a suit on it may be entered by the obligee to the use of another person, the obvious measure of the sum recoverable is the extent of the damages which the obligee might exact, and is not the amount which the equitable plaintiff, who is not a party to the bond, has sustained. If this were not so, a person not indemnified by the bond because not named as obligee, could recover against the surety on the bond a sum in excess of that which the obligee himself could recover. The surety would thus be held bound to a person with whom he did not contract, and in addition he would be made liable to the latter in a larger amount than to the person with whom he did contract. This cannot be, and hence it is clear that the extent of the right which the person to whose use the suit on the replevin bond is brought may have in the property replevied is not the measure of the surety’s liability; but the extent of the right of the obligee in that property is the true measure of that liability. The assignee of the bond can have no greater rights than the assignor had. Whilst this is clear upon principle it is also settled by adjudged cases. In Walter, use of Susanna Walter v. Warfield et al., 2 Gill, 216, nearly the identical case now at bar was presented. That was an action of debt on a replevin bond.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Alexander v. Rose
30 A.2d 785 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1943)
Hodgson v. Burroughs
2 A.2d 407 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1938)
Rowan v. State Ex Rel. Grove
191 A. 244 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1937)
Succession of Von Phul
2 Pelt. 55 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1918)
Baltimore, Chesapeake & Atlantic Ry. Co. v. H. Klaff & Co.
63 A. 360 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1906)
Singer v. Fidelity and Deposit Co.
54 A. 63 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A. 518, 94 Md. 124, 1901 Md. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-deposit-co-v-singer-md-1901.