Smith v. Federal Surety Co.

243 N.W. 664, 60 S.D. 100, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 18
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1932
DocketFile No. 6903.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 243 N.W. 664 (Smith v. Federal Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Federal Surety Co., 243 N.W. 664, 60 S.D. 100, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 18 (S.D. 1932).

Opinion

'MISER, C.

The fidelity bond on which the claim against the appellant suret)’’ company is based is in part as follows: “Whereas, Helmer Hegness * * * has been appointed to the position of president in the service of the Farmers’ Security State Bank, Centerville, South Dakota, * * * Federal Surety Company, * * * hereby covenants and agrees that it will * * * • reimburse the employer to the extent of the sum of $5,000.00 * * * for loss of money, securities, or other personal property belonging to or in possession of the employer or for which the employer may be responsible to others, which the employer shall sustain by reason of any act or acts constituting larceny, fraud, dishonesty, forgery, theft, embezzlement, wrongful abstraction, wilful misapplication or misappropriation, or crime committed by the employee (directly or through connivance with others) 'during the continuance of this bond. * * * ”

From February 29, 1924, until January 27, 1927, when respondent superintendent of banks took charge of it, Hegness was the president of respondent bank. Respondents claim that1 during that period, as a result of wrongful and willful misappropriations and abstractions of said Hegness, the bank suffered losses in transactions and amounts as follows: (1) Farmers’ Machinery Company, $1,063.50; (2) Fanners’ Machinery Company, $519.20; (3) Thomas Hove certificate of deposit, $750; (4) Hegness salary overdraft, $450; (5)' Sandve notes, $900; (6) Anderson note, $1,500; (7) Hegness note $800; (8) Johnson note, $1,100 — total $7,082.70. They ask reimbursement to the extent of the $5,000 penalty of the bond.

*103 Appellant first contends that there can be no- recovery on the bond because there is no evidence that the bank has sustained any actual and final loss of money, securities, or property. To illustrate : In the Anderson transaction, Hegness induced Anderson to sign a note for $1,500 payable to respondent bank under promises, which Anderson believed, one of which was that he would never have to pay them. By means of this note and the entries thereof on the books of the bank, Hegness caused it to appear that a loan was being made to Anderson, whereas the money ‘was taken by Hegness and was used by him for his individual purposes. Although the Sandve transaction differs in other respects, the foregoing statement applies also to it. After reviewing the evidence in the iSandve transaction appellant argues: “If, then, the accommodation maker, Sandve, is liable on these notes and financially responsible, how can it be said that the bank has sustained a loss by this transaction ? We concede that if an attempt had been made to collect these notes by suit and a successful defense had been interposed, or if judgment had been recovered and execution returned unsatisfied because of ‘no goods found’ there might be some liability upon these accommodation notes, including the Anderson and Johnson notes hereafter referred to. But no such attempt has been made, and the evidence affirmatively establishes that the man is good for ’the amount of these notes.”

Appellant contends that the bond executed by appellant is not a contract of indemnity against liability but a contract of indemnity against loss, and that respondents cannot recover until they show actual final loss. It cites, among other authorities, Morse on Banks and Banking (6th Ed) pp. 69, 126; section 1470, R. C. 1919; George Birrell, Inc., v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 193 Iowa, 860, 188 N. W. 26, 29.

The bond in the case at bar contains a covenant and agreement on the part of the surety company to “reimburse the employer * * * for loss of money, securities or other personal property.” It also contains nine conditions which are therein stated to be conditions precedent to any right of the employer to recover thereunder. . In four of these, the word ‘loss” is used twice or more times. The second of these conditions precedent is as follows: “Second: That any loss covered hereunder shall' be discovered during the continuance of this bond or within twelve months after *104 its termination and that notice of any such loss shall be given * * * within ten days after the discovery of such loss; that an itemized statement of such loss, verified by affidavit, shall be filed with the Company by the Employer within ninety days after the date of said notice of loss; that * * * the Employer shall * * * render every assistance * * * for the purpose of enabling the company to procure reimbursement from such employee of any loss, -damage or expense sustained by the company hereunder.”

In Queenan v. Palmer, 117 Ill. 62, 619, 629, 7 N. E. 470, 613, 617, the Illinois Supreme Court says: “In its most general sense, the word boss’ means any deprivation. In some instances it may mean that which can never be recovered, and in others that which is simply withheld, or that of which a party is dispossessed. Often the context assists to a clearer understanding of the words employed in a statute or written argument.”

In Fitchburg Savings Bank v. Massachusetts Bonding & Ins. Co., 274 Mass. 135, 174 N. E. 324, 328, 74 A. L. R. 274, the Massachusetts court says: “A definition of the loss for which the defendant as surety is liable as the net amount irrecoverable after all rights against others than the surety have been exhausted clashes with several sections of the bond. * * * In this bond the word boss’ means the deprivation or -dispossession of money or property of the bank due to -dishonest, criminal or fraudulent acts of its officers, regardless of the security the bank has for the loss, and that the boss’ occurredi and was suffered by the plaintiff, without regard to its possible remedies, when its funds in fact were diverted- * * * through the fraud and dishonesty of its treasurer. Forbes v. Manufacturers’ Ins. Co., 1 Gray [Mass.] 371; Qweenan v. Palmer, 117 Ill. 62, 619, 629, 7 N. E. 470, 613; Mitchell Grain & Supply Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co., 108 Kan. 379, 384, 195 P. 978, 16 A. L. R. 1488; First National Bank of Crandon v. U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 150 Wis. 601, 607, 137 N. W. 742; American Surety Co of New York v. Lawrenceville Cement Co. (C. C.) 96 F. 25, 30; Champion Ice Manuf. & Cold Storage Co. v. American Bonding & Trust Co., 115 Ky. 863, 874, 75 S. W. 197, 103 Am. St. Rep. 356. It follows that the plaintiff could sue the defendant on its bond without proof that it had then sustained some actual defined loss, not merely nominal, as the result of the transaction- in question.”

*105 So, in the case at bar, if the word “loss” in that part of the bond heretofore quoted was given the restricted meaning for which appellant contends, it would -clash with the context of the bond. It may take years to determine the exact amount which may be irrecoverable from Hegness and those -who may be liable on the paper he used in his various schemes to- defrau-d the bank.

The restricted meaning for which appellant contends, is also inconsistent with the object for which the bond was given. Section 8957, R. C.

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Bluebook (online)
243 N.W. 664, 60 S.D. 100, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-federal-surety-co-sd-1932.