Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Kenny

184 N.E. 695, 44 Ohio App. 138, 14 Ohio Law. Abs. 58, 1932 Ohio App. LEXIS 303
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 20, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 184 N.E. 695 (Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Kenny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals 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. Kenny, 184 N.E. 695, 44 Ohio App. 138, 14 Ohio Law. Abs. 58, 1932 Ohio App. LEXIS 303 (Ohio Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

SHERICK, PJ.

The result of the controversy was a judgment in favor of the receiver, from which judgment the indemnity company prosecutes error to this court, the chief grounds of error being: First, that the court below improperly overruled the motions of the indemnity company for a directed verdict; second, that it permitted evidence of waiver of conditions precedent to go to the jury when performance was pleaded and waiver was not pleaded; and, third, that the court erred in its general charge when instructing the jury concerning waiver. Decision of these claimed errors is dispositive of the questions presented, as the other claimed errors, if such they be, are not prejudicially so.

By reason of certain claims relative to the pleadings, it becomes necessary to first examine the allegations thereof, in conjunction with certain terms and conditions of the bond. The clause of the bond drawn in question recites: “Upon the discovery by the Employer of any loss covered here *60 under, this bond shall automatically be terminated as to any acts committed by the employee causing the loss, subsequent to the date of discovery. The Employer shall, within ten (10) days after becoming aware of such loss, give written notice thereof to the Surety at its home office in the city of Hartford, Connecticut; and affirmative proof of loss, under oath, giving the name, address and office or position occupied by such employee, together with full particulars of such loss, shall be filed with the Surety at its home office in the city of Hartford, Connecticut, within three (3) months after such discovery.”

The plaintiff devotes one paragraph of the petition to the matter of performance, which is couched in the following language; “Plaintiff says that upon the discovery of the losses hereinbefore set forth, he gave notice to the defendant company within the time limit, and as required by the terms of said surety bond, of the losses sustained.”

It will be noted that the phraseology of this averment is not in the general words of the statute. §11339, GC. It does not recite “that the party duly performed all the conditions on his part.” Construed strictly the averment says that it gave notice of the losses sustained within the time limit. It is not averred that the insured or the plaintiff furnished the indemnity company with affirmative proof of loss within three months after such discovery of losses, as conditioned by the terms of the bond previously quoted.

To this petition the indemnity company answered, and after certain admissions it specifically denied that Whitson padded the pay roll, or embezzled or converted to his own use . certain merchandise without the knowledge of the Zollars company, but avers the fact to be that he owes the value of this merchandise to it as a valid legal charge for which the indemnity company is not liable under the bond. Then follows a general denial, and thereafter it is pleaded that defendant has not received of the plaintiff satisfactory proof of any direct pecuniary loss caused his employer by Whit-son within three months after the discovery thereof, as required by the bond.

The allegations of the answer are denied by the reply.

It is now claimed by the plaintiff that the general denial part of the defendant company’s answer does not raise any issue as to a compliance with the provisions for notice, because the provisions of §11314, GC, provide what the answer- shall contain, “and that where both general and specific denials are made the general denial is limited to those matters specifically denied.” The part quoted is taken from the receiver’s brief.

It is apparent that the answer specially denies the two claims of dishonesty, and generally denies a third claim of forgery, abandoned at the trial, and the allegation of performance which plaintiff specially averred; but it does so in general language by virtue of §11339, GC. The latter part of this section becomes of much importance. It reads as follows: “If such allegation be controverted, the party pleading must establish, on the trial, the facts showing such performance.”

The indemnity company, under §11314 GC, could have controverted this allegation by a special denial had it chosen to do so, but it .did not so choose. Had it elected to specially deny this allegation in some particle and then to have generally denied the issue, we could then perceive the logic of the receiver’s claim.

Now §11314 GC says that “the answer shall contain: A general or specific denial of each material allegation of the petition controverted by the defendant.” The answer in this case simply does what the statute says must be done; that is, each material averment must be controverted either generally or specifically. It rather seems to us that the plaintiff receiver would take advantage of the first portion of §11339, GC, in his favor, but deny the obligation imposed upon him by the last part thereof. It is therefore our opinion that the question of the ten-day notice is an issue in this case, and having so determined, we now proceed to further comment on the plaintiff’s proof made at trial, to see if the chief ground of error is well taken.

First, considering the matter of a padded pay roll, we learn that counsel for the receiver — who had also been counsel for the insured up to the time of the receiver’s appointment on January 28, 1930 — had been notified some time in December, 1929, by the insured’s pay roll bookkeeper of the manager’s padding of the pay roll, and that thereafter, in the same month, at a directors’ meeting of the insured, or in the presence of its officers, Whitson was questioned, and that about Christmas time officers and employees of the insured appeared before the grand jury of Stark County and procured Whitson’s indictment on December 31, 1932, for embezzlement of the insured’s moneys in padding the pay rolls. The amount charged in the indictment is within a few dollars of the amount sued for in the pay roll padding feature. It is therefore *61 clear that the insured company, through its attorney, its directors and its officers, had full knowledge of its manager’s wrongdoing concerning the pay roll and the substantial amount of its loss by reason thereof.

In the matter of the claim for merchandise fraudulently obtained by the insured’s manager, we are first drawn to the testimony of Mr. Levy, an attorney of Cleveland, employed by the officers of the insured, who came to Canton during the month of December, 1929. From his testimony it appears that he then secured from the insured certain invoices, checks, bills of lading; and correspondence relating to the merchandise herein in question; that these were submitted to a United States commissioner and that the insured’s manager was bound over to the fedei’al grand jury on a charge of using the mails to defraud; that all of these original papers were taken to Cleveland and delivered to a federal inspector, this all transpiring during the month of December, 1929.

Now, these papers, at least the major part of them, were lost, and this case is made on these papers that Levy obtained, and it is a significant and unescapable fact that this feature of the case is built on these merchandise deals which came into Levy’s hands and that no other fraudulent merchandise deals were thereafter ascertained.

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Bluebook (online)
184 N.E. 695, 44 Ohio App. 138, 14 Ohio Law. Abs. 58, 1932 Ohio App. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-accident-indemnity-co-v-kenny-ohioctapp-1932.