Hare & Chase, Inc. v. National Surety Co.

49 F.2d 447, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1315
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 18, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 49 F.2d 447 (Hare & Chase, Inc. v. National Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hare & Chase, Inc. v. National Surety Co., 49 F.2d 447, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1315 (S.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

MACK, Circuit Judge.

After the defendant moved for the appointment of an auditor in an action at law by the successor in interest of Hare & Chase, Inc., the obligee of a bond against the obligor, plaintiff’s motion for a transfer of the cause to the equity side of the court to determine several equitable issues raised by the amended answer was granted. Reformation of the bond because of alleged mutual mistake, and enjoining of the further prosecution .of the" action at law because of an alleged equitable estoppel, were thereby sought.

Plaintiff’s assignor, Hare & Chase, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as plaintiff), an automobile finance company, had-its principal place of business in Philadelphia, Pa.; defendant, a surety company, in New York.

*449 In 1920, defendant issued a bond indemnifying plaintiff against ultimate loss resulting from defaults in tbe installment obligations acquired by it in the course of its business; this ultimate loss was the deficiency after resale of cars, plaintiff’s security for the obligations.

On October 1, 1922, the 1920 bond was superseded by two bonds, one covering losses on wholesale business, the financing by plaintiff of a purchase of cars by dealers from manufacturers or distributors; the other covering losses on retail business, the discounting by plaintiff of paper given by retail buyers, of individual cars to the dealer seller. The latter notes were ordinarily without recourse on the dealer and were secured only by the ear itself; in the wholesale transaction, the dealer was directly obligated on the notes discounted for the manufacturer or distributor.

All of these bonds covered paper acquired only from or through dealers whose names had been submitted to and approved by defendant; they recited that plaintiff would from time to time acquire automobile paper secured by “commercial or passenger vehicles, tractors or trailers.” The wholesale 1922 bond stated that defendant’s liability “shall be limited to the amount named in notice of acceptance.” - The 1922 bonds further limited the coverage to 70 per cent, of the wholesale and 75 per cent, of the retail purchase price of the car.

None of the bonds contained any reference to the computation or payment of the premiums other than the statement that defendant’s obligation'was in consideration of premiums computed at an agreed rate.

Each of the bonds bore an annotation “rate 1%,” but, as to the 1922 bonds, that rate was afterwards reduced.

None of the bonds described the form or contents of reports to be rendered in respect of the business currently acquired or specified the time for premium payments. Erom 1920 on, however, reports were rendered monthly and the corresponding premiums remitted some weeks thereafter. The reports did not name the make of car, or indicate whether it was a passenger ear, new or used, or some other motor vehicle. The last column of the form called for the amount of notes; the premiums were calculated on the amounts thereby reported.

Not all of plaintiff’s business was entered in its contract register; such other dealings, including paper discounted for other finance companies, were not reported, and no premiums were paid thereon. Alfred Hare, who was in charge of the business, believed that under each of the bonds he had the right to report only such of the business as he desired covered by the bonds. While the reports currently rendered have been referred to as “liability reports,” they were useless as such, inasmuch as the outstanding liability could at no time be determined from them. They reflected only the new business acquired, without any indication of the business run off.

Early in 1923, so-called “deductibles” under the bonds were dealt with by successive collateral undertakings; these “deductibles” were the definite amount or a certain percentage of losses • which plaintiff alone was to bear before defendant’s obligatio.n to reimburse should be enforceable.

No formal agreement was prepared to cover the last increase of the deductible; in the course of conferences it was suggested that the bond itself should be rewritten to include the deductible in order to avoid misapprehension as to the extent of the coverage by those who might see only the bonds and not the supplemental agreements.

After lengthy negotiations during 1924, the bond in suit covering retail and wholesale transactions, with a collateral premium agreement, was executed some time in January, 1925, effective as of January 1, 1925. This bond indemnified plaintiff against ultimate loss upon secured notes held by it above a minimum deductible loss of $600,000 for each period of six months; in other words, an initial loss to that amount for each such period was to be borne by the obligee itself; in other respects, it followed substantially the texts of the 1922 bonds.

The report under the 1925 bond for the month of January, 1925, was not forwarded until May 5th; it was accompanied by a request that plaintiff be advised whether the form was satisfactory. While the record discloses no reply thereto, this form was continued without objection during the life of the bond. The simplified report, merely listing the states from which business emanated, and specifying, as to each state, only the total wholesale and the total retail paper, was apparently adapted only to determine the amount of premiums due and to enable defendant to report to the several Insurance departments the business transacted by it. It did not reflect the nature of plaintiff’s current business, the makes of cars financed, or the dealers from whom paper was purchased. Such detailed information, *450 if required by defendant, could however have been obtained by inquiry of plaintiff or by examination of its records, in accordance with provisions of the bond.

1. Reformation. Because there is no provision in the bond expressly requiring plaintiff to render reports to the surety on newly acquired obligations, as an express condition precedent to coverage, the question of reformation is here presented, on defendant’s contention that such a clause was omitted by mutual mistake.

Whether or not on a fair interpretation of the provisions of the bond as written and unreformed defendant is liable at law for losses on unreported transactions is not now before this court in this equity proceeding. The notes upon which loss was sustained and for which plaintiff claims indemnity under the bond were not reported to defendant in any form. Furthermore, premiums in respect thereto were never paid and were not tendered until after the losses in question had occurred and the controversy in respect to liability had arisen. The notes in question secured by 1,503 taxicabs, originally discounted by the General Finance Company of Indianapolis, were rediscounted by plaintiff for the latter company. They bore the full indorsement of the taxicab dealer that had made the sale, the Premier Motors, Inc. (manufacturers of the. taxicabs), and the General Finance Company. Many of the sales involved were of fleets of taxicabs, as distinguished from the sale of an individual car to an individual purchaser.

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Bluebook (online)
49 F.2d 447, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hare-chase-inc-v-national-surety-co-nysd-1931.