Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corp. v. Old Nat. Bank

4 F.2d 753, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3078
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 1925
DocketNo. 4131
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 4 F.2d 753 (Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corp. v. Old Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corp. v. Old Nat. Bank, 4 F.2d 753, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3078 (6th Cir. 1925).

Opinion

MOORMAN, Circuit Judge.

The Old National Bank of Grand Rapids, Mich., defendant in error, brought this suit against the Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation, of London, England, plaintiff in error, to recover under an indemnity bond issued December 31, 1920,, and renewed December 31, 1921, with. amendment in form of rider, the value of 64 bills of lading which the bank had received, with attached drafts for collection, and which it had lost through the acts of W. L. Wellman Company. The case was tried before the court, and judgment rendered for the hank in the sum of $72,596.86, with interest at 5 per eent. per annum from March 9, 1922. $10,975.34 of this loss occurred in December, 1921.

The facts in the case are simple. E. L, Wellman Company was eng'aged in the grain business in Grand Rapids, and the Old National Bank for some time prior to the matters complained of had received daily an average of 8 or 10 drafts, with attached [754]*754bills of lading, on the Wellman Company. Some of them were paid on presentation; others were not. From the beginning of the period in which this loss occurred there was an accumulation of drafts that had been presented and not paid. When the drafts were received by the bank, its custom was to fold the bill of lading with the face inside, and pin it to the. draft. The accumulated drafts were kept in a package between cardboards. The new drafts, as they came in, were placed on the outside of the cardboards, with a rubber band around all of them.

Carlton Blomley, 'the collector for the bank, daily took this package to the Well-man Company to present the drafts for payment. They were presented to Arthur Drueke, the bookkeeper and cashier of the company, in the-front office of the suite of rooms occupied by that company. In this room there were two high desks and the telephone switchboard. The bookkeeper was usually behind his desk, and, upon presenta-tion by the collector, would sometimes say, “Let me look at them,” and take the package, go over the drafts and bills of lading, and, for the ostensible purpose of checking the bills with invoices in another room, would take some of the drafts and bills out of the room. He would then bring them back, and, if he did not want to pay any of the drafts, would say, “I don’t want any to-day,” or “Hold them,” handing the package to the collector; if he wanted to pay any of them, he would do it, keep the corresponding 'bills of lading, and hand the others to the collector, to be returned to the bank.

Blomley did not know just how many of the drafts and bills, or whether all of them, were taken out of the room on any particular occasion. He usually sat in a chair below the desk, near the switchboard, and was not in position to see what Drueke did. Either while Drueke had the drafts and bills in the next room, or after he had returned to his desk, he detached the bills he wanted, and in their stead attached to the drafts regular forms of the same color, folded face inside, partially or completely filled out as the true bills. All unaccepted drafts having been returned to the collector, and the forms attached to them being exteriorly identical in appearance with the true bills, he, as well as the collecting teller of the bank, assumed that the fictitious bills were genuine.

To avoid detection the Wellman Company paid the drafts with the fictitious bills of-lading attached when tracers for those drafts were received by the bank. Funds to make these payments were procured by abstracting other bills, effecting delivery of the ears, reselling them, and depositing the proceeds of those sales to the company's account. • In this way the fraudulent practice was concealed for inore than a year. Hence, the accumulation of fictitious bills in December of 1921. After discovery of these frauds, the Old National Bank paid to the owners of the original bills of lading the value thereof, without adjudication of liability.

This aetion is to recover the amounts so paid, with interest. It is the contention of the bank that the loss is covered by the following language in the policy:

“TJbe underwriter [the defendant] hereby undertakes and agrees to indemnify the insured and hold it harmless from and against any loss, to an amount not exceeding one hundred thousand and 00/ioo ($100,000) dollars, of money, currency, bullion, bonds, debentures, scrip, certificates, warrants, transfers, coupons, bills of exchange, promissory notes, cheeks,.- or other similar securities, hereinafter referred to as property, in which the insured has a pecuniary interest, or for which it is legally liable, sustained by the insured subsequent to noon of the date hereof, and while this bond is in force, and discovered by the insured subsequent to noon of the date thereof and pri- or to the expiration of 12 months after the termination of this bond as provided in condition II.”
“(C) Through robbery, hold-up, or theft,' by any person whomsoever, while the property is in transit within 20 miles of any of the offices covered hereunder and in the custody of any of the employes, or through negligence on the part óf any of the employés having custody of the property while in transit as aforesaid.”

Liability under this provision is denied by the insurance company on various grounds hereafter tp be noted; and it further relies upon clauses 2 (a) and 2 (f) of the policy, the latter being in the rider of December 31, 1921, which, it contends, specifically exclude liability.

It is the first contention of the insurance company that bills of lading are not included in the indemnity given. In this particular the bond undertakes to hold the insured harmless from and against loss of several denominated kinds Of property or other similar securities. Bills of lading are not mentioned, and cannot, in our opinion, [755]*755be imported into the specific designations. But the general words, “other similar securities,” wore manifestly intended to mean something in addition to the specific words; i. e., other property, differing in name and some of its features from that described — as, for example, warrants differ from coupons—but possessing the same general characteristics as some of the securities mentioned. A bill of lading, in many of its essential characteristics, is similar to the other securities specifically mentioned, and for that reason the court below held, and we think rightly, that it was included in the general words.

Another contention of the company is that the bank has not sustained a recoverable loss, because it voluntarily paid to the owners of the bills of lading the value thereof, without an adjudication of its liability —such an adjudication being, as it contends, a prerequisite to the bank’s right to recover on the policy. Disregarding the provision which imposes liability for loss of property “in which the insured has a pecuniary interest,” the perlinency of which wo do not decide, the question turns on the clause “for which it is legally liable,” qualifying, as we construe it, the property described. The clause Obviously refers to property of others in the custody of the bank. Interpreting this clause more strongly against the insurer, as authorized in Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Co. v. Kearney, 180 U. S. 132, 21 S. Ct. 326, 45 L. Ed.

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Bluebook (online)
4 F.2d 753, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocean-accident-guarantee-corp-v-old-nat-bank-ca6-1925.