United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Krow

1938 OK 577, 87 P.2d 950, 184 Okla. 444, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 499
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 15, 1938
DocketNo. 26201.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1938 OK 577 (United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Krow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Krow, 1938 OK 577, 87 P.2d 950, 184 Okla. 444, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 499 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

BAYLESS, V. C. J.

In this case we are called upon to determine whether the party plaintiff in the court below was with right and authority to maintain suit on fidelity bonds given pursuant to the provisions of section 1, chapter 157, Session Laws 1923 (sec. 9123, O. S. 1931). Said section provides ;

“It is by this act made mandatory that all persons who are actively engaged in the state banking business in the state of Oklahoma and all active employees of any such bank shall from and after the passage and approval of this act give fidelity bonds, to the state of Oklahoma, executed by a surety company in the amount fixed by the Bank Commissioner, and when executed to be approved by the Bank Commissioner for the faithful performance of their respective duties and every active officer and employee of such state banks shall give such bond within 30 days after such officer shall become active as an officer or employee in a state bank in the state of Oklahoma.”

Each of the bonds involved in this litigation bears an indorsement of approval by the 'State Bank Commissioner, and respectively .provide that the principal and surety named therein are bound to pay to the state of Oklahoma such pecuniary loss, not exceeding $5,000, as “the First Commerce Bank of Ralston, Oklahoma, * * • may sustain by reason of the failure of the principal from and after the date of this suretyship to faithfully perform all duties required of such principal while said principal is actually employed by said bank aforesaid. * * *”

While said bonds were in force and effect, Jasper T. Krow, as plaintiff, but now defendant in error, instituted suit in the district court of Pawnee county, Okla., against V. M. Harry and J. O. Cales, principals named in the bonds aforementioned, and United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company and American Surety Company of New York, the respective sureties on said bonds. He alleged: That during the year 1931 he was a depositor in the First Commerce Bank, of Ralston, Okla., and continued so to be up to August 1, 1932, “when said bank was turned over to the State Bank Commissioner as an insolvent bank”; that prior to August 6, 1931, he left various promissory notes amounting to $10,000 with said bank for collection, the proceeds there *445 of to be deposited in> a special account designated “Jasper T. Krow Collection Account”; that prior to August 6, 1931, approximately $3,000 bad been deposited in said account, and that while said sum was so deposited, the defendants, as officers and employees of said bank, wrongfully and unlawfully and without knowledge or consent of plaintiff, and in violation of their duties as officers and employees of said bank, and in violation of the terms and conditions of 1lieir bonds, debited his said account in the sum of $1,000 and caused entries to be made on the bank’s books crediting said amount to an account carried in the name of “Osage Market”; that thereby plaintiff was deprived of said sum, and that said conduct on the part of said defendants constituted a breach of their respective duties and a breach of their respective bonds. And therefore, plaintiff prayed judgment for $1,000 and interest. He further alleged: That included in the notes aforementioned were three certain notes, to wit, the “W. G. Peters note” for $595. the “E. G. Rice note” for $358.50, and the “Jeff Smith note” for $585; that while said notes were in said bank for collection said defendants, as officers and employees of the bank, without knowledge or consent of plaintiff, wrongfully and unlawfully misappropriated said three notes by selling two of them to American National Bank of Pawhuska, and the other to Reconstruction Finance Corporation; that the defendants, as officers and employees of said bank, owed plaintiff the duty to properly care for and protect said notes, and that their acts in converting said notes and causing same to be sold constituted a “breach of the statutory bonds of each of them which obligated the said defendant-officers and employees and each of them to faithfully perform their official duty as such officers and employees of said bank.” And for this plaintiff claimed damages in amount equal to the face of said three notes plus interest thereon, and the further sum of $250 to compensate and reimburse him for time and money expended in “pursuit” of said notes.

Trial in the court below resulted in a verdict favorable to the plaintiff, upon which the trial court subsequently rendered judgment against V. M. Harry and his surety, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, for $1,174 with interest thereon from date of judgment, and, against V. M. Harry and his surety aforenamed, and A. D. Krow as special administrator of the estate of J. O. Cales, deceased, and American Surety Company of New York, surety of J. O. Cales, for $1,734.36 with interest thereon from date of judgment.

In an appropriate manner the defendants United 'States Fidelity & Guaranty Company and American Surety Company of New York each timely challenged in the court below the right and authority of the plaintiff to maintain suit on the bonds. But the ruling thereon by said court was against them, and they are presenting the point in their appeal to this court.

There are decisions by this court which tend to sustain the right of the plaintiff to maintain his suit, as against the individual defendants Harry and Cales. See Hughes v. Martin, 81 Okla. 89, 196 P. 951, and Paris v. Beckner, 143 Okla. 238, 289 P. 276. But examination, however, of the opinions in those cases will-disclose that the actions were not upon the bonds of the defendant bank officers, but were against said officers alone and as individuals, and that no attempt was made in said actions to subject the surety on the bonds of said officers to liability in the premises. And hence it may not be said of these decisions that they tend to support the plaintiff’s claim of right to maintain suit on the bonds of the said Harry and Cales.

In 9 C. J. 86, sec. 152, it is stated:

“Under statutes, in many jurisdictions, which prescribe that the real party in interest must be the plaintiff, the obligee need not sue if he is not entitled to the beneficial interest in the bonds; but the party for whose benefit the bond is executed, whether the obligee or some other person, must sue thereon. But to enable a third party not named in the bond to sue thereon it must clearly appear by the terms of the bond that he is of the class covered by the conditions of the bond and entitled to its benefits and if it appears from the terms used that the bond is solely for the benefit of the parties thereto, third persons cannot recover under its provisions. * * *”

The right of a depositor or other creditor of a state bank to sue upon the statutory fidelity bond of one of the officers of the bank was considered in Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland v. Duke, etc. (C. C. A.) 293 Fed. 661. The sixth headnote to the opinion reads:

“No suit on statutory fidelity bonds to a bank can be maintained by depositors or other creditors or to their use, and any benefit they may derive must be worked out through the bank in its right and subject to its liabilities.”

From the opinion it appears that in the *446

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 577, 87 P.2d 950, 184 Okla. 444, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-v-krow-okla-1938.