Union Life & Accident Insurance v. American Surety Co.

203 N.W. 172, 113 Neb. 300, 1925 Neb. LEXIS 98
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1925
DocketNo. 23047
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 203 N.W. 172 (Union Life & Accident Insurance v. American Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Life & Accident Insurance v. American Surety Co., 203 N.W. 172, 113 Neb. 300, 1925 Neb. LEXIS 98 (Neb. 1925).

Opinion

Redick, District Judge.

This action is brought to recover upon three bank depository bonds issued to the plaintiff, and two other corporations to be named later, under which plaintiff claims by assignment, which bonds were executed as indemnity [301]*301against loss upon deposits made and to be made in certain banks named in a schedule attached to said bonds. The bond to plaintiff was dated August 5, 1920, and on November 12, 1920, there was added to the schedule the name of Corn Belt National Bank of Scotland, South Dakota, in the sum of $2,650, deposits in which are the ones in controversy, and which bank failed and did not pay said deposits. Plaintiff had judgment below, and defendant appeals.

The terms of the three bonds are identical, with the exception of the date and name of obligee, and the condition thereof is in the following words: “Now, therefore, the condition of this obligation is such that if said banks shall, during the term of this bond, faithfully account for and pay on legal demand all moneys deposited with them by and on behalf of said obligee, and shall not suspend payment during the term hereof, then this obligation shall be null and void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect.” A further provision was as follows: “The obligee may apply to the surety to have other banks added to said schedule from time to time, which by an acceptance in writing by the surety will bind the surety to the same extent as though, said bank or banks were originally listed herein.” The' term of said bonds was one year, and during «that period plaintiff deposited in said bank the total sum of $3,564.20, receiving therefor six certificates of deposit, for the failure to pay which the action is brought. The defendant, however, conceded its liability as to four of said certificates and has paid the same, so that the only ones in controversy are No. 967, dated June 19, 1920, due in one year, for $1,110, and No. 981, dated July 3, 1920, due in one year, for $700, both at 5 per cent, interest.

August 21, 1920, plaintiff for value sold and assigned certificate No. 967 to Union Automobile Insurance Company, and December 21, 1920, sold and assigned for value certificate No. 981 for $700 to Union Fire Insurance Company. The depository bonds of these two companies were dated August 24, 1920, for the term of one year, but did not include the Corn Belt National Bank, and on January [302]*30224, 1921, the assignees each applied to defendant to extend the coverage on its bonds issued to them, respectively, so as to include the Corn Belt National Bank. On January 27, 1921, the defendant accepted said applications and extended the coverage requested to the Union Automobile Insurance Company in the sum of $1,125, and the Union Fire Insurance Company in the sum of $700.

On January 21, 1921, by order of its directors, the Corn Belt National Bank closed its doors and thereafter the bank transacted no business, and on January 22, 1921, National Bank Examiner Smiley took charge of the affairs of the bank for the comptroller of the currency. These facts were unknown to the Union Automobile Insurance Company and the Union Fire Insurance. Company at the time they made application to defendant to extend the coverage of its bonds so as to include said bank, and were unknown to defendant January 27, 1921, when it accepted said applications and issued its contract in compliance therewith; all of the parties concerned believing and assuming that at the date of said transactions the Corn Belt National Bank was still functioning and a going concern. On February 3, 1921, the defendant discovered that the Corn Belt National Bank had closed its business on January 21, and thereupon demanded of the plaintiff a return of said coverage contract issued January 27, but which by its terms was to go into effect January 24, 1921, on the ground that at the time the same was issued the defendant did not know that the bank had suspended, and later on deposited with the clerk of the court the amount of premiums paid for said coverage contracts, $5.80, for the use of plaintiff.

At the time of sale of said certificates they were transferred by general indorsement of the plaintiff, which claims it thereby became liable for their payment, and on May 18, 1921, plaintiff repurchased said certificates 967 and 981, and has owned the same ever since, taking assignments thereof and of the coverage contracts relating thereto. The above facts are stipulated. In addition thereto the defend[303]*303ant produced evidence to the effect that it would not have issued said coverage agreements if it had known that the bank had suspended, and evidence tending to establish that said contracts were issued through a mistake in its office, but this latter fact we deem immaterial in view of our conclusion. The defenses relied upon are: That the plaintiff was not a depositor in the Corn Belt National Bank when it failed; and that the two coverage contracts dated January 27 never came into existence because based upon a mutual mistake of fact.

The plaintiff bases its right to recover upon two propositions: (1) As a depositor of the Corn Belt National Bank under its own bond; and (2) as the assignee of the Union Automobile Insurance Company and the Union Fire Insurance Company of their rights under the coverage contracts effective January 24 and dated January 27, 1921.

We deem it convenient to first discuss the second proposition. The facts are undisputed: At the time of the issuance of the two coverage contracts both of the parties thereto were in ignorance of the failure of the Corn Belt. National Bank and assumed that it was a going concern,, and the contracts would not have been made had the facts; been known. Thus is presented a clear case of mutual mistake as to the existence of a fact upon which the obligations of the contract were based, viz., the existence of the Corn Belt National Bank. It is obvious that when the contract speaks of a bank it implies a going concern engaged in the business of banking, not a defunct institution whose doors have been closed and which is prohibited by law from continuing its business. It seems futile to discuss the question whether or not the contracts of coverage would have been issued if the defendant had been advised that the bank had suspended and was in the hands of the bank examiner. A contract of indemnity under such conditions would be essentially different from one under the condition of facts assumed by the parties and with reference to which they entered into the contracts. The rule in such cases is, we believe, without exception, that there is no contract. It is [304]*304. sometimes said that the contract is void, but we think the situation is, better expressed by saying that the contract never had any existence. In 9 Cyc. 399, the rule is stated: “Where certain facts assumed by both parties are the basis of a contract, andi it subsequently appears that such facts did not exist, there is no agreement.” And the text is supported by citations from numerous states and England. “When an alleged agreement was entered into by an honest misunderstanding and through a mutual mistake of the parties, there is no legal contract.” Boehm v. Yanquell, 15 Ohio C. C. Rep. 454. In Scriba v. Insurance Company of North Amercia, 2 Wash. C. C. (U. S.) 107, it was held that a policy of insurance upon a cargo loaded or to be loaded upon a certain vessel at La Vera Cruz for shipment to New York never became a binding contract when no such cargo was ever loaded, as there was no subject-matter upon which the contract could operate. In Gibson v. Pelkie, 37 Mich.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
203 N.W. 172, 113 Neb. 300, 1925 Neb. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-life-accident-insurance-v-american-surety-co-neb-1925.