National Surety Co. v. First State Bank of Tomball

244 S.W. 217, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1254
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 1922
DocketNos. 8232, 8233. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 244 S.W. 217 (National Surety Co. v. First State Bank of Tomball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Surety Co. v. First State Bank of Tomball, 244 S.W. 217, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1254 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

“This is an action brought by the First State Bank of Tomball, hereinafter called the bank, and Ed. Hall, acting in his official capacity as Commissioner of Insurance and Banking of the State of Texas, against the National Surety Company and R. W. Leslie, for the purpose of recovering on a fidelity bond executed by defendants in favor of the bank, by the terms of which the said R. W. Leslie, as principal, and the National Surety Company, as surety, undertook to indemnify the bank against such pecuniary loss as it might sustain of money or other valuable securities embezzled, wrongly abstracted, or willfully misapplied by said R. W. Leslie as an officer or employee of said bank in the course of his employment as such.

“Plaintiffs pleaded that the Commissioner of Insurance and Banking was in lawful charge of the affairs of the bank; set up the execution of the bond in the sum of $5,000, and the continuation thereof until the date in November, 1920, when the said Commissioner took charge of the affairs of the bank; set out the terms of the bond, and alleged its breach in language following the wording of the bond, but without alleging in detail the facts constituting the breach, and sought to recover against both defendants the full amount of the .bond.
“The defendants pleaded, in addition to their general and special exceptions and general denial, that if the bank suffered any pecuniary loss, as alleged, that the same was the result of the misconduct of Roy Mackey Huffington, who was the vice president of the bank and in control of the majority of the bank stock and the management of the bank, who was solely guilty of the acts complained of and the only beneficiary thereof, and that the said R. W. Leslie did not use, embezzle, misapply, or appropriate to his own use any part of the bank’s property, nor did he directly or indirectly profit by the transactions of the said Huffington, or do any other act sufficient to authorize a recovery on the bond; and defendants further pleaded that the said vice president, Roy Mackey Huffington, was also under bond in the sum of $5,000 to the said bank at the time said loss occurred, and that he was directly responsible therefor, and that the defendant National Surety Company was surety on the bond of the said Roy Mackey Huffington, and upon demand being made therefor by plaintiffs, had paid to them on account of the defalcations of said Huffing-ton, the full amount of the penalty of his said bond, and that, by reason thereof, plaintiffs were estopped and precluded from recovering on account of the same transactions on the bond sued on in this case.
“The case was tried to the court without a jury, and a judgment was rendered on the 16th day of May, 1921, in favor of the plaintiff against both defendants for the sum of $5,000, the full amount of said bond, together with the interest thereon.”

The statement thus made has been taken from appellant’s brief.

The Surety Company has appealed through writ of error.

Appellant, under four assignments of error, presents as many contentions for reversal in substance and order as follows:

1. Its general demurrer to the. petition of plaintiffs below should have been sustained, because no facts constituting a breach of the bond sued on were set up, but merely an allegation, in the language of the bond itself, that its obligations were not complied with, which constituted only a conclusion of the pleader.
2. The judgment is so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as' to be manifestly wrong, because the acts proven against Leslie did not come within the terms of the bond, in that:
“(a) They did not constitute embezzlement, because none of the funds or securities of the Bank were converted to the use of said principal.
“(b) They did ont constitute wrongful abstraction because none of the funds or securities of the bank were abstracted, or taken out of the bank by such principal.
*219 “(c) They did not constitute willful misapplication, because if any funds or securities of the bank were misapplied by said principal, the same was not willfully done, in that such acts were in each instance committed, not voluntarily, but by the direction and at the command of a superior officer of the bank who was in charge of its affairs.”
3. “Since the only obligation of appellant as security on the fidelity bond sued on is to hold the bank harmless against, and to pay to it such pecuniary loss as it may sustain of money or other valuable securities embezzled, wrongfully abstracted, or willfully misapplied by the principal in the bond in the course of his employment, it is not liable on account of moneys embezzled, wrongfully abstracted, or willfully misapplied by a superior officer of the bank, in the absence of any evidence showing that the principal in the bond ever received any financial benefit from the acts of such superior officer, or participated in such acts in any other manner than to carry out the instructions of such superior officer.”
4. “The bank having taken fidelity bonds from its active vice president, and from other officers and employees, including the principal in the bond sued on, and such vice president having been guilty of misappropriating the funds of the bank to his own use, thereby breaching the terms of the bond, and the bank then, having claimed and collected from the surety on the bond of the vice president the full penalty thereof, it cannot thereafter collect from the surety on the'bond of another of its officers or employees on account of such misappropriation of funds, merely because such officer or employee may have had a guilty knowledge of the acts of the vice president, or may have actually rendered assistance to said vice president in effecting such misappropriation.”

The appellees, upon the other hand, insist that—

The record shows not only that Leslie “had knowledge of the manipulation of the books and the misappropriation of the funds of the bank by Roy W. Huffington, but that he aided and assisted Huffington by entries made by Leslie from time to time on the books of the bank, drafts, checks, etc., signed by him, and through funds paid out belonging to the bank, by removal, handling, and concealment of the sheets (marked M) removed from the bank’s books, by statements made to the Commissioner of Banking, to the bank, and to the depositors by Leslie, all in aid of and contributing to the acts of Huffington.”

The established facts deemed material to a determination of the issues thus joined upon appeal, in substance, were these:

The terms of the bond ran:
“Now, if the above bounden officer and surety shall hold the bank harmless against, and pay to it such pecuniary loss as it may sustain of money or other valuable securities embezzled, wrongly abstracted, or willfully misapplied by said officer in the course of his employment as such, and in the course of his employment in any other position in the bank to which he may be appointed, re-appointed, elected, re-elected or temporarily assigned, then this obligation is void; otherwise to be and remain in full force and effect.”

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Bluebook (online)
244 S.W. 217, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-surety-co-v-first-state-bank-of-tomball-texapp-1922.