Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Delta & Pine Land Co.

150 So. 205, 169 Miss. 196, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 4
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1933
DocketNo. 30445.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 150 So. 205 (Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Delta & Pine Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Delta & Pine Land Co., 150 So. 205, 169 Miss. 196, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 4 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

McG-owen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

A judgment was recovered against Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, the appellant, in a suit based on a declaration filed by the Delta & Pine Land Company upon a fidelity bond covering officers and employees of the Delta & Pine Land Company for various sums set opposite the names of these officers and employees in a schedule attached to the bond and known as a fidelity schedule bond. The appellant was at the date of the contract, and since, authorized to do business in this state, and subject to process therein.

The appellee, Delta & Pine Land Company, sought to recover two thousand seven hundred three dollars and seventy-nine cents because of the alleged default of H. IT. Hands, listed in all the schedules as the treasurer of the appellee at Memphis, Tennessee, and whose fidelity was indemnified by the Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars. The contract of indemnity was amended from time to time, but at all times it appeared that IT. IT. Harris, treasurer, was located at Memphis, Tennessee.

In the declaration it was alleged that, subsequent to the contract of indemnity, the Delta & Pine Land Company removed its office from Memphis, Tennessee, to Scott, Mississippi. The defalcations of Harris, the treasurer, for which liability was sought to be enforced against the indemnity company, were alleged to have occurred on various dates between May 9, 1929, and September 20, 1929, and all occurred in Bolivar county, Mississippi. It was further alleged that the appellee discovered these defalcations on May 24, 1931, and immediately gave notice thereof to the appellant, and within three months thereafter filed with the appellant at its home office at Hartford, Connecticut, affirmative proof of its loss, and *203 brought its suit within twelve months of the filing of the proof of loss. The schedule shows employees covered by the fidelity bond at Memphis, Tennessee, Scott, Lamont, Deeson, Estill, and Lake Cormorant, Mississippi. It further appears from the contract that the appellant indemnified the appellee, or the loss to it, for a specific sum as to each employee, as, for instance, IT. H. Harris, treasurer, Memphis, Tennessee, twenty-five thousand dollars.

The bond contained the following provision: “Any claim hereunder must be duly made upon the surety wifhin fifteen (15) months after the termination of the surety-ship for the defaulting employee, and no suit, action, or proceeding shall be brought hereunder by the employer against the surety after the expiration of twelve (12) months after the filing of proof of loss as above required, or, in case such limitation be void under the law of the place governing construction hereof then within the shortest period of limitation permitted by such law.”

The bond also contained the following provision: “The Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company (hereinafter called Surety), in consideration of an agreed premium, binds itself to pay to Delta & Pine Land Co., of Mississippi, and/or Delta Farm Co., and/or Empire Plantation Co. (as their interest may appear) (hereinafter called the Employer), within sixty (60) days after satisfactory proof thereof, such pecuniary loss as the Employer shall have sustained of money or other personal property (including money or other personal property for which the Employer is responsible) through the fraud, dishonesty, forgery, theft, embezzlement, wrongful abstraction or wilful misapplication committed directly or in connivance with others by any of the employees named upon the schedule attached hereto and made a part hereof, in any position, anywhere, during the period commencing with the respective dates set opposite the names of the employees in such schedule, and ending with the termina *204 tion of the suretyship for any employee by his dismissal or retirement from the service of the Employer, by the discovery of loss hereunder, or by cancellation by the Employer or the Surety.”

The appellant filed the following plea: “Now comes Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company and for plea says that plaintiff should not have its action because plaintiff before and at the date of the contract of surety-ship herein sued upon was doing business in the state of Tennessee and had its principal office at Memphis, in said State, and defendant was also then, as it is now, doing business in the state of Tennessee and had an Agency at Memphis, in said state, and plaintiff through its said office at Memphis, in' said state, applied to defendant through its said Agency at Memphis, in said state, for said bond, rider and schedules containing the name of the defaulting employee, H. H. Harris, constituting said contract of suretyship, and defendant through its said Agency at Memphis, executed and delivered the same to plaintiff at its said office at Memphis, in said state, and s'aid contract is a Tennessee contract and is governed by the laws of Tennessee and full faith and credit must be given thereto in the courts of this state uúder and in accordance with the requirements of article 4, section 1; article 1, section 10, and section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, and there was not then and there is not now any statute in the state of Tennessee that prohibits and renders invalid the condition or limitation in said contract hereinafter mentioned, and the highest court of the state of Tennessee, to-wit, the Supreme Court, has held and announced as the law in Tennessee in a number of its decisions, to-wit, Guthrie v. Indemnity Association, 101 Tenn. 643, 49 S. W. 829; Phœnix Cotton Oil Co. v. Royal Indemnity Co., 140 Tenn. 438, 205 S. W. 128; City of Bristol v. Bostwick, 146 Tenn. 205, 240 S. W. 774, and other cases, that such conditions or limitations in such contracts are valid and *205 binding; and said contracts of suretyship herein sued, upon provided that any claim thereunder must be duly made upon the defendant, the surety, within fifteen (15) months after the termination of the suretyship for the defaulting employee,, and plaintiff did not make claim for its loss upon defendant, the surety, within fifteen (15) months after the termination of its suretyship* for said defaulting employee, Harris, in that said contract of suretyship was canceled and thereby terminated December 31, 1929, and plaintiff did not make claim upon defendant until June 22, 1931; and this defendant is ready to verify.”

-■To this plea the appellee filed a demurrer on the ground that the construction and validity of the provision requiring claim thereunder to be made within fifteen months after the termination of the suretyship for the defaulting employee was not to be determined by the laws of Tennessee, but by the laws of Mississippi, and that this provision violated section 2294 of the Mississippi Code of 1930 and the public policy of Mississippi; and further that the courts of Mississippi were not required to give full faith and credit thereto* under and in accordance with article 4, section 1; article 1, section 10; and section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.

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Bluebook (online)
150 So. 205, 169 Miss. 196, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-accident-indemnity-co-v-delta-pine-land-co-miss-1933.