National Surety Corporation v. Rauscher, Pierce & Co., Inc.

369 F.2d 572
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 13, 1967
Docket21903_1
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 369 F.2d 572 (National Surety Corporation v. Rauscher, Pierce & Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Surety Corporation v. Rauscher, Pierce & Co., Inc., 369 F.2d 572 (5th Cir. 1967).

Opinions

[574]*574JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal involves the question of liability under a Brokers Blanket Bond purchased to indemnify the Insured against any loss sustained due to dishonest, fraudulent or criminal acts of its employees and for court cost and reasonable attorney’s fees incurred by the Assured in defending suits arising from such acts. The District Court sitting without a jury allowed Rauscher, Pierce and Company, Inc., the Assured, recovery in the amount of $73,131.07 against National Surety Corporation, the Bond underwriter. National Surety appeals from the decision.

Rauscher, Pierce, a company engaged in the brokerage of securities, was the Assured; National Surety, the Insurer. The Brokers Blanket Bond contained the usual fidelity clause indemnifying the employer (Assured) against loss due to the dishonest or fraudulent acts of its employees and providing for reimbursement of counsel fees and claims expense.1 The loss claimed in this case grew out of a sale of Water Control and Improvement District Bonds by Rauscher, Pierce to Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company and State Mutual Life Assurance Company of America.2 The facts of the transaction are not in dispute. In January 1957 Travis County Water District No. 9 had for sale Water Control and Improvement bonds. Rauscher, Pierce became interested in the purchase and resale of the bonds. Edward Volz, Manager of Institutional and Dealer’s Sales for Rauscher, Pierce investigated the district for the purpose of ascertaining the value of the bonds and whether it would be a profitable venture for Raus-cher, Pierce. The reports of Volz were very favorable and pursuant to his investigation he prepared an offering circular for use by Rauscher, Pierce in reselling the bonds. The circular, it was later discovered, contained numerous misstatements of fact pertaining to the population of the district, the assessed value of the land and improvements and the actual value thereof. Volz wrote letters to the Water Bond Purchasers which contained the same misstatements. With the letters he enclosed a copy of the offering circular and a copy of an engineer’s report on the district. The engineer’s report contained substantially the same misstatements. The Water Bond Purchasers in February 1957 in effect contracted to purchase the bonds from Rauscher, Pierce. Delivery was made in August 1957 in the total face amount of $1,365,000.

The transfer of the bonds entailed a three-step transaction. The Water District which issued the bonds made a commitment to sell the entire issue to Tucker and Company, the Underwriter, who gave a like commitment to sell the bonds to Rauscher, Pierce. The Water Bond Purchasers in turn purchased the bonds from Rauscher, Pierce. Rauscher, Pierce in 1961 discovered the falsity of the statements by Volz and notified the Water Bond Purchasers. Subsequently they filed suit against Rauscher, Pierce demanding the reimbursement of the purchase price in exchange for a return of the bonds. Notice was given by Raus-eher, Pierce to National Surety of the pending suit, and demand was made that National Surety fulfill its indemnity bond obligation to defend the suit. National [575]*575Surety refused on the basis that the suit was not a claim which came within coverage of the bond. After the refusal by National Surety, Rauscher, Pierce engaged legal counsel and after extensive investigation, pretrial activity and negotiation, a compromise agreement was worked out with the Water Bond Purchasers.

The settlement took this form. The Water District was to reissue bonds containing terms, conditions and provisions more consistent with actual conditions of the district than those in the original bonds. The reissued bonds were to remain the property of the Water Bond Purchasers. Rauscher, Pierce agreed, however, to repurchase the reissued bonds within eleven years in ten installments at 75% of their face value even though the actual value at the time of purchase might be less. To the extent, therefore, that the market value of the reissued bonds was less than 75%, Raus-cher, Pierce was certain to sustain a loss at these installment dates.

After the compromise Rauscher, Pierce instituted suit against National Surety to recover its costs and the damages sustained. The District Court found National Surety liable. The Court held that the loss was within the coverage of the Brokers Blanket Bond and “[b]y refusing to defend the suits, * * * [National Surety] came bound to pay to the plaintiff the cost of procuring counsel to defend such suits and the costs of the court * * Likewise, it became obligated “ * * * to hold itself ready to pay whatever losses the plaintiff might sustain by reason of any judgment entered in such litigation.” The Court allowed Rauscher, Pierce to recover $32,311.07 expended in defending the suits and $40,800 actual loss based on the repurchase of bonds on two of the agreed ten installments occurring in the interim. Also the Court found that National Surety was to reimburse Rauscher, Pierce for any future losses it might sustain due to the repurchase of the remaining installments.

National Surety urges two errors: (1) no liability exists on its part because the claim asserted by the Water Bond Purchasers did not come within the coverage of the indemnity bond, and (2) in the event it is found liable, there should be set off against National Surety’s liability the profit of $59,436.55 which Rauscher, Pierce made on the sale of the bonds to the Water Bond Purchasers.

We first consider National Surety’s contention that the suits by the Water Bond Purchasers did not come within the coverage of the bond. The alternatives for supporting this position are few. National Surety must show either (1) that the suits instituted by the Water Bond Purchasers did not grow out of alleged fraudulent acts committed by the employees of Rauscher, Pierce, the Assured, or (2) that no loss was in fact sustained by Rauscher, Pierce.

We easily dispose of the first. It is clear from the face of the complaints filed by the Water Bond Purchasers that the alleged misconduct was sufficient to bring the suit within coverage of the indemnity bond.3 Actually [576]*576National Surety does not deny that the demand of the Water Bond Purchasers was based on alleged misrepresentations by Volz acting in his official capacity as representative of Rauscher, Pierce. Rather, as near as we can discern it, National Surety contends that the claims were not within the coverage because Rauscher, Pierce was in a position to avoid the prosecution of the suits without actually sustaining any loss. In their suits the Water Bond Purchasers demanded a rescission of the sale. In exchange for the full purchase price paid for the bonds, they tendered a return of the bonds together with all interest received thereon to date.4 For reasons it fully explained, Rauscher, Pierce rejected the offer to rescind as not being a prudent disposition of the claims. National Surety argues that by rejecting the offer to rescind, Rauscher, Pierce eliminated any possible liability under the indemnity bond. The reasoning runs this way. Since Rauscher, Pierce could have rescinded the sale, this would have restored the status to the position existing prior to making of the sale. Raus-cher, Pierce would have had the bonds, it would have given up the proceeds received on the sale by returning the purchase price to the Water Bond Purchasers. Thus everyone would be where they were earlier, and no loss would have [577]

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369 F.2d 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-surety-corporation-v-rauscher-pierce-co-inc-ca5-1967.