Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Stephenson

79 P.2d 115, 26 Cal. App. 2d 241
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1938
DocketCiv. 6048
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 79 P.2d 115 (Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Stephenson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal 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. Stephenson, 79 P.2d 115, 26 Cal. App. 2d 241 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The defendant, Emma L. Leuzinger, has appealed from a judgment which was rendered in an equitable suit brought by the plaintiff as surety on the bond of a stock broker, to ascertain and pay the relative proportions of the bond to which several claimants are entitled on account of losses sustained by them as a result of derelictions of the broker.

This action was instituted to prevent a multiplicity of suits. It is based upon detriment accruing to the several defendants in separate transactions which they had with A. J. Merrick & Company, a corporation, conducting a stock brokerage business in the state of California, by means of which the firm fraudulently obtained and appropriated to its own use the sums of money hereafter mentioned. In compliance with the Corporate Securities Act of California, A. J. Merrick & Company furnished and filed its bond on qualifying in the sum of $5,000 to secure the faithful performance of its acts as a stock broker. The bond was executed by the respondent, Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland. The bond provides that the principal, A. J. Merrick & Company, and its agents, shall fully comply with the Corporate Securities Act of California, and shall “honestly and faithfully apply all funds received, and faithfully and honestly perform all obligations and undertakings in the purchase or sale of securities by said broker,’ Ms agents and employees”. The bond also contains the following provisions :

“That any person who sustains an injury covered by this bond may, in addition to any other remedy that he may have, bring an action in Ms own name upon this bond for the recovery of any damages sustained by Mm. . . .
‘1 That the total aggregate liability of the surety or sureties herein shall be limited to the payment of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00).”

The complaint alleges that three other separate suits against the stock broker and the surety company were commenced in the courts in Los Angeles for separate specified amounts, by the defendants named herein; that the aggregate *243 detriment claimed by the plaintiffs in those three actions on account of the broker’s derelictions amounted to the sum of $13,850, which was in excess of the $5,000 limitation of liability under the bond; that the defendants in this suit be required to establish the validity of their respective claims herein, and that they be restrained from attempting to collect from the surety company, in their respective suits, more than their just pro rata shares of the amount of the indemnity bond; that the court ascertain and determine the losses sustained by each of said claimants and prorate to each his share of the amount of said surety bond to which he is entitled. The complaint prays that after the payment of said sums the surety may be exonerated from further liability on account of its said bond. Demurrers to the complaint were overruled. The defendant, Emma L. Leuzinger, filed an answer and cross-complaint in this cause, asserting her claim for $1600. The defendants, George W. and Kate S. Wild, husband and wife, filed their separate answer and cross-complaint for a claim of $12,000. The defendant, Harriet B. Stephenson, who had previously prosecuted her claim for $250 to judgment in the Municipal Court of Los Angeles County did not appear in this case. But it was stipulated between all parties hereto that her said claim “shall be paid out of the aforesaid penal sum of said bond pro rata with other judgment creditors thereon”. The delinquent stock brokerage company had been declared bankrupt, and it was not made a party to this suit.

This cause was tried by the court, which adopted findings to the effect that the three separate claimants sustained losses on account of the derelictions of the stock broker in the following amounts: George W. and Kate S. Wild, the sum of $12,000; Emma L. Leuzinger, the sum of $1600; and Harriet B. Stephenson, the sum of $250; that the limit of liability of the surety company on its bond is the aggregate sum of $5,000; that the pro rata sum to which each claimant is entitled under the provisions of the bond is the proportion of said $5,000 which the claim of each bears to the total sum of $13,850, which is the aggregate amount of the three claims; that upon that basis George W. and Kate S. Wild are entitled to the sum of $4,332; Emma L. Leuzinger is entitled to $577.50, and Harriet B. Stephenson is entitled to $90.50. Judgment was accordingly rendered against the respondent, *244 Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, and in favor of each of the said claimants for the respective sums last mentioned, together with interest and costs of suit. From that judgment the defendant and cross-complainant, Emma L. Leuzinger, has appealed. The appeal is presented to this court on a certified copy of the pleadings and proceedings without the evidence which was adduced at the trial. It. is a mere appeal upon the judgment roll.

The only point raised by the appellant is the quota or pro rata share of the amount of the indemnity bond of $5,000 which was allowed to her. The appellant contends that the court erred in allowing her only the sum of $577.50; that each of the separate suits for detriment for the derelictions of the stock broker, as against the surety, is based solely on the provisions of the bond; that this action is founded on contract and does not sound in tort; that since each separate claimant was entitled to recover from the surety the full amount of his loss if it does not exceed the amount of the bond, it follows that Stephenson was entitled to judgment for $250, the appellant was entitled to $1600, and George W. and Kate S. Wild were entitled to a judgment for only the maximum sum provided by the bond, namely $5,000, and that the respective claimants, therefore, were entitled to participate in the available fund in the proportions which the last-mentioned three sums bear to their aggregate amount of $6,850 instead of the total sum of their three claims which is $13,850. In other words, it is asserted the distribution of shares in the amount of the bond should be based on the relative sums recoverable under the bond and not the pro rata share thereof determined by the relative proportion of their aggregate losses on account of the torts of the stock broker. In support of her contention the appellant relies on Betzer v. Olney, 14 Cal. App. (2d) 53 [57 Pac. (2d) 1376], Kane v. Mendenhall, 5 Cal. (2d) 749 [56. Pac. (2d) 498], and Wiggins v. Pacific Indemnity Co., 134 Cal. App. 328 [25 Pac. (2d) 898],

We are of the opinion there is no merit in the foregoing contention of the appellant. This is a suit in equity to ascertain and distribute the just proportions of an acknowledged fund to the claimants pro rata according to the respective losses sustained on account of the torts of the broker with whom they dealt. The losses sustained are "the measure of *245 damages of each claimant. The very purpose of this action was to avoid a multiplicity of suits and to ascertain and equitably distribute the available bond fund among those who are entitled to share therein.

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143 Cal. App. 3d 403 (California Court of Appeal, 1983)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P.2d 115, 26 Cal. App. 2d 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-deposit-co-v-stephenson-calctapp-1938.