Independence Indemnity Co. v. Grants Pass & Josephine Bank

29 F.2d 83, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2620
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 1928
DocketNo. 5568
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 29 F.2d 83 (Independence Indemnity Co. v. Grants Pass & Josephine Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Independence Indemnity Co. v. Grants Pass & Josephine Bank, 29 F.2d 83, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2620 (9th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

RUDKIN, Circuit Judge.

Some months prior to February 19, 1927, tbe Oregon Construction Company entered into contracts with tbe eities of Grants Pass and Klamath Falls, in tbe state of Oregon, for tbe construction and laying of sewer systems for tbe two cities, and tbe Independence Indemnity Company executed surety bonds on behalf of tbe contractor for tbe faithful performance of these contracts. Tbe bonds were executed by tbe indemnity company through Brownell-Slocum Insurance Agency, Inc., general agent for tbe indemnity company for tbe state of Oregon. Tbe Grants Pass & Josephine Bank, of Grants Pass, advanced to tbe contractor tbe sum of $6,000 which was expended in the performance of tbe contracts, and took as security for tbe loan assignments of moneys to become due tbe contractor from tbe cities as work under tbe contracts progressed. On tbe above date, tbe contractor was in need of further funds for tbe prosecution of tbe work and applied to tbe bank for an additional loan, which tbg bank declined to make. Thereupon, H. C. Leigh, president of the Brownell-Sloeum Insurance Agency, and the officer in charge of its affairs, visited Grants Pass, and as a result of this visit tbe [84]*84bank advanced $4,000 additional, taking the note of the contractor for the sum of $10,-000. At the same time the indemnity company executed an indemnity contract reciting the loan of the $10,000 by the bank; that the indemnity company had executed the surety bonds to the two cities; that the sum of $6,000 had already been expended by the contractor in the performance of the work and that the additional $4,000 was intended for the like purpose; that the bank held certain assignments from the contractor for moneys to become due under the contracts and had surrendered these assignments to the indemnity company; and that the bank and the indemnity company had agreed that the indemnity company would save the bank harmless for the repayment of the loan according to the tenor of the promissory note. It was thereupon agreed that, in consideration of the premises, the indemnity company would save the bank harmless, and that all sums thereafter paid by the two cities on their respective contracts for work should be deposited with the bank for disbursement. This contract was signed, Independence Indemnity Company, by H. C. Leigh, attorney in fact, and the corporate seal was affixed. Leigh had theretofore held a power of attorney from the indemnity company authorizing him to execute certain undertakings on its behalf to the amount of $25,000, without being countersigned by any other person or persons; but this power was revoked prior to the execution of the indemnity agreement with the bank. Whether the bank had notice of the existence of the power of attorney or of its revocation does not appear.

. After the execution of the indemnity agreement to the bank, work progressed under the sewer contracts until their completion about September 1, 1927. In March, 1927, the agency contract between the indemnity company and the Brownell-Sloeum Insurance Agency, Inc., was terminated, and at about that time the indemnity company sent its representative to Portland to check up the office of the agency and to detect irregularities, if any such existed. This representative found a copy of the contract in suit among the files of the agency and criticized it severely; but there was no repudiation of the contract at that time, and the bank had no notice of any disclaimer of liability under it until late in the summer of 1927. When liability was disclaimed, the present suit was instituted by the bank against the indemnity company. The complaint is in the usual form in such eases, alleging the execution of the contract by the defendant and its nonperformance, and a copy of the contract is attached to the complaint as an exhibit. The answer denied the execution of the contract, denied that the instrument, a copy of which was attached to the complaint, was executed by the defendant, or by any person upon its behalf, or by any person with authority to execute it, and alleged affirmatively that the instrument claimed to be executed by the defendant, if executed at all, was not executed by the defendant, or by any person for or on its behalf, or with authority to execute the same. Upon the trial in the court below judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed.

In the course of the trial, a witness for the appellee was asked if it was in the usual course of dealing of general agents of surety companies to handle the adjustment of claims, and the witness answered, over objection and exception, that it always is unless a special adjuster is appointed. The ruling of the court admitting this testimony is assigned as error. The question was a very general one. What was meant by handling the adjustment of claims is rather indefinite, and what was meant by the adjustment of claims is equally so. The witness apparently understood the inquiry to be whether general agents acted as adjusters for their companies, and such perhaps was the information sought. But the authority of adjusters is as varied and as hard to define as the authority of general agents. They may have or exercise much or little authority. In some states their authority is defined by statute, but in the absence of statutory definition their authority is a mere matter of private contract. They usually act under special instructions, and when they do their authority is, of course, measured by the instructions given, unless, as here, we are driven into the realm of ostensible or apparent authority. In other words, the fact that general agents for surety companies sometimes act as adjusters for their company, without further elucidation or explanation, tended in no way to explain or define their authority as general agents. For this reason the testimony might well have been excluded, but inasmuch as the court specifically instructed the jury that Leigh was without authority to execute the contract in suit on behalf of the appellant, the admission of the testimony was, at most, error without prejudice.

The court below instructed the jury generally on the question of the apparent or ostensible authority of the agent who executed the contract, and the appellant challenges the correctness of these instructions on sev[85]*85eral grounds: First, because the contract in suit was executed by Leigh as attorney in fact and the authority of no other agent was involved; second, because the instructions permitted the jury to find against the appellant if they found from the testimony that the insurance agency at Portland had authority to execute the contract; third, because the instructions permitted the jury to find against the appellant on the theory of apparent authority of any of its agents to execute the contract, whereas the complaint was predicated upon an express authority; and, lastly, because the instructions permitted the jury to find against the appellant if the agent had apparent or ostensible authority to execute the contract, that an apparent or ostensible agency is based on estoppel, and that no estoppel was pleaded.

We will first consider the question of pleading. Where an action is brought on a contract made by an agent, it is both customary and proper to plead the contract as that of the principal, and if the execution of the contract is denied, the plaintiff must prove both its execution and the authority of the person by whom it was executed. This latter may be proved by any competent testimony, as by showing that the authority was directly conferred by the principal, or that the agent had apparent or ostensible authority, or that the contract has been ratified by the principal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F.2d 83, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/independence-indemnity-co-v-grants-pass-josephine-bank-ca9-1928.