Slidell Savings & Homestead Ass'n v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.

152 So. 121, 178 La. 548, 1933 La. LEXIS 1882
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 7, 1933
DocketNo. 32162.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 152 So. 121 (Slidell Savings & Homestead Ass'n v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slidell Savings & Homestead Ass'n v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 152 So. 121, 178 La. 548, 1933 La. LEXIS 1882 (La. 1933).

Opinion

OVERTON, Justice.

This is a suit to recover $2,708.21 on a fidelity deposit bond, signed by defendant as surety, in favor of plaintiff, against the loss, not exceeding $5,000, of any money or other personal property for which plaintiff is responsible, through the fraud, dishonesty, forgery,, theft, embezzlement or wrongful abstraction of Gladys C. Badon, while engaged in the-service of plaintiff, whether these dishonest acts be done directly or in connivance with, others.

Miss Badon, by marriage, after the irregularities complained of began, became GladysBadon Morris, and the bond was promptly altered to show her change in name. The bond was signed in 1923, and was continued in force from year to year until the discovery of the defalcations. When the bond was given, Miss-Badon was assistant secretary and treasurer of plaintiff, but, upon the death of the secretary and treasurer, which occurred several years prior to her defalcations, she was selected to fill the vacancy.

The record leaves no doubt that Miss Badon or, as we shall refer to her, Mrs. Morris, wrongfully abstracted funds belonging to plaifitiff in the sum of $2,078.21. This sum- *551 consists of $1,080.17, being overdrafts for salary, fraudulently made, during a period of several years; of $307.26, fraudulently paid by Mrs. Morris to her sister, Earline Badon, a clerk of plaintiff, in excess of her authorized salary; $73.80, represented by cash receipts unaccounted for; and of $1,266.98, the amount of insurance premiums, fraudulently paid by Mrs. Morris to an insurance agency, in which she was a partner, on policies, covering property in which plaintiff had no interest, either as owner or mortgagee, and the premiums on which plaintiff was under no color of obligation to pay.

The defense rests on a plea of prescription, growing out of the terms of the bond, and upon certain alleged breaches of warranty. Since the plea of prescription rests upon the terms of the bond, we shall quote the pertinent parts of the bond. The fourth article of the bond reads, in part, as follows:'

“Upon the discovery by the employer of any dishonest act on the part of the employee, the employer shall, at the earliest practical moment, and at all events not later than five days after such discovery, give written notice thereof to the surety at its home office. Affirmative proof of loss under oath, together, with full particulars of said loss, shall be filed with the surety at its home office within three months after such discovery. Legal proceedings for recovery hereunder may not be brought until three months have elapsed after such proof of loss has been filed with the surety, nor brought at all unless begun within six months after proof of loss has been filed with the surety. * * * ”

Plaintiff, through some of its officers and directors, became suspicious of the honesty and integrity of Mrs. Morris just prior to September 5, 1931, and apparently lost no time in instituting an investigation into her official conduct. The suspicion arose concerning the failure of Mrs'. Morris to credit a Mrs. Laderman with some $35 for rent, due by her to plaintiff, and her failure to give one of plaintiff’s customers credit on a monthly installment, paid on a loan. These suspicions resulted in a prompt convening of the board of directors of plaintiff, at which William H. Robert, a certified public accountant, was employed tp make an audit of plaintiff’s books. In making the audit, Robert quickly discovered that there was a shortage and reported it orally to plaintiff. Promptly, to wit, on September 5,1931, plaintiff gave notice to defendant of the defalcation, which was at the earliest practical moment, and within five days after its discovery. Thereafter, namely, on September 22, 1931, plaintiff made proof of' loss to defendant as provided by the bond. This proof was clearly well within three months, as the bond provides, from the discovery of the defalcation. Suit was filed on March 5,1932, and service of citation made on March 7, 1932. This was obviously within six months from the day proof of loss was filed with the surety.

Therefore, the prescription provided in the bond should not be sustained, in our judgment, unless it be that Mrs. Morris’ improper conduct was discovered by plaintiff, prior to the date of September 5,1931, named above, as the date of the discovery of her misconduct and plaintiff failed to notify defendant pf the discovery within the five days prescribed by the bond and failed to make proof of loss within three months after the discovery.

*553 Defendant most earnestly contends that the foregoing was the case. It relies upon facts showing that, under the rules of the company, Mrs. Morris’ duty was to deposit the funds of plaintiff in bank and to keep the books and the records of the business; that she had no right whatever to draw a check for plaintiff in her favor, except for her salary, which, during virtually the entire period involved, was $150 a month; and that she drew, during a period of approximately three and a half years, some eighty-nine checks for her salary, each of which, under the rules of plaintiff, was countersigned by its president, J. C. Langston. The drawing of these checks, it is shown, began with February, 1928, and ended with August, 1931, and the checks, it appears, were drawn at irregular times during the month and in irregular amounts. During a few of the months of that period, it seems, Mrs. Morris drew less than the amount of her salary for the month, but usually she drew more than the amount thereof, and in March, 1929, she drew, by checks, payable to her order, sums totaling $234.81; in April, 1929, in like manner, she drew sums totaling $419.05; and, in May of the same year, she drew checks totaling $500.87. Each of these was made, as were the other salary checks, payable to her own order, and was countersigned by J. C. Langston, president. These cheeks were charged on plaintiff’s books by Mrs. Morris, as were the remaining cheeks payable to her order. to expenses.

Defendant urges that, as Langston countersigned these checks, it appears that he had the facts before him showing that Mrs. Morris was overdrawing her salary, and therefore that plaintiff necessarily had such knowledge, but failed to report the same and make proof of loss timely. On the other hand, it appears that Langston had full faith in the integrity of Mrs. Morris; that he did not charge his memory with the amounts she was drawing, but considered that she was drawing the checks to pay herself the amount due her as salary; that his attitude towards Mrs. Morris was not only brought about by the fact that she had been working for plaintiff since 1923, during which time she had done nothing, within his knowledge, to- excite his suspicion or cause his confidence to wane, but also by the facts that her books had been examined by certified public accountants twice each year, and reported to plaintiff as being'correct, and likewise once a year by the state bank examiner, and similar reports made of their condition.

An examination of the evidence satisfies us that Langston had not even a suspicion that Mrs. Morris was overdrawing her salary and otherwise misappropriating the funds of plaintiff until the occurrence of the rent and passbook episodes, already adverted to.

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152 So. 121, 178 La. 548, 1933 La. LEXIS 1882, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slidell-savings-homestead-assn-v-fidelity-deposit-co-la-1933.