Glenrock State Bank v. National Surety Co.

14 P.2d 197, 44 Wyo. 532, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 39
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1932
Docket1747
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 197 (Glenrock State Bank v. National Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenrock State Bank v. National Surety Co., 14 P.2d 197, 44 Wyo. 532, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 39 (Wyo. 1932).

Opinions

*534 Riner, Justice.

In this proceeding the Glenrock State Bank, appellant here and plaintiff below, seeks review of a judgment of the District Court of Converse County, denying recovery on plaintiff’s petition against the National Surety Company, respondent here and defendant in the trial court. Hereinafter, the parties will be referred to as designated in the *535 District Court, or as tbe “bank” and tbe “surety company.”

Tbe plaintiff, a banking institution incorporated under "Wyoming law, brought tbis action against tbe defendant upon a contract whereby the latter agreed to reimburse plaintiff, in an amount not exceeding $2000, if plaintiff sustained loss through tbe “personal dishonesty, forgery, theft, larceny, embezzlement, wrongful conversion, abstraction or misapplication by Harry B. Wood,” one of the plaintiff’s employees, in the performance of his duties as such employee. Plaintiff’s petition, after pleading this contract, alleged that Wood had embezzled, wrongfully converted, abstracted and misapplied its money and personal property in the sum of $16,500, and that due proof of such loss had been made to the surety company. The answer was a general denial.

A jury having been demanded for the trial, upon the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence the court, after sustaining defendant’s motion to strike out certain documentary proofs, likewise sustained its motion that the jury be instructed to return a verdict in its favor. Upon the verdict thus rendered, the judgment aforesaid was entered. The errors assigned relate to the action of the District Court in striking out these proofs and in thus directing a verdict, it being further assigned as error that the verdict and the judgment thereon are contrary to law and the evidence in the case.

To establish its case, plaintiff relies upon its claim of misconduct on the part of the employee Wood, asserted to have been proven through the introduction in evidence of four of its journal sheets, dated respectively July 14, 15, 25 and 28, all of the year 1927, and four so-called “blotter sheets.”

It is necessary at this point to relate to some extent the manner in which the bank’s affairs were conducted. The record shows with reasonable clearness that on each busi *536 ness day deposit slips were made containing memoranda of the deposits made in the hank on that day by the plaintiff ’s customers. These were kept as part of the permanent records of the bank. The accounts of all these customers, of whom there were some five or sis hundred, were kept in a loose-leaf ledger, each customer being assigned a sheet, or page, therein, on which was entered each day the amount of his deposits and his checks drawn upon the account. As these sheets were filled or the account closed they were transferred to store-room space and preserved as a permanent bank record.

At the close of the day’s business some one of the employees of the bank took a blank sheet of paper and listed thereon the several amounts of all of the cheeks and the several amounts of all the deposits that came into the bank on that day, the names of the depositors and of the makers of the checks not being given upon the sheet thus prepared. These amounts were then totaled and thereupon transferred to the journal sheet of the bank, thus reflecting, to that extent, a summary of that day’s business. Customarily, the blotter sheets were dated — though it appears that some were not — and they were subsequently filed in the bank’s vault or store-room and also constituted one of the permanent records of the bank. Occasionally, these sheets were initialed by the employee making them, but this was not required.

At the time of the transactions in question, the active operations of the bank were conducted by three employees, F. O. Carson, Mrs. Elsie B. Holmes, and Harry B. Wood, except in vacation seasons, when several other persons were engaged for short periods of time. Carson, as cashier, was in charge of the bank, the others working under his supervision. He looked after the loans while they attended to the work ordinarily transacted by bank tellers, and the bookkeeping. Wood was employed from *537 about November, 1924, until the 13th day of May, 1930. Mrs. Holmes worked there during this entire period.

The institution was subject to examination by representatives from the State Examiner’s office, and the record is that on the 17th and 18th of October, 1929, an examination was made of the affairs of the bank by two of them, and its books were then found to be in balance, “except about seventy-one cents.” Thereafter, and about the 13th of May, 1930, another official examination was made, which, according to the testimony of the examiners who made it, showed that the bank’s books disclosed a shortage of $16,500, and also that they were at least $8000 short when the previous examination in October was made. The missing amount the examiners were unable to locate. The record is further to the effect that if, when the examination was made in October, 1929, the bank had been $8000 short, and “$8000 worth of general ledger sheets” were removed by someone before the examination was made, the bank’s books would have balanced; and that Wood, when asked by one of the examining officers to explain why the books balanced in October, 1929, when the examination was made then, and did not balance in May, 1930, stated that “he supposed someone must have pulled sheets.”

Recurring now to the four blotter and the four journal sheets, previously mentioned, plaintiff’s claim is, and was on the trial, that because the total amounts of checks and deposits indicated on these blotter sheets failed to correspond with the totals of checks and deposits entered on the respective journal sheets for the several days on which they were made to the extent of some $800' — the entries 'thereon being concededly in Wood’s handwriting — this was proof that Wood had taken that amount of money. As invalidating this contention, the defendant claims that the evidence establishes that the blotter sheets aforesaid *538 were undated when, some two years after the transactions involved, they came into the hands of Carson, the cashier, who testified concerning them, and who dated them himself ; that he did not know where the sheets were when he first saw them, except that they were in the bank; that there was no proof as to when they were made or who made them other than that they were made by employees of the bank, the amounts being listed by adding machine operation only and in no one’s handwriting.

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

Related

Rosson v. Hylton
22 P.2d 195 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 197, 44 Wyo. 532, 1932 Wyo. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenrock-state-bank-v-national-surety-co-wyo-1932.