Ætna Indemnity Co. v. Farmers' Nat. Bank

169 F. 737, 95 C.C.A. 169, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4628
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 20, 1909
DocketNo. 40, October Session, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 169 F. 737 (Ætna Indemnity Co. v. Farmers' Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ætna Indemnity Co. v. Farmers' Nat. Bank, 169 F. 737, 95 C.C.A. 169, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4628 (3d Cir. 1909).

Opinion

ARCHBALD, District Judge.

This was an action by the Farmers’ National Bank of Boyertown, Pa., on a bond given by the ¿Etna Indemnity Company to indemnify the bank for loss or damage by reason of the dishonesty of its employés, the particular loss which was the basis of the action being occasioned by the delinquencies of Morris L. [739]*739Hartman, the cashier, with respect to transactions with one D.. C. Hillegass, a customer of the bank, who had dealt with it extensively for a long number of years. The bond was originally given April 30, 1906, for the term of one year, but was continued in force for another by a renewal receipt, upon payment by the bank of the required premium. The items of loss claimed by the bank consisted of overdrafts allowed by Hartman to Hillegass, and worthless bonds accepted from him as collateral, after positive instructions by the directors not to do so. The jury gave a verdict for the bank for $17,766.40, made up of overdrafts subsequent to the date of the bond, amounting to $11,721.07, and $5,500 of bonds, which have been spoken of, with $545.33 of interest added. The indemnity company deny liability, and claim that a verdict should have been directed on the ground that the bond was invalid, because it was obtained, as was the renewal, by material misrepresentations, and also because of a breach of warranty, by which, by express stipulation, it was to be avoided; or, if this is not sustained, that proper instructions were not given touching these questions. Particular items of loss are also contested because of the failure of the bank, within a reasonable time after their occurrence, to give notice of the practices of the cashier which ar.e set up, the dishonest character of which, as it is said, was manifest, the indemnity company, by the terms of the bond, being relieved as the result from liability for losses thereafter arising. Not altogether consistently with this, it was maintained at the trial that the acts of the cashier were pot dishonest, but were merely mistakes of judgment, against which the company did not indemnify. But except incidentally, by way of argument—that that which was not considered dishonest at the time, is not to be considered dishonest now, the bank otherwise being affected' with notice, and the bond avoided—this seems to have been abandoned. The questions which are so presented will be taken up in their order.

The bond in suit is one of high class indemnity, demanded by modern business standards, and is not simply against embezzlement or misappropriation, but for the larger liability for dishonesty or bad faith of employés, by which financial loss is experienced. As with respect to all agreements of such character, the utmost good faith is called for in obtaining it, and misrepresentation in a material point is ground for avoidance. Application for the bond in suit, although made by the cashier, was authorized by the bank, and the bond was issued directly to it, as was the renewal, the bank in each case paying the premium, and the obligation thus being of its own procuring. Attached to the application was a so-called “employer’s certificate,” executed by the president on behalf of the bank, wherein it was stated that the applicant, the cashier, had been in the service of the bank for 20 years, and had “at all times, so far as known, faithfully and satisfactorily performed his duties”; and that his accounts were last examined April 7, 1906—about three weeks before that—by the national bank examiner, and found correct to date in every-particular. At the time of the renewal, a year later, there was also a further certificate, similarly executed by the president, to the effect that, for the year then ending, Hartman had been continuously engaged in the serv[740]*740ice of the bank, and to the best of his [the president’s] knowledge and belief had given satisfaction in his personal conduct and in the performance of his duties, and had kept and rendered his accounts correctly and without default, and that no reason was known why his bond should not be renewed; that his accounts had been supervised and checked, and were last examined and audited March 14, 1907, by the examining committee, by whom they were found to be correct. It is contended that both the president and the directors had knowledge at the time of practices by Hartman, in the interest of Hillegass, which were at variance with these statements, in the face of which there can be no recovery.

There can be no question that the assurances so given were material, and that the bond was obtained and renewed on the strength of them. If, therefore, they were untrue to the knowledge of the officers of the bank, or were made without proper effort on their part to inform themselves, the bond is not enforceable. It cannot be denied that the practices indulged in by the cashier, of which complaint is made, by which loss occurred, were known to the president, and some, if not all, of the directors; and they now realize their dishonest character, and that they ought not to have countenanced or condoned them. There is evidence, for instance, that in April, 1906, not long prior to the procuring of the bond and the giving of the first certificate, Hartman, in violation of the rules of the bank and the instructions of the directors, had permitted Hillegass to make large overdrafts, running into thousands of dollars, which, in the shape of dishonored notes and checks, he carried in his drawer among his cash items, not entering them on the books, as he should, .and thus concealing .them from the directors, in 'the same way that he did the subsequent overdrafts, which, on the ground of dishonesty, are the subject of the present action; and that, when this was discovered, Hartman was not only admonished but censured by the whole board, and expressly ordered not to let it happen again, nor accept anything from Hillegass for the future, except actual cash or certified checks—directions, the disregard of which resulted in the losses sued for; also that, contrary to the instructions of the directors, he had taken from Hillegass, as security for overdrafts, $10,-000 worth of bonds of the same kind and character as the $5,500 worth which he later accepted for the same purpose, the loss on which also formed a part of the verdict. It is admitted that he should have been discharged for this, as soon as it was discovered; from which it is maintained that the certificate on which the bond was originally secured, as well as the one on which it was renewed and extended—that he had “faithfully and satisfactorily performed his duties,” according to the one; and had “given satisfaction in his personal conduct * * * and had kept and rendered his accounts correctly and without default,” according to the other—not only was not true, but could not have been affirmed with any regard for the facts as known to the directors, amounting to misrepresentation, which avoided the bond as well as the renewal.

But whatever argument of this kind could legitimately have been drawn from the evidence, and however the jury would have been jus[741]*741tified in finding according to it, we are not prepared to say that it was so preponderantly one way that but one view could be taken of it, requiring the direction of a verdict for the defendant, as contended. Take the $10,000 bond transaction, for instance.

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Bluebook (online)
169 F. 737, 95 C.C.A. 169, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tna-indemnity-co-v-farmers-nat-bank-ca3-1909.