Resolute Insurance Company v. State
This text of 290 So. 2d 599 (Resolute Insurance Company v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
RESOLUTE INSURANCE COMPANY
v.
STATE of Mississippi.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*600 Daniel, Coker, Horton, Bell & Dukes, Donald V. Burch, Jackson, for appellant.
A.F. Summer, Atty. Gen., by T.E. Childs, Jr., Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.
RODGERS, Presiding Justice.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Claiborne County, Mississippi, in favor of the State of Mississippi against the appellant, Resolute Insurance Company, on certain bail bond forfeitures. The appellant insurance company filed a petition in the circuit court requesting the court to vacate judgment nisi on four alleged bail bonds. The appellant contended that the alleged bonds were not valid. The insurance company offered evidence on the petition. The following facts were brought to the court's attention.
In September, 1971, Eddie Gorham, Jacqueline Mae O'Hara, Barney Joseph O'Hara and Tommy Riley were arrested for theft and incarcerated in the Claiborne County jail. On September 24, 1971, the deputy sheriff received a telephone call from a person who identified himself as John Wilson, a bail bondsman in Georgia. Wilson advised the deputy sheriff that the persons above named were his clients. He wanted to know the amount of the bonds required to release the prisoners. Wilson informed the deputy sheriff that he had power of attorney from Resolute Insurance Company. The deputy sheriff advised Mr. Wilson that Resolute Insurance Company's bail bond would be accepted by him. The next day, Saturday, September 25, Mr. Wilson arrived in Port Gibson driving a car with Georgia license tags. He presented the deputy with a business card bearing the name "A-Bonding Company, Augusta, Georgia." He also gave the deputy a qualifying power of attorney and four powers of attorney to make bond. He said that he could not file the qualififying power of attorney since the clerk's office was closed. After looking at these documents, the deputy released the prisoners on Mr. Wilson's bonds signed by him.
The four prisoners were indicted, but failed to appear at the January, 1972 term *601 of circuit court. Judgment nisi was entered against the four prisoners and the two sureties, A-Bonding Company and Resolute Insurance Company, in the amount of twelve thousand dollars ($12,000.00). Scire faciases were issued requiring the prisoners and sureties to appear at the May term of court. Appellant contends that it first became aware of the four bonds when its Mississippi agent was served with the scire faciases in April, 1972. Appellant filed a petition to vacate on May 20, 1972. Final judgment of forfeiture was entered on May 24, 1972, the petition to vacate was denied, and this appeal ensued.
The following uncontradicted facts can be gathered from the record of the hearing on the petition to vacate: The John Wilson who called and arranged for the release of the prisoners was the son of a former agent of Resolute Insurance Company. The elder John Wilson died in August of 1971, and soon after his death, an attorney from Resolute Insurance Company was sent to Augusta, Georgia to gather all papers and documents pertaining to Resolute Insurance Company. Evidently, the four powers of attorney and qualifying power of attorney were acquired by the son, John Wilson, without the knowledge of Resolute. The son was never an agent for Resolute, nor was he ever a licensed bondsman in Georgia or Mississippi. By using the above mentioned documents, the son, John Wilson, obtained the release of the four prisoners in question.
The qualifying power of attorney given to the deputy sheriff was obviously a Georgia power of attorney. It had written across the top of the document the following words: "This power cannot be filed without proof of valid insurance license issued by Georgia Insurance Department."
The general agent of the insurance company testified that John Wilson was the son of their agent John S. Wilson, who had died on August 4, 1971. He testified that he had no knowledge of the bonds until April, 1972, and that John Wilson, the son of their agent, was never an agent for Resolute Insurance Company. He pointed out that bonds signed by the son of their deceased agent did not have the corporate seal on them.
The insurance company's general agent admitted on cross-examination that the qualifying power of attorney and the numbered powers of attorney attached to the bonds were sent out to their agent, the senior Mr. Wilson in blank, allowing the agent to insert his name at a later time.
The petitioner introduced two certificates from the Commissioner of Insurance of Mississippi in which the commissioner certified that neither John S. Wilson, Sr., nor John S. Wilson, Jr. was licensed to sell insurance in Mississippi.
It is evident from the testimony in this case that John S. Wilson, Jr. was not the agent of Resolute Insurance Company at the time he signed the bonds and filed the power of attorney; nor does the State of Mississippi contend that he was an agent of the insurance company in signing the bonds.
The State contends that the final judgment forfeiting the bail bonds should be affirmed, because it is said the appellant, Resolute Insurance Company, is estopped to deny that the bonds filed and forfeited were genuine. This contention is based upon the fact that the powers of attorney were issued and delivered to their agent without inserting the name of the person empowered to make the bond. Further, it is said, the powers of attorney were numbered and the insurance company knew, or should have known, that these documents were outstanding at the time the company retrieved the papers from the widow of the deceased agent. Therefore, the company should have notified the officers of the surrounding states. Thus, it is argued that since no notice was given to the public, the insurance company cannot now claim these documents to be invalid.
*602 After careful consideration we have reached the conclusion that Resolute Insurance Company was not estopped to show that the alleged bail bonds filed in the circuit court in this case were in fact invalid, for the following reasons.
It is true that one of the most usual applications of the doctrine of estoppel in pais arises where there has been a misrepresentation or concealment of material facts on the part of the person or company to be estopped. It has long been an established rule of equity [now adopted by courts of law] that where one by his acts or representations [or even by his silence when he ought to speak] intentionally or through culpable negligence induced another to believe that certain facts exist so that he acts on these facts to his hurt and prejudice, such person may invoke the doctrine of estoppel against one who induces or by his negligent acts causes, a person to act to his hurt on such facts. Kelso v. Robinson, 172 Miss. 828, 161 So. 135 (1935); Clark v. Dorsett, 157 Miss. 365, 128 So. 79 (1930); Staton v. Bryant, 55 Miss. 261, 272 (1877); 19 Am.Jur. Estoppel § 51, at 653; § 55, at 661 (1939).
The rule that one may be estopped by his silence, however, presupposes that one not only had the duty to speak out, but that he had an opportunity to do so, and in addition, that his failure to speak when the opportunity was presented, was either intentional or in negligent disregard of plain dictates of conscience and justice. Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank v. Brewer, 143 Miss. 146, 143 Miss. 184, 108 So. 424, 109 So. 8, 47 A.L.R. 45 (1926).
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290 So. 2d 599, 1974 Miss. LEXIS 1704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/resolute-insurance-company-v-state-miss-1974.