Fort Scott Building & Loan Ass'n v. McAfee

10 P.2d 851, 135 Kan. 355, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 214
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 7, 1932
DocketNo. 30,462
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 P.2d 851 (Fort Scott Building & Loan Ass'n v. McAfee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fort Scott Building & Loan Ass'n v. McAfee, 10 P.2d 851, 135 Kan. 355, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 214 (kan 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, J.:

Plaintiff brought this action against its treasurer and the surety on his fidelity bond. A jury was waived. The trial court made findings of fact and rendered judgment for plaintiff.. The surety has appealed.

[356]*356Briefly the facts may be stated as follows: In January, 1921. Paul H. McAfee was made treasurer of the plaintiff building and loan association and continued to act in that capacity until about May 1, 1930. During that time he was president and the active managing officer of the People’s State Bank at Fort Scott. In January, 1921, the surety company, in consideration of premiums paid, agreed that it would reimburse plaintiff for any loss not exceeding $5,000 of moneys, securities, or other .personal property which plaintiff might sustain by reason of any act or acts of fraud, dishonesty, forgery, embezzlement, wrongful abstraction, or willful misapplication on the part of McAfee while in the performance of his duties as treasurer of plaintiff occurring during the continuance of the bond.' This bond was kept in force by the payment of additional annual premiums until January 24, 1930, on which date it was discontinued as to future transactions, being replaced by a similar bond, with the same surety, but with McAfee as principal. During the time here in question E. G. Atkins was secretary of the plaintiff association and also a vice president of the People’s State Bank, and C. E. Hulett was president of the plaintiff association. At a meeting of the board of directors of the plaintiff association on July 7, 1929, the treasurer was directed to make an investment for the association in government securities, the specific directions being to buy $5,000 worth of United States treasury notes to run to December 15,1929. On August 6 McAfee advised the plaintiff’s secretary that he had obtained the United States treasury notes, and on that date McAfee was given a check for $5,112.28, being the face of the treasury notes, with accrued interest, signed by the secretary and vice president of the plaintiff association. While this check was made payable to the People’s State Bank, it was in fact given to Mc-Afee, plaintiff’s treasurer, who at that time exhibited to Atkins what he represented to be the United States treasury notes purchased. The trial court found that in fact McAfee did purchase the United States treasury notes and had them in his possession as plaintiff’s treasurer on August 6, but thereafter, and perhaps in September or October of 1929, McAfee did wrongfully abstract, embezzle and misapply them and convert them, or the proceeds thereof, to his own use without the knowledge of the president, secretary, or other officers of plaintiff association. About December 31, 1929, in order to conceal from plaintiff and its other officials the embezzlement and disposition of the United States treasury notes, McAfee máde out a deposit slip on the bank in favor of the plaintiff association in the [357]*357sum of $5,059.38 and caused that amount to be credited to the plaintiff association in the bank, representing that as the amount received by him at the maturity of the United States treasury notes. The plaintiff association then directed the investment of $5,000 in United States fourth Liberty loan bonds. About December 31, 1929, Mc-Afee represented to plaintiff’s secretary that the bonds had been received, and a similar check of the association was given to McAfee for $5,125.75 in payment of such bonds. At the time the check was given to him McAfee represented that he had the bonds in the denomination of $5,000 in his possession.

The trial court was unable to find from the evidence whether McAfee in fact purchased such bonds, but did find that he either embezzled the amount of the check then given him in payment of the bonds, or if he purchased the bonds, that he later embezzled the bonds. On September 6, 1929, the association, by appropriate action, directed the purchase of $7,500 worth of federal certificates of indebtedness bearing date of September 16, 1929, and due June 16,1930. About September 30,1929, McAfee advised plaintiff’s secretary that he had received such certificates of the par value of $7,500, and the check of plaintiff association in that sum was given McAfee in payment of such certificates. At the time this check was delivered to him McAfee exhibited to Atkins papers which he represented to be such certificates. The trial court was unable to find whether McAfee purchased such certificates for plaintiff, but found that if he did not do so he embezzled the amount of the check given him for that purpose, and that if he did purchase them he later wrongfully embezzled such certificates. Early in October, 1929, an examiner for the department of the commissioner of building and loan associations, examining plaintiff’s records, found them to show the investment of $5,000 in government bonds and $7,500 in federal certificates of indebtedness, and went to McAfee, as plaintiff’s treasurer, to verify those items. McAfee reported to the examiner that he had, as plaintiff’s treasurer, United States treasury certificates of indebtedness, $5,000, due December 16, 1929; also similar certificates, $7,550.09, due June 15, 1931. On the examiner’s report, showing this in the handwriting of McAfee, was “Above certificates held for safe-keeping,” directly under which, having been placed there by a rubber stamp, was “The People’s State Bank, Fort Scott, Kansas, P. H. McAfee, president.” Plaintiff’s treasurer had never been authorized by its board of directors, [358]*358or any of its officers, to place its securities with the bank for safekeeping, and they knew nothing of any such transaction. On May 1,1930, McAfee absconded. No federal bonds, or certificates of indebtedness, belonging to plaintiff could be found. The bank commissioner took charge of the People’s State Bank and found it to be in bad condition financially, apparently having been wrecked by the defalcations and embezzlements of McAfee. About the third week in May, 1930, McAfee was apprehended, returned to Fort Scott, and placed in jail. On the same day Mr. Hulett, plaintiff’s president, talked with him with reference to the handling of the securities and moneys of the plaintiff association. Hulett asked McAfee what had become of plaintiff’s bonds, and McAfee said he had disposed of them. He further stated that he never purchased any bonds except the first $5,000 worth, and that he had disposed of them before October, 1929; that the $7,500 worth he never purchased at all. Mr. Hulett’s testimony as to this conversation was received over appellant’s objection.

The appellant surety company contends it was error for the court to admit in evidence the declarations of McAfee made to Mr. Hulett, president of the association, in the latter part of May, after McAfee had been apprehended and returned to Fort Scott, for the reason that such declarations were not made during the time of his employment as treasurer, or in connection with his duties as such. In this connection it cites the general rule from 22 C. J. 405 as follows. (We italicize portions emphasized by appellant):

“In cases of suretyship, an admission of the principal, when made in good faith, in connection with the obligations or duties to which the suretyship relates, is competent against the surety, although not to the extent of varying his liability or of determining the rights of several sureties as between themselves. Competent admissions may be made by word of mouth, contained in books or other writings, or evidence by silence or acquiescence.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 P.2d 851, 135 Kan. 355, 1932 Kan. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-scott-building-loan-assn-v-mcafee-kan-1932.