First National Bank of Fort Walton Beach v. United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company

416 F.2d 52, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 10753
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 17, 1969
Docket27148
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 416 F.2d 52 (First National Bank of Fort Walton Beach v. United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Fort Walton Beach v. United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, 416 F.2d 52, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 10753 (1st Cir. 1969).

Opinion

DAVIS, Judge:

Plaintiff-appellee, First National Bank of Fort Walton Beach (Bank), sued defendant-appellant, United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company (USF&G), claiming a right to indemnification under a Banker’s Blanket Bond, in force between the Bank and USF&G, for losses incurred on a loan by the former. The District Court for the Northern District of Florida awarded the Bank $57,130.70, plus attorney’s fees of $5,713.00, and the defendant has appealed. 1

On April 10, 1962, plaintiff was insured by defendant under this Banker’s Blanket Bond. The insurance purported to cover certain losses resulting from loans obtained by fraud.

In December 1961, the Bank had begun a series of loans to Jo Vonne M. Barnes which continued over a number of years. These were made on the strength of a program certificate of membership in the Dreyfus Investment Program, as well as two later “Dividend Reinvestment Advices” and a “Confirmation of Dividend Reinvested” issued in 1964 and 1965 by the Bank of New York, as custodian for the Dreyfus Investment Program. The latter papers each stated the total shares held by the investor in the Program at the particular time. About $40,000 was loaned to Miss Barnes in 1964-1965 on the strength (at least in part) of these writings.

Upon completion of the loans, the Bank discovered that the “Advices” and the “Confirmation”, issued in 1964 and 1965, had been falsified, and that, in fact, she then owned very few shares in the Program, far less than the face of those papers had indicated. After unsuccessful attempts to collect the amounts *54 due, the Bank demanded reimbursement of its losses from USF&G, but the defendant refused payment. It contends that the losses were not insured under the bond because not within any of its terms.

The only issue before us is the liability of USF&G under the bond. The parties are agreed that, if there is liability, the amounts granted below are correct. See footnote 1, supra,. Theoretically, since this is a diversity-of-citizenship case begun by the Florida Bank in a state court and removed to the District Court by the Maryland defendant, 2 there is a conflict-of-laws problem as to whether Florida or Maryland law governs. But neither party has relied on the law of any particular jurisdiction, both have argued as if the question is one of general law, and there do not seem to be any Florida or Maryland cases which are at all close. We shall assume, accordingly, that the law of both of those states accords with the general law, as we find it to be. Cf. Fidelity Trust Co. v. American Surety Co. of New York, 268 F.2d 805, 807 (C.A. 3, 1959).

The Bank invokes two parts of the bond — clause (D), entitled “Forgery or Alteration”, and clause (E), headed “Securities”. We hold that USF&G is responsible under (E), and it is therefore unnecessary to consider (D).

Under (E), 3 the critical question is whether the altered “Advices” and “Confirmation” fall within the phrase “any securities, documents, or other written instruments”. (It is in effect conceded that, if they are, the other stated conditions of (E) are met.) Two of the three writings are called “Dividend Reinvestment Advice”; the other is a “Confirmation of Dividend Reinvested”. These are printed forms, headed by the legend “The Bank of New York, Custodian for the Dreyfus Investment Program Sponsored by the Dreyfus Corporation”, and containing boxes to be filled in, showing in typing (among other things) the date the dividend was declared, the amount declared or received for the investor, the shares purchased for him, and the total shares then held by him. Attached to each paper are stubs for “next payments”, if any are due, but in Miss Barnes’ case these stubs showed the account as “fully paid”.

USF&G’s point is that (E) covers only conventional securities (like stocks or bonds) or other documents or instruments which are accepted as in themselves documentary evidence of owner *55 ship of property — and that here the papers simply gave information to the investor and were not in themselves intrinsic evidence of her ownership of shares in the Dreyfus Investment Program. 4 The Bank' responds that the general, unqualified terms “documents, or other written instruments” plainly have a wide coverage, and in context must at least blanket a written paper indicating or reflecting specific ownership of a security, or of rights of participation in assets.

Textual arguments can be made for both sides. For USF&G, it is pointed out the clause is entitled “Securities”, and, in the words of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, this “suggests that clause (E) is dealing with ‘securities and writings something like securities’ and it speaks against an intention to encompass all writings or all formal writings.” Rockland-Atlas National Bank v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Co., 338 Mass.. 730, 157 N.E.2d 239, 243 (1959). Also, the enumeration of the category of signers whose signatures may be forged can be thought to indicate only a “true” - instrument, i. e., a “writing, made and executed as the expression of some act, contract, or proceeding, as a deed, writ, etc.” Ibid. Similarly, the words “instruments” and “documents” are used restrietively in the latter part of (E), dealing with the guaranty or witnessing of signatures, and this tends to show that these terms likewise have a limited meaning in the earlier parts of (E). Ibid. These linguistic contentions are all aids to the claim that the information papers involved here were not “documents” or “instruments” in the sense intended by clause (E).

On the other hand, the Bank can say that the provision, by its enumeration, necessarily differentiates among “securities”, “documents” and “other written instruments”, and must therefore cover more than “securities” themselves; that “documents” and “written instruments” are very broad words, embracing, in ordinary speech, forms such as those involved there; and that there is nothing on the face of the bond to suggest that these broad words fail to cover, at least, formal writings declaring the ownership of securities or shares (even though these writings do not, in themselves, have “legal efficacy” to pass title).

If the result is to be determined by these textual considerations alone, there is more to the Bank’s position than USF&G admits. In Rockland-Atlas National Bank, supra, on which appellant relies, recovery was refused where the insured participated in a loan on the strength of a balance sheet purportedly prepared by a certified public accountant from the records of the borrower, but in actuality false and not made by the accountant or with his authority. But that is quite a different case. A balance sheet gives an over-all view and does not ordinarily evidence or declare ownership of specific securities or participation rights.

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416 F.2d 52, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 10753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-fort-walton-beach-v-united-states-fidelity-and-ca1-1969.