Importers' & Exporters' Insurance v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.

42 P.2d 409, 45 Ariz. 237, 1935 Ariz. LEXIS 226
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1935
DocketCivil No. 3353.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 42 P.2d 409 (Importers' & Exporters' Insurance v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Importers' & Exporters' Insurance v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 42 P.2d 409, 45 Ariz. 237, 1935 Ariz. LEXIS 226 (Ark. 1935).

Opinion

McALISTER, J.

The Importers’ & Exporters’ Insurance Company of New York brought an action *238 against Charles E. MacMillin and the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland to recover the sum of $8,076.46, which it alleges MacMillin caused it to lose and against which it had been indemnified by a bond of the latter. The plaintiff was awarded judgment against MacMillin for $5,550.41, but was unsuccessful against the surety and it is the judgment in favor of the latter that the plaintiff is ashing this court to review.

The facts out of which the action grows are substantially these: In October, 1927, the plaintiff employed Charles E. MacMillin as its State Ag’ent for Arizona, his duties being described in the written contract of employment as follows: To act as plaintiff’s representative in Arizona in supervising the business of fire and automobile insurance; to appoint local and sub-agents subject to the approval of plaintiff and to terminate such appointments when necessary ; to bind insurance and reinsurances to the extent the employer prescribed; to collect agency balances and assume full.liability for the payment of same; to transmit daily reports of policies written and monthly accounts of the business done, the latter to be forwarded in such way that they would reach the home office not later than the tenth of the following month; and to pay the balances thereunder not later than ninety days after the end of the month for which the account was renderéd. For these services the company agreed to pay MacMillin a salary of $7,000 a year and in addition an amount equal to 5 per cent, of its net yearly profits in Arizona.

.The plaintiff required MacMillin to indemnify it against loss resulting from certain acts and by way of compliance therewith the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland made and delivered to the plaintiff on November 22, 1927, its bond in the sum of $15,-000 and agreed therein to pay plaintiff within sixty *239 days after proof thereof the amount of any loss MaeMillin might cause it to sustain “through larceny, theft, embezzlement, forgery, misappropriation, wrongful abstraction, willful misapplication or any other act of fraud or dishonesty committed” by him during the year beginning November 1, 1927, and by a continuation certificate this bond was extended for a second year beginning November 1, 1928. It provided, among other things, that it should “terminate as to future acts of any Employe immediately upon discovery by the Employer, or, if a corporation, by an officer thereof not in collusion with such Employe, of any fraudulent or dishonest act on the part of such Employe,” that the “Einployer shall notify the Surety by letter or telegram addressed and sent to it at its home office in the City of Baltimore, Maryland, of any defaults hereunder or of any other fraudulent or dishonest act on the part of any Employe, within a reasonable time after discovery thereof by the Employer, or if a corporation, by any officer thereof not in collusion with such Employe,” and that “the Surety shall not be liable hereunder, directly or indirectly, ... on account of premiums not actually collected by the Employe.”

MaeMillin entered the service of plaintiff as its State Agent in October, 1927, and continued therein until September 20, 1929, when he received from the plaintiff a letter dated September 16, 1929, discontinuing his agency and giving formal notice of the immediate cancellation of the contract. Two reasons were assigned therein for this action, the first being that MaeMillin had accepted the general agency for another company, and the second, that he had failed to cooperate with the underwriting department of the plaintiff in that he had written prohibited risks freely and ignored requests for cancellation of policies. The deposition of the vice-president of the *240 company stated, however, that the one reason for the cancellation was “ MacMillin’s failure to account for moneys due us.”

The evidence discloses that on February 6, 1930, the plaintiff filed with the defendant company proof of loss and a detailed statement of its claim therefor under the bond of MacMillin, showing that MacMillin owed it $8,076.46 in premiums collected by him on insurance policies issued by it in the state of Arizona through his agency during the months of July, August and September, 1929. The full liability for these months as shown by the claim was $12,943.25 but credits thereon during October, November and December of that year' of $2,366.79 on account of premiums returned and $2,500 in cash paid by MacMillin on December 17th, had reduced this to the amount claimed, $8,076.46. The defendant company denied liability in any sum whatever, so on August 6, 1930, the plaintiff brought suit against it and MacMillin for this sum, but the amount was reduced before the trial to $5,550.41 by credits of $526.06 for return premiums for the period January 1st to May 31, 1930, and of $2,000 for cash paid by MacMillin after the commencement of the action but before the hearing in November, 1932. The plaintiff recovered judgment against MacMillin for $5,550.41 and this appeal is based on the contention that this sum was covered by the bond and that judgment for it should have gone against the surety also.

It appears that, notwithstanding the discontinuance of his agency on September 20, 1929, pursuant to a provision of the contract of employment giving either party the right to terminate it at any time, MacMillin continued to collect premiums on policies written prior to that date, and that these funds formed a part of the amount for which the judgment against him was rendered. The bond indemnified *241 appellant against acts of MacMillin as its employee and the appellee took the position below, and urges here, that it did not cover funds which MacMillin collected after the cancellation of his agency on September 20, 1929, and failed to turn over to it. The trial court upheld this contention and its action in so doing is made the basis of one of the principal assignments. Appellant contends that the termination of the contract applied only to writing new policies and did not interfere with MacMillin’s right to collect premiums on those already written. Its position is that since the contract gave him ninety days from the end of the month for which the account was rendered to pay the balances shown thereby, the appellant could not take from him authority to collect these amounts during this period and, this being true, the bond necessarily covered moneys which went into his possession that way. This view, if true, means that the contract was not canceled in its entirety or the agency discontinued for all purposes, but that it was terminated in part and continued in part.

The letter to MacMillin states, among other things:

“We regret to be obliged to notify you of our decision to discontinue your agency. ... We hereby give formal notice of the immediate cancellation of The Importers and Exporters and Mohawk Fire contracts, both fire and automobile. Kindly note that you forthwith cease to represent us as State Agent, and your authority to act on our behalf is terminated.
. . . In order to facilitate matters we have arranged with Messrs. Swett and Crawford of San Francisco to act as our representatives in closing the agency.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 P.2d 409, 45 Ariz. 237, 1935 Ariz. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/importers-exporters-insurance-v-fidelity-deposit-co-ariz-1935.