Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Hay

194 S.W. 922, 175 Ky. 671, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 380
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 18, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 194 S.W. 922 (Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Hay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Hay, 194 S.W. 922, 175 Ky. 671, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 380 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Miller

Affirming.

„ This is the second appeal in this ease. The opinion on the former appeal is printed in 165 Ky. 76; and, although the facts are there stated in detail, a brief restatement of the case, in outline, will be necessary to understand the questions involved upon this appeal.

In September, 1911, George 1Y. Harper contracted with Franklin county for the construction of a turnpike [672]*672road for $5,500.00, with the appellant company as his surety. As an inducement, however, for the company becoming Harper’s surety, Hay, Smith, Baker, Horton, and Mills gave the surety company a joint bond for $2,000.00, indemnifying it to that extent, against loss on account of its suretyship on the Harper bond.

■ Harper having failed to execute his contract, Hay and his co-indemnitors in the bond to the surety company, completed the road at a total cost of $14,084.12. They received, however, $4,600.00 which the county owed under the contract, which, when added to the $2,000.00 secured by the bond, reduced the liability of the surety company by $6,600.00, leaving unpaid $7,484.12 of the total cost of the road.

This suit was filed by Hay and his co-indemnitors in the $2,000.00 bond, to recover this balance of $7,484.12, upon the theory that they had constructed the road after Harper’s default, at the verbal request of the surety company made through its general agent, Samuel K. Bland, of Louisville.

Upon the first trial there was a verdict for the plaintiffs for the amount sued for. That judgment, however, was reversed for errors in the instructions, and for error in permitting the plaintiff Smith to testify in his own behalf concerning a conversation with Bland, who was dead at the time of the trial.

Upon a second trial there was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs for $5,000.00; and the company again appeals.

1. It is insisted that appellant’s motion for a directed verdict for it should have been sustained.

Upon the second trial the plaintiffs introduced a new witness, W. S. Whitesides, who testified in substance, and explicitly, that he heard the conversation between Smith and Bland, in which Bland instructed Smith and his coindemnitors to proceed with the work of finishing the road, and to send the bill to the appellant.

Whitesides gives the circumstances of the conversation, and fully supplies the incompetent testimony of Smith given upon the first trial.

The issue being whether the company had authorized the appellees to complete the road, Whitesides’ testimony was not only competent, but was sufficient to carry the case to the jury. •

Appellant contends, however, that Whitesides’ testimony did not relate to or support the cause of action, [673]*673because the conversation proved by him occurred after the work had been partly done. The criticism is based upon the fact that Whitesides testified that the conversation between Smith and Bland occurred either in the fall. of 1912, or in the spring of the year; and, appellant con-, tends that it occurred in the fall of the year after the! work had, in a large measure, been completed. If, how-; ever, the conversation occurred in the spring of that year; (which is a reasonable inference from Whitesides’ testi-, mony), it occurred before a part of the work was done, i However that may be, the testimony was clearly compe- i tent; and, as it was, under any theory, sufficient to sus-j tain a recovery for some amount, the court properly over-1 ruled appellant’s motion for a peremptory instruction.

2. The most important question raised upon this appeal is one of agency. It is insisted that Bland, the appellant’s state agent, was without power, in the absence of an express authority, to make the contract with Smith for the completion of the road. This question was not considered upon the former appeal, and is now presented for the first time.

It appears from the testimony of William Gaunt, Bland’s surviving partner, that Bland & Gaunt were the general agents for the appellant surety company for the state of Kentucky; that as general agents they executed bonds, and appointed other agents; that they could appoint any agent they selected; that they had no authority to make settlements for losses; that immediately upon the general agency receiving notice of any loss under any bond, they communicated the fact to the home office of the company, and that the home office then either sent a special agent to adjust the loss, or instructed them to pay so much in settlement of the loss.

Reliance is put upon the printed rules of the company, which provide (a) “that all claims under this company’s bond are adjusted under the direction of, and paid by check from the home office, and no agent is authorized to take any action looking to- a settlement, except when specially instructed to do so by the company”; (b) “in-the event of the contractor defaulting in any way, immediate notice of the same must be given to the company by the party in whose favor the bond is issued”; and (c) “that if the contractor abandon or forfeit the contract, it will be the company’s right to sub-let or complete the same in accordance with the terms thereof. ’ ’

[674]*674It is evident that these rules have no hearing upon this ease, since the company had immediate notice of Harper’s default,'thereby satisfying rules (b) and (c); and the question at issue is not whether the company had the right to complete the contract, but whether it exercised that right. And rule (a), which provides that all claims under the company’s .bond were to be adjusted under the direction of the home office, and that no agent was authorized to take any action looking to a settlement, except when specially instructed to do so by the company, applied only in cases where settlements are made and paid.

Appellant’s contention that the act of the appellees in completing the Harper contract on behalf of the company constituted a settlement of a loss under the Harper bond, which could not be done by Bland, under the rules of the company, without special authority, cannot be sustained, in view of the fact that the company then stood bound as surety upon the Harper contract, and no settlement was made or money paid to any one. Franklin county, the beneficiary in the bond, was asserting no claim of loss against the company; and, no loss was settled with the county. The loss had not been incurred, and could not, possibly, have been then ascertained. In other words, no loss had occurred and no settlement was made by Bland within the meaning of those terms as used in the policy. On the contrary, the case really came within rule (c) above quoted, which provided that whenever the contractor abandoned or forfeited the contract, the company had the right to sub-let or complete the same, according to its terms.

The prohibition upon the power of the agent to settle a loss does not apply to the agent’s authority to employ some one to complete a contract for the company, and thereby save it from loss.

So, the real case asserted by the appellees is, not that Bland attempted to make a contract for the settlement of a loss, but that he made a contract by which the company exercised its right to complete the work.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 922, 175 Ky. 671, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/title-guaranty-surety-co-v-hay-kyctapp-1917.