McIntosh v. Dakota Trust Co.

204 N.W. 818, 52 N.D. 752, 40 A.L.R. 1021, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 146
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 204 N.W. 818 (McIntosh v. Dakota Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIntosh v. Dakota Trust Co., 204 N.W. 818, 52 N.D. 752, 40 A.L.R. 1021, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 146 (N.D. 1925).

Opinion

JoirNSON, J.

Three actions were brought by the receiver of the Mohall State Bank on as many separate fidelity bonds, one executed by the American Surety Company, and two by the Dakota Trust Company, as sureties, for one Bergman, the cashier, Peters, the president, and Wiebe the vice-president of the bank. The bonds are, similar, but. not identical. The actions were consolidated and by stipulation tried and appealed together.

One Bergman, at that time cashier of the Mohall State Bank, hereinafter referred to as the bank, applied to the American Surety Com *755 pany for a bond in the sum of $10,000, to run for a period of one year. Peters as president of tbe bank, upon request from tbe surety company, furnished a certificate stating certain facts pertaining to the record, character, and the condition of the accounts of the applicant for the: bond. Peters testified that he made the statement in behalf of the bank. It is urged by this defendant that the certificate was the actual basis of the bond, and the inducing cause for its execution. This instrument, generally identified in the record as the employer’s certificate, is dated March 18, 1920, and recites that Bergman has been employed by the bank for five and one half years, and has performed his duties, to the best knowledge of Peters, in a faithful and satisfactory manner ; that his accounts were last examined on January 1, 1920, and found correct in every respect; that he was not iu arrears in the employment; that he is “entitled to confidence and qualified to discharge the duties of the position named in the application. Proper accounts are kept and adequate examinations of his transactions will be made.” Those statements were false in every material detail.

A condensed financial statement of the bank, at the close of business on February 28, 1920, was submitted to the American Sm*ety Company with the application for the bond. This statement showed a surplus fund of $25,000, and undivided profits of $8558.21. According to the testimony of Peters, this was “really an absolute fabrication.” It was likewise shown in this statement that the bank had real estate worth $7,500. This was likewise false; there was no value there whatever.

The bond of the American Surety Company indemnifies the bank against loss due to fraud, dishonesty, theft, embezzlement, wrongful abstraction, or willful misappropriation on the part of the employee, “of funds or personal property.” It is stipulated that the suretyship shall end “(a) with the date of the discovery by the employer either of loss hereunder or of dishonesty on the part of the employee, or (b) with the date of the dismissal of the employee from the service of .the employer, or (e) with the date of determination of suretyship by the surety or the employer in the manner hereinafter set forth in Clause 7.”

The American Surety Company denies liability on the ground that the answers in the employer’s certificate as to the character and the *756 condition of the accounts of the insured, and the statement as to the. condition of the bank, were grossly false and materially affected the risk, contending that the bond never became operative, because the dishonesty of the employee, Bergman, was fully known to the Bank at the time the instrument was signed, and that Bergman’s embezzlements-were fraudulently concealed from the surety.

In the actions against the Dakota Trust Company on the bonds of Wiebe and'Peters, the employer’s certificates, purporting in each instance to be made by the bank, gave more detailed information. In each case, the certificate unequivocally asserted, as a fact, that the applicant had correctly kept his accomits and “made proper settlement of all cash and other property entrusted to his care;” that his books and accounts had been personally “inspected and audited by the board' of directors and all money and valuables reported as due, on hand or in bank, examined and verified,” on June 2, 1920, in the Wiebe case, and in January, 1920, in the Peters case; that when such examination and auditing took place, the accounts were in “every respect” correct; that the insured was in no manner indebted to the bank, and was not in default under a previous bond. The blank certificates were mailed directly to the bank, the answers were certified in its name, in the Wiebe case by Peters as president, ’and in the Peters case, by Bergman, as cashier, and the premiums on the bonds were paid by the bank.

The material conditions of the bonds of Wiebe and Peters are substantially as follows:

No. 3. If the employee has defaulted at any former period, to the knowledge of the employer at the time of the execution of the bond, the bond shall-be void and no recovery shall be had thereunder.

No. 6. If, at any time after the bond is written, the employer, or any officer of the employer, acquires knowledge or notice of any 'act, fact, or information tending to show that the employee is, or may be, unreliable, deceitful, dishonest or unworthy of confidence, the employer shall immediately give the surety notice of such fact, and the surety shall not he liable for any act of the employee thereafter committed; if, at any time 'after the beginning of the term for which the bond is written, the employer acquired knowledge of the fact that the employee is unreliable, deceitful, dishonest or unworthy of confidence, the surety shall not be liable for any act of the principal thereafter committed.

*757 No. 1. All written statements and declarations concerning tbe employee or bis duties or acts made to tbe surety company by tbe employer, or any officer of tbe employer, at or before tbe execution of the bond or any renewal thereof are “hereby made tbe basis of this bond, as to tbe employee and are each, every and all warranted by the employer to bo true”; if any of such statements or declarations be false in any particular, or if any suppression or misstatement has been made of any fact affecting tbe risk at any time, tbe surety shall not be liable under the bond.

No. 14. The receipt and retention of tbe bond, or tbe making of claim for any loss thereunder by tbe employer, shall be construed as a covenant on tbe part of the employer consenting and agreeing to all tbe terms, provisions and conditions therein; and that tbe employer will make frequent audits and examinations during tbe term’of tbe bond, take and use all'reasonable steps and precautions to prevent any act on the part of tbe employee which would tend to give rise to liability under tbe bond.

The Wiebe and Peters bonds are executed upon the foregoing express conditions and indemnify the bank on account of loss due to tbe “personal dishonesty amounting to larceny or embezzlement of tbe employee.”

The undisputed testimony shows that both surety companies relied on the employer’s certificates and tbe statement of facts therein contained; and that each certificate was grossly false in every substantial detail. The statement, purporting to show the financial condition of tbe bank, furnished tbe American Surety Company was likewise false.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 N.W. 818, 52 N.D. 752, 40 A.L.R. 1021, 1925 N.D. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintosh-v-dakota-trust-co-nd-1925.