Williams v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.

66 A. 495, 105 Md. 490, 1907 Md. LEXIS 51
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 3, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 66 A. 495 (Williams v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 66 A. 495, 105 Md. 490, 1907 Md. LEXIS 51 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, G. Harlan Williams, in his capacity of receiver of the Home. Fire Insurance Company of Baltimore sued the appellee in debt on its bond of indemnity given to that company. The suit was instituted in the Superior Court of Baltimore City and was removed on affidavit of the plaintiff to the Circuit Court for Baltimore county where it was tried. At the trial in the Court below, the learned Judge granted a prayer offered by the defendant at the close of the testimony for the plaintiff instructing the jury to find for the defendant because the plaintiff had offered no evidence legally sufficient under the pleadings to entitle him to recover. A verdict was rendered in accordance with this instruction and judgment was entered thereon for the defendant and the plaintiff appealed.

There are fifteen bills of exception in the record of w'hich the first fourteen relate to rulings on evidence and the fifteenth to the Courts action on the prayer offered at the close of the plaintiff’s case. As the prayer if properly granted finally disposes of the controversy and a consideration of the propriety of the Courts action thereon involves a review of the entire case we will give that our first attention.

The bond declared on by the appellant, as plaintiff below, was an employer’s guaranty bond, originally issued to cover the period of one year.from August ist, 1902, and extended by agreement executed at Baltimore on July ist, 1903, to cover the ensuing year. By its terms the appellee undertook to reimburse and make good to the Insurance Company, the employer, to the extent of $10,000 all loss sustained by it of moneys, &c., “in the possession or custody of the employee (Tuttle) or for the possession or custody of which he is re *493 sponsible, directly occasioned by larceny or embezzlement on the part of the employee in connection with the duties of his office or position. ” A subsequent clause of the bond provided that the obligor should not be responsible for loss occasioned by any mere error of judgment or bona fide mistake, adding, “This bond being intended only to cover such dishonest acts of the employee in connection with the position in the service of the employer hereinbefore referred to as amount to larceny or embezzlement.” A further .clause provided that the obligor should not be liable under the bond for the amount of any balance that may be found due the employer from the employee and again asserted that it was the true intent and meaning of the bond that the obligor should be responsible there under only for moneys, &c., “diverted from the employer through larceny or embezzlement on the part of the employee within the period specified in the bond.”

The breach alleged in the declaration is that, within the period prescribed in the bond, Tuttle had as agent of the Insurance Company collected various sums of money on its behalf, of which he had.stolen or embezzled the sum of $7,680.

A statement or account verified by the oath of the plaintiff was filed, with the declaration, charging Tuttle with his monthly balances from October, 1903, and crediting him with his commissions and sundry expenditures and debiting him, at its foot, “To net balance due Home Fire Ins. Co. $7680.69.”

The reiterated declarations in the bond restricting the liability of the surety to losses occasioned by the larceny or embezzlement of the employee or by such dishonest acts as amount to larceny or embezzlement are too distinct and positive to be ignored or explained away. The bond should receive at our hands a reasonable construction so as to give effect to the intention of the parties thereto and carry out the purpose for which it was executed (Union Ins. Co. v. U. S. Fidelity Co., 99 Md. 423) but the plain language used by those parties in defining the limit of the liability of the obligor requires us to hold that there can be no recovery in this case for any acts or conduct of the employee which fall short of *494 larceny or embezzlement. It therefore becomes important for us to determine what are the essential elements of those two offenses. Larceny, at common law, was the felonious taking the property of another against his will with the intent to convert it to the use of the taker or, as some authorities hold, the use of the taker or a third person. Embezzlement, which is a statutory offense, consists in the fraudulent appropriation to one’s own use of money or goods entrusted to him by another. In larceny the felonious intent must have existed at the time of the taking of the property whereas in embezzlement the fraudulent act consists in the appropriation of the property to the use of the taker or third party, but the felonious or fraudulent intent is of the essence of the offense in each case. Boitvier’s Law Diet, under “Larceny” and “Embezzlement;” Wharton’s Crim. Law, sec. 883 &c. and 1009 &c; 15 Cyc. 488; A. & E. Encycl., vol x, p. 979 et seq. vol. 18, p. 459.

It was not seriously contended in this case that the acts of Tuttle in failing to pay over to the Insurance Co. an alleged balance of its funds in his hands amounted to larceny at common law as the funds were paid to him by the company’s consent. It was however contended that as his office was at Syracuse in New York the alleged offense must be regarded as committed in that State, and that it amounted to larceny as defined by the New York statute. A copy of that statute was put in evidence in the case and appears in the record. By it larceny, embezzlement, obtaining property under, false pre fences and felonious breach of trust. are included under one definition. It provides that a person who “with the intent to deprive or defraud the true owner of his property or the use thereof or to appropriate the same to the use of the taker or any other person,” either takes from the possession of the owner or other person, or fraudulently obtains possession of, or secretes, withholds or appropriates to his own use or that of any person other than the owner any money or property, or, having it in his possession as agent or trustee, &c., appropriates the same to his own use or that of any person other than the owner or person entitled to the benefit thereof, steals such *495 property and is guilty of larceny. A section of the Insurance Law of New York was also offered in evidence, which provides that the agent of any Insurance Company who as such collects or receives any money shall be responsible in a fiduciary or trust capacity to the company therefor.

This statutory modification of the definition of larceny, including embezzlement, as interpreted by the Courts of New York has not done away with the necessity of proving the felonious orfrazidulent intent at the time of taking, or appropriating or withholding the property in order to establish the offense. People v Pollock, 51 Hun. 613; People v. Lawrence, 137 N. Y. 547; People v. Henderson, 90 N. Y. 12; People v. Loomis, 67 N. Y. 329; People v. Grim, 3 N. Y. 317.

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Bluebook (online)
66 A. 495, 105 Md. 490, 1907 Md. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-md-1907.