United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Wilson

41 F.2d 319, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2781
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 7, 1930
DocketNo. 8676
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 41 F.2d 319 (United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit 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. Wilson, 41 F.2d 319, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2781 (8th Cir. 1930).

Opinion

VAN VALKENBURGH, Circuit Judge.

February 25, 1924, the firm of Fischer Freres, of Antwerp, Belgium, desired to intervene in a certain receivership suit then pending in the District Court of the United States at Clarksdale, Miss. On that day appellee, as attorney for that firm, went with one of its members to Mills & Sons, local agents for appellant at Pine Bluff, Ark., where appellee resides, to get a cost bond to be filed in that intervention. There Fischer Freres, by W. Fischer, made application in writing for an open penalty cost bond, carrying a premium of $10. In this application the space after the word “penalty” was left blank. Fischer Freres, being alien nonresidents, were unable to qualify for indemnity to appellant. Therefore appellee on the same day executed with them the following special indemnity agreement annexed to the application:

“The undersigned, hereby agrees to Indemnify and keep the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company indemnified and hold and save it harmless from and against any and all demands, liabilities, charges and expenses of whatsoever kind or nature, which it may at any time sustain or incur by reason of or in consequence of having executed the above' described bond, and we do further guarantee that the charges for executing and continuing upon the bond will be paid as agreed until1 the Company has been released from liability thereunder.”

The federal court at Clarksdale declined to accept an open penalty bond, but required one with a fixed penalty of $10,000, conditioned to cover the payment of all cou'rt costs and expenses growing out of the propounding of the claim of Fischer Freres, which might be finally adjudged to be paid, and all costs that might accrue to the receivers. It is conceded that an open penalty bond is one without any fixed penalty. The premium for such a bond is only $10 per annum, it being generally estimated that the costs in a suit do not usually run beyond $1,000. However, the bond being open and unlimited, would cover any amount ultimately assessed. The premium for a bond with a fixed penalty of $10,000 is $100 per annum. Agent Mills sent the application, with attáehed indemnity agreement, to Mr. Harwell, general manager of appellant at Memphis, Tenn. He also wrote the agents of the company at Clarksdale, Miss., authorizing them, on the faith of the application taken by him, to sign and deliver to appellant a cost bond to be filed in the United States court there. The letter opened with these memoranda:

“Re: Application for Cost Bond Fiseher-Frers, of Antwerp, Belgium in U. S. District Court at Clarksdale, Miss. Open penalty 2-25-24. Prem. $10.00.”

Mills also gave to Wilson a special letter of introduction to the agents "at. Clarksdale. [321]*321There is some testimony to the effect that originally there was executed an open penalty bond in conformity with the application; that, being unacceptable, it was returned to Mr. Mills, was canceled, and delivered to appellee. There is also some confusion in the testimony as to whether more than one $10,-000 bond was drawn and tendered. The important fact, however, is that when the bond carrying a penalty of $10,000 was tendered for execution to agent Mitchell at Clarksdale, he thought the amount was excessive, and that the situation called for caution in view of the letter from Mills authorizing the execution of an Open penalty bond. He says:

“A. So I wont on to the office and thinking that Mr. Mills had not gone into the matter carefully and did not realize the possibility of the costs in this case would run as high as I was advised it would and I called Mr. Harwell over the telephone and told him about it and he replied to us, that it was all right that Mr. Wilson stood well financially, he being an attorney and to make any bond he was having to file in the ease, that we had his special indemnity and were relying on that.”

Accordingly a cost bond carrying a penalty of $10,000 was executed by appellant as surety and was duly approved and filed. On final hearing the federal court in Mississippi disallowed the intervention of Fischer Freres and taxed costs against them in the sum of $28,000. Judgment was rendered against appellant, as surety, for $10,000, which it paid. Upon appellee’s refusal to indemnify appellant this suit was brought. The trial court directed a verdict in favor of appellee.

The complaint, after reciting the application of Fischer Freres to Mills So Sons, appellant’s agents at Pine Bluff, Ark., for a cost bond, and the execution of the indemnity agreement by appellee, all as above set out, proceeds as follows:

“The said Mills So Sons then wrote Martin & Mitchell, the agents of the plaintiff in Clarksdale of the application for an open penalty bond and directed them to sign the bond when it was presented to them by the defendant. When the defendant arrived at Clarksdale he discovered that an open penalty bond would not be approved and that it would be necessary for him to file a bond in a fixed penalty of $10,000. He thereupon presented to the said Clarksdale agents of plaintiff a bond with a fixed penalty of $10,000'. The said agents at first refused, to execute such a bond because they had been directed to sign an open penalty bond, but upon the insistence of the defendant, and after securing authority from H. F. Harwell, and the District Manager of the plaintiff at Memphis, they executed it and it was then filed -in court by the defendant.”

To these allegations of the complaint appellee made the following answer:

“Admits that Mills So Sons wrote Martin So Mitchell, the agents of the plaintiff in Clarksdale of the application for an open penalty bond and directed them to sign the open penalty bond when it was presented to them by the defendant’s client. Admits when the defendant arrived at Clarksdale he discovered that an open penalty bond was requested by plaintiff, but denies that he discovered that it would be necessary for him to file a bond in a fixed penalty of $10,000.00. Denies that he thereupon presented to the said Clarksdale agents of plaintiff a bond with a fixed penalty of $10,000.00. Denies that said agents at first refused to execute such a bond because they had been directed to sign an open penalty bond and denies that upon the insistence of the defendant, and after securing authority from H. F. Harwell, the District Manager of the plaintiff, at Memphis, they executed it and denies that it was then filed in court by the defendant.”

Upon the issues thus framed appellant contends that the indemnity agreement signed and delivered by appellee covered the cost bond ultimately'tendered, executed, and filed, and that appellee is estopped from denying his liability thereunder. The defenses interposed may practically be condensed and considered under the following heads:

1. That appellee was released by the unauthorized and material alteration of the application of Fischer Freres for the bond involved.

2. That the bond executed was not the bond authorized by the original application, and that appellee’s guaranty of indemnity was confined to that application.

3. That liability against appellee, based upon an alleged oral agreement at Clarksdale, Miss., is not permissible under the pleadings.

4. That, if permitted, this claim of appellant would fall before the bar of the Statute of Frauds.

We shall discuss these in their order.

1.

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Moore v. Manhattan Co.
276 A.2d 720 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1971)
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United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Wilson
52 F.2d 66 (Eighth Circuit, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
41 F.2d 319, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-v-wilson-ca8-1930.