Granite Building Co. v. Saville's Administrator

43 S.E. 351, 101 Va. 217, 1903 Va. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 5, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 43 S.E. 351 (Granite Building Co. v. Saville's Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Granite Building Co. v. Saville's Administrator, 43 S.E. 351, 101 Va. 217, 1903 Va. LEXIS 23 (Va. 1903).

Opinion

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court'.

George E. Saville, now deceased, was an employee of the appellant company, charged with the duty of keeping its books, collecting all.money coming to the company, looking after deposits, and disbursing its funds according to the rules of the company. To indemnify and save harmless the appellant against any malfeasance in office on his part, he executed and delivered to the appellant a bond in the penalty of $2,000, conditioned for the faithful performance of his duties, with the American Bonding and Trust Company as his surety.

The bill in this case was filed by the appellant, the Granite Building Company, against the administrator of George E. Saville, deceased, and the American Bonding and Trust Company. Its object was twofold. Eirst, to establish and enforce a claim, alleged to be for some $3,000, against the estate of [219]*219George E. Saville, deceased; and second, to hold the American Bonding and Trust Company responsible as insurer of said Saville’s fidelity, to the extent of its bond, if sucb á recourse should prove necessary.

Tbe bill was taken for confessed as to Saville’s administrator, and a general demurrer was. filed by tbe appellee, tbe American Bonding and Trust Company. Tbe court sustained tbe demurrer, and dismissed tbe bill upon tbe following ground set forth in its decree: “The court being of opinion that section Y of tbe bond filed with tbe bill as Exhibit A is a part of tbe contract between tbe parties, which they bad a right to make, and tbe language is plain and emphatic, and that there is no ambiguity in it, or between it and tbe other provisions of tbe said bond, that tbe court is not justified in reading it out of tbe contract, and that tbe parties must be bound by it.”

Clause Y of tbe contract referred to in this decree is as follows : “In tbe event of tbe death, or dismissal, or retirement of tbe employee from tbe service of tbe employer, or tbe cancellation of this bond during the said term, tbe right to make a claim thereunder shall cease at the end of six months from sucb death,'dismissal, retirement, or cancellation.” Tbe point is made in tbe petition for appeal that tbe court dismissed tbe bill upon a ground not raised by the demurrer. Tbe defendant was not required to assign grounds of demurrer. It is true tbe defendant voluntarily suggested several grounds upon which it thought tbe demurrer should be sustained, but tbe demurrer was general, and went to the foundation of tbe whole bill. It was, therefore, competent for tbe court to sustain tbe demurrer upon any valid ground, although sucb ground bad not, been suggested by the defendant It appears, however, that tbe ground upon which tbe demurrer was sustained, though not clearly expressed, was substantially suggested by tbe defendant. Tbe real question presented by tbe demurrer and raised by this appeal is this: Was tbe case stated in tbe bill [220]*220one that imposed any liability upon the American Bonding and Trust Company under the terms of its contract with the appellant ?

• The following allegation of the bill is relied on as sufficient to support the contention that a claim was made within six months, as required by clause 7. “'Your orator further shows that, on or about the day of November, 1900, the said George E. Saville departed this life, and that your orator, through its then president, Mr. John W. Gordon, promptly, to-wit: on November 16th, 1900, notified the said surety company of such demise; adding in the same letter a statement that the books and accounts of the company were then being examined, and that a report of the result would be made as soon as such examination could be completed.” Clause 7 provides that in the event of the death of the employee, the right to make a claim thereunder shall cease at the end of six months from such death. The letter which the bill alleges was written is silent upon the question of any claim against the surety company. It merely informs the company that the employee was dead, and adds that the books and accounts of the company were being examined, and that a report of the result would be made as soon as such examination was completed. Nothing further was heard from the appellant on the subject until after the six months had expired, and if the Surety Company gave the matter any further thought, it might well have presumed that as no other communication was had there was no claim to assert. The letter alleged in the bill “was not sufficient, in contemplation of the contract set forth in clause 7, to put the defendant company upon notice that a claim was thereby asserted, or was to be asserted; and the further statement of the bill, that “an employer cannot be expected to take the risk of reporting a defalcation upon mere suspicion, and that the law does not require or allow such action,” would indicate that the [221]*221letter was not intended at the time as an assertion of claim, and that appellant, did not then know that it had a claim.

It is further insisted that the lower court has fallen into error by confounding clause 13 with clause 7 of the contract; that under clause 13 the employer was allowed, not six months from the death of the employee, but twelve months from the discovery of the fraud within which to bring suit; and that the bill was filed within the period thus prescribed. We are unable to discover any conflict between clause 7 and clause 13, or any other part of the contract. It is of the utmost importance, for reasons apparent, that the Guarantee Company should have notice within a reasonable time, after the death of the employee, that the employer intends to make a claim against it. The purpose of clause 7 was in part to meet that necessity.

Clause 13 is as follows: “That no suit or proceeding at law or in equity shall be brought, or arbitration required, to recover any amount hereby insured, unless the same is commenced, and the process served, within the term of twelve months next after the first discovery of any such fraud or dishonesty.” This section provides for the time within which suit shall be brought to enforce a claim. Section 7 provides for the time within which the company shall have notice that there is a claim. If the notice of the claim had been given within six months from the date of the death of the employee, then the employer would have had twelve months from the time of the discovery of the fraud in which to bring its suit. BTo notice having been given, .as required by clause 7, that there was a claim, then according to the express terms thereof the right to make a claim ceased, and there was nothing to bring suit for within the time prescribed by section 13.

It is further contended on behalf of appellant that the dealings of building fund companies are peculiarly complicated, and the accounts easily mystified and confused, so that much time is required for a proper report in such cases. That, as al[222]

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.E. 351, 101 Va. 217, 1903 Va. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/granite-building-co-v-savilles-administrator-va-1903.