Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Nichols

224 U.S. 346, 32 S. Ct. 475, 56 L. Ed. 795, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2307
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 8, 1912
Docket102
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 224 U.S. 346 (Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States 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. Nichols, 224 U.S. 346, 32 S. Ct. 475, 56 L. Ed. 795, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2307 (1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lurton

delivered the opinion of the court.

Action upon a bond executed by the plaintiff in error to protect the Union Bank & Trust Company, of Phoenix, Arizona, against the dishonesty of its cashier. There were two or more renewals. Embezzlements by the cashier occurred during the currency of the bond. After a right of action had accrued, the bond was assigned to the defendant in error, who brought this action thereon.

The principal defense was that the loss was due to the neglect of the employer to supervise the conduct of the employé by making such monthly examinations of his accounts as it agreed to make or have made. There was a jury and verdict for the plaintiff, and a judgment against the Surety Company, which was affirmed by the Supreme Court.

A number of errors have been assigned which relate to this defense, but the argument has turned upon those which in different ways, raise the question as to whether, after the defendant in error had made out a prima facie case by proving the bond and its breach by a refusal to indemnify him for losses sustained during its currency through the dishonesty of the employé guaranteed, the *350 onus devolved upon the Surety Company to plead and prove that the loss had occurred through the fault of the employer in not making the monthly examinations which it had agreed to make. The trial judge ruled that the onus was upon the defendant, and this ruling has been affirmed by the Supreme Court.

Whether this ruling was right or wrong must depend upon whether the requirement of the bond, that monthly examinations of the books of the employé should be made, constituted a condition precedent or a condition subsequent. The bond on its face requires the employer “to take and use all reasonable steps and precautions to detect and prevent any act upon the part of the employé which would tend to render the company liable for any loss.” It also provides that if the statements by the employer in the application “shall be untrue, the bond shall be void.” The obligation in respect to examinations of the employé’s accounts is found in the application. The questions propounded by the Surety Company and the employer’s answers, so far as relevant, were these':

“To whom and how frequently will he account for his handlings of funds and securities? Monthly; to Board of Directors.
“What means will you use to ascertain whether his accounts are correct? Examination of books and count of money and securities. How frequently will they be examined? Monthly or oftener. By whom will they be examined? Our Auditor.
‘ ‘ When were his accounts last examined? February 8th, 1905.
“Were they reported correct? Yes.
“Is there now or has there been any shortage due you by applicant? No.”

There was never any question but that liability under the bond would be defeated if it appeared that the loss attributable to the dishonesty of the employé was due *351 to the neglect of the bank to make the monthly examinations required. And so the jury were instructed. The question was whether this requirement was a condition precedent to liability which the bank was required to aver and prove or whether it was a defense to be made out by the defendant. But a construction which makes the bond inoperative until the employer shows that it had made such examinations is not a fair and reasonable interpretation. The distinction between conditions precedent and subsequent is plain enough. The condition here involved, if properly a condition at all, is of the latter class.

The coming into effect of a contract may be made to depend upon the happening or performance of a condition. But a condition subsequent presupposes a contract .in effect which may be defeated by the happening or performance of a condition. Where, therefore, an action is upon a contract subject to a condition precedent, the performance of that condition must be averred and proved; but if the contract sued upon is subject to a condition subsequent, there is no occasion for any averment in respect to the condition. It is a matter of defense winch must come from the other side. Chitty on Pleading, vol. 1, pp. 246, 255.

The plaintiff was plainly entitled to recover upon proving the bond, an embezzlement and a breach, by a refusal to indemnify. It was not obliged to aver that it had made the examinations which it.agreed should be made. If it had failed in that duty, it was for the Surety Company to so plead and prove. Such, indeed, was the course of the pleading in this case, and a breach of the agreement to make such examinations was set up as a defense. There was no error in the ruling of the court that the onus was upon the Surety Company to prove a breach of the obligation to make examinations. Piedmont & A. L. Ins. Co. v. Ewing, 92 U. S. 377; American Credit Indem. Co. v. Wood, 73 Fed. Rep. 81; Redman v. Etna Ins. Co., 49 Wis *352 consin, 431; Murray v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co., 85 N. Y. 236; Freeman v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 144 Massachusetts, 572.

It has been argued that there was no evidence upon which the case could go to the jury upon the question of whether reasonably proper monthly examinations were in fact made. This insistence has no foundation. The plaintiff in error brought out upon its own cross-examination of McDowell, the defaulting cashier, that he made monthly reports and that these reports were gone over by the officers of the bank regularly, once a month. He testified that his cash and securities were counted and examined and his report verified from the book entries made by the bank’s bookkeeper. Indeed, he testified, “that there never was a set of directors in any bank that tried to watch things closer than that set of directors.” The cashier’s embezzlements of money were covered by false entries relating to remittances to the bank’s corre-, spondents, whereby the balances in such banks were made to appear much larger than they actually were. The defendant’s expert evidence tended to show that if the returned vouchers or the reconciliation reports of such banks had been compared with the ledger accounts, thp discrepancy would have appeared. But the cashier was cunning, and he testified to the difficulties which he threw in the way of any effort to verify the books in these particulars. He supported his report by his cash and his bills receivable and a showing of the books kept by another officer, who made the entries from “slips” made by himself (the cashier), purporting to show cash used to buy exchange for remittances. These “slips,” being falsified memoranda, were innocently used by the bookkeeper as the basis for the ledger entries which misled the officers in their examinations. On this evidence the question as to whether reasonable diligence had been used in making such examinations was one for the ,jury. It was so submitted under a fair charge, and they found for the

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Bluebook (online)
224 U.S. 346, 32 S. Ct. 475, 56 L. Ed. 795, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/title-guaranty-surety-co-v-nichols-scotus-1912.