Pacific Indemnity Co. v. Hargreaves

98 P.2d 217, 36 Cal. App. 2d 338, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 53
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 29, 1939
DocketCiv. 12100
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 98 P.2d 217 (Pacific Indemnity Co. v. Hargreaves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pacific Indemnity Co. v. Hargreaves, 98 P.2d 217, 36 Cal. App. 2d 338, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 53 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

McCOMB, J.

From a judgment in favor of plaintiff after trial before the court without a jury in an action to recover a sum of money paid by plaintiff as principal on a fidelity bond after defendant defaulted, defendant appeals.

The essential facts are:

January 29, 1931, defendant, president of the First National Bank of Beverly Hills, was indebted to the Chase National Bank in the sum of approximately $280,000. He was also indebted to the First National Bank of Beverly Hills in the sum of approximately $40,000. On the aforementioned date defendant communicated with Mr. C. R. Bell, vice-president of the Bank of America, and asked him for an unsecured loan in the sum of $60,000. Mr. Bell told defendant that he would take care of it. However, thereafter Mr. Bell informed defendant that he could only loan him $48,000, whereupon defendant asked how he was to raise the $12,000 more which he needed. Mr. Bell suggested that he borrow it from his own bank, but was informed by defendant that he did not care to increase his liability with his own bank, whereupon Mr. Bell stated that he would have Mr. Ben H. Brown, one of the vice-presidents of the Bank of America, borrow $12,000 from the bank of which defendant was president, as an accommodation to defendant.

A note was then drawn in favor of the First National Bank of Beverly Hills in the sum of $12,000 signed by Mr. Brown, who received a cashier’s check for $12,000 which he endorsed to defendant, who gave his unsecured note to the Bank of America for $48,000, receiving a credit slip for this sum and the $12,000 cashier’s check endorsed by Mr. Brown. These defendant deposited to his credit in the First National Bank of Beverly Hills, and thereafter he gave to the Bank of America a draft for sixty-one thousand and some odd dollars, which sum in turn was by the Bank of America transmitted to the Chase National Bank. On the same day defendant executed a guarantee to the First National Bank of Beverly Hills of the $12,000 note signed by Mr. Brown. However, the contingent liability register of the bank did not, *341 as was customary, show that the note executed by Mr. Brown was guaranteed by defendant until August 7, 1931. Shortly after the execution of the note by Mr. Brown the loan was approved by the loan committee and the board of directors of the First National Bank of Beverly Hills. Although the other directors were not aware of the fact, Mr. Scantlin, a loan officer of the bank and a director thereof, knew before the loan was approved that defendant was receiving the proceeds thereof.

April 15, 1932, the note was “charged off”, which in bank parlance means that the note is taken out of the current or active assets of the bank which make up the actual assets shown on the bank’s balance sheet, for the reason that the note was not of sufficient worth to justify its being included as part of the bank’s assets.

June 3,1932, the First National Bank of Beverly Hills was closed and a receiver was appointed for the purpose of handling its affairs.

August 12, 1932, defendant filed a petition in bankruptcy, and in his schedule of liabilities he included the note executed by Mr. Brown, payable to the First National Bank of Beverly Hills, as accommodation paper endorsed by him. February 6, 1933, he was duly discharged from bankruptcy.

June 15, 1933, Mr. Brown filed a petition in bankruptcy and was thereafter duly discharged. April 12, 1934, defendant was convicted in the United States District Court for misapplication of funds while president of the First National Bank of Beverly Hills. Among the transactions involved was the one relative to the $12,000 note executed by Mr. Brown. His conviction was affirmed by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals (Hargreaves v. United States, 75 Fed. (2d) 68), and his petition in certiorari was denied by the Supreme Court of the United States (295 U. S. 759 [55 Sup. Ct. 920, 79 L. Ed. 1701]).

March 1, 1934, the receiver of the First National Bank of Beverly Hills filed an action against the plaintiff herein on a fidelity bond, which the latter had executed covering defalcations by employees of the bank, to recover the sum of $12,000 which the bank had lost on the note executed by Mr. Brown. Thereafter plaintiff effected a settlement of the claim with the receiver for the bank by paying him $9,000.

*342 Defendant relies for reversal of the judgment on these propositions:

First: The trial court’s findings of fact are not supported by the evidence.
Second: The trial court did not make a finding as to when the bank learned of the loss.
Third: The findings of fact do not support the judgment in the following particulars:
(a) They do not establish that plaintiff paid any loss under legal compulsion.
(b) They do not show compliance with the condition precedent required in the bond, to wit, the filing of proof of loss within ninety days and the commencement of suit against the surety within one year of discovery of the loss by the bank or by any person capable of charging the bank with knowledge of such loss.
(c) They do not establish that the defendant committed any dishonest or criminal act.
Fourth: The trial court committed prejudicial error in admitting in evidence the judgment of defendant’s conviction by the federal courts in a criminal case pertaining to the transaction herein involved.

The first proposition is untenable. An examination of the record discloses substantial evidence in connection with the inferences which may be reasonably drawn therefrom to sustain the facts set forth above and each and every finding of fact made by the trial court upon which the judgment in favor of plaintiff is necessarily predicated. For example:

(a) The trial court found as follows:

“That on or about October 25, 1933, the plaintiff delivered to the defendant, through his agent and attorney, William H. Neblett, a true and correct copy of said itemized proof of claim, and the said defendant nor his attorney at any time raised or asserted any claim or offered any information or proof that the aforementioned discovery was not made as set forth and alleged in said itemized proof of claim.”

Paragraph 2 of the second amendment to the complaint contained an allegation identical with the finding just recited. This allegation was not denied and therefore was admitted.

*343 (b) The trial court found in substance that neither defendant nor Mr. Brown was of sufficient financial responsibility to justify the $12,000 loan to Mr. Brown by the First National Bank of Beverly Hills. Defendant testified that at the time he went to see Mr. Bell, “I had no idea when I went down to see Mr. Bell where I was going to get the money”. Mr. Brown testified that when defendant was on trial in the federal court he, Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 P.2d 217, 36 Cal. App. 2d 338, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-indemnity-co-v-hargreaves-calctapp-1939.