Handelman's Chain Stores v. Maryland Casualty Co.

184 So. 827, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 456
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 1938
DocketNo. 16918.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 184 So. 827 (Handelman's Chain Stores v. Maryland Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Handelman's Chain Stores v. Maryland Casualty Co., 184 So. 827, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 456 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This is a suit on a fidelity bond. The defenses are that the loss is not shown to have been one within the contemplation of the bond and that the claimant (employer) did not comply with certain warranties which the surety contends were made in connection with the bond. There was judgment for defendant and plaintiff has appealed.

Handelman’s Chain Stores, a commercial partnership, during 1933-1935, operated a retail store in the town of Thibodaux, Louisiana. It appears that in June, 1933, Preston J. Field was appointed general manager of the said store and was required to furnish a fidelity bond in the sum of $1,000. Maryland Casualty Company had previously executed many other such bonds for employes of the said employer and— apparently at the request of the said employer — it agreed to execute the bond required by the employer and applied for by the employe, Field. In accordance with its custom it sent the employer a printed form on which there were many questions concerning the duties of the said Field and .the methods which would be resorted to by the employer in keeping itself advised concerning the conduct of the affairs entrusted to him. When these questions were answered by the employer, the bond was issued under date of June 13, 1933. Renewal premiums have been paid regularly since and it is conceded that, at the time of the alleged shortage which forms the basis of this suit, the bond was in full force and effect.

On the morning of Monday, December 23, 1935, Field, the bonded employe, reported by telephone from Thibodaux to the employer in New Orleans that the store had been robbed between the closing on the preceding Saturday night and the opening on that Monday morning. A subsequent check showed a shortage of $268.44 in cash and of $2,065.73 in merchandise. But the employer reached the conclusion that there had been no robbery and that the said bonded employe, Field, by fraudulent means, had for some time been retaining cash received from customers for goods sold and failing to report the sales, and also had taken cash from the cash register and had reported the alleged robbery in order to hide his own peculations. Thereupon demand was made on the surety company for settlement under the bond, but that company, maintaining that the employer had breached certain warranties made when the bond was issued, that an earlier default of the same employe had not been reported and, also, that it had not sufficiently appeared that the loss was one within the coverage of the bond, refused to make payment. This suit has resulted.

In addition to the face amount of the bond, $1,000, plaintiff claims attorney’s fees, and a penalty, both as provided for by Act No. 37 of the Extra Session of 1921.

If there was a breach of warranty on the part of the employer, then there can be no recovery even if the bonded employe is shown to have been guilty of the acts charged to him, and we, therefore, turn to the question of whether there was such breach of any warranty made by the employer in executing the bond, or in any statement properly referred to in and sufficiently connected with the said bond.

No warranties were contained in the bond itself, but in it there appeared a stipulation to the effect “that all statements which the employer has furnished to the Company concerning the employe or his duties or accounts are warranted by the employer to be true; * * *

It is admitted by plaintiff that there was no compliance with certain of the obligations which were assumed in the statement made in connection with the employe’s application for the bond and it is further conceded that, if all of the said obligations can be classified as warranties and can be read into the bond as inducements for the issuance thereof, then there can be no recovery.

The particular obligations which were assumed by the employer in the statement made in connection with the application for the bond and which obligations, it is contended, have been breached, were:

*829 (1) That at least once in every three months inventory of stock goods and samples would be made by special representatives.

(2) That at least once in every thirty days the applicant’s books, accounts and securities would be inspected and audited by special representatives.

It is argued that such breach as there may have been was not of one of those obligations which were sufficiently referred to in the bond as warranties to permit that it be held that a breach thereof should defeat recovery.

It has been determined in this state that a promise made in connection with an application for such a bond is not to be considered as a warranty the breach of which would defeat recovery unless such promise is stated to be a warranty and unless, if made in some other document than the bond itself, it is carried over into the bond by language which shows a definite intention to make it a part of the said bond.

In Slidell Savings & Homestead Association v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland, 178 La. 548, 152 So. 121, the statement which the employer made as an inducement for the issuance of the bond read as follows [page 123] : “ ‘It is agreed that the above answers shall be warranties and shall constitute the basis of and form part of the bond, or any continuation or • continuations of same that may be issued by the Fidelity & Deposit Company of' Maryland to the undersigned, upon the person above named. And it is agreed that the duties, powers and remuneration of the employee and obligations of the employer as stated in the above warranties shall remain unchanged during the currency of this bond or any continuation or continuations thereof.’ ”

Yet the Supreme Court held that the breach of any covenant contained in that statement could not defeat recovery since, in the bond itself, there was no reference to those covenants as being warranties made in connection with the bond: “This agreement, however, was never carried out by referring in the bond to the application, and making it a part of the bond, or by reciting in that instrument in unequivocal language that the answers to the questions should be deemed warranties. The recital of these matters in the application alone was insufficient. Reference to them should be made in the bond itself, and not simply in a separate instrument.”

In the case at bar there is in the bond itself a clear reference to certain statements made by the employer as an inducement for the issuance of the bond for the applicant-employe, so that the argument that none of the promises made can be considered as warranties is not well founded.

But it is also argued that the covenants contained in the statement of the employer are not all referred to in and made part of the bond and that the breaches pointed to by the defendant as preventing recovery are not of warranties carried over into the bond by reference thereto; in other words, that, though the employer, in the statement, promised that it would do certain things and that it would require the employe to do certain other things, when those promises were referred to in the bond only those concerning the employe and what he would be required to do were, in the bond itself, referred to as warranties.

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184 So. 827, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/handelmans-chain-stores-v-maryland-casualty-co-lactapp-1938.