Wilson v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance

190 S.W.2d 944, 238 Mo. App. 882, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 346
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 20, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 190 S.W.2d 944 (Wilson v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance, 190 S.W.2d 944, 238 Mo. App. 882, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 346 (Mo. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinions

This action was commenced before a justice of the peace to recover five hundred dollars deposited by plaintiff as collateral security with defendant Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company. Plaintiff obtained a judgment against defendant in the justice court, and defendant appealed to the circuit court. The appeal bond was executed by the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland as surety.

The trial anew in the circuit court resulted in a judgment for plaintiff against defendant Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company and its surety, the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, for $527, including interest. From this judgment the Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company and the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland appeal.

The evidence shows that Lamine Finney brought an attachment suit against Frank W. Trogdon in the circuit court of St. Louis. The attachment bond was executed by Lamine Finney as principal and by the Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company as surety for the amount of $1586, conditioned, in accordance with section 1444, Revised Statutes 1939, Missouri Revised Statutes Annotated, "that the plaintiff shall prosecute his action without delay and with effect, refund all sums of money that may be adjudged to be refunded to the defendant, or found to have been received by the plaintiff and not justly due to him, and pay all damages and costs that may accrue to any defendant, garnishee or interpleader by reason of the attachment, or any process or proceeding in the suit, or by reason of any judgment or process thereon, and pay all damages and costs that may accrue to any sheriff or other officer by reason of acting under the writ of attachment, following the instructions of the plaintiff."

Susie M. Wilson, plaintiff in this case, deposited with the Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company, defendant in this case, a Fourth Liberty Loan bond in the amount of five hundred dollars. Upon the making of the deposit the parties executed an agreement defining the purpose of the deposit as collateral security to protect the bonding company against any and all liability, loss, cost, damage or expense on the attachment bond. The bonding company is given full power and authority to cash, sell, assign, transfer and deliver the collateral security, or any part thereof, without notice, at public auction or private sale at any time, the depositor having the right to substitute other collateral security acceptable to the bonding company, but agreeing to keep on deposit at all times collateral security acceptable to the bonding company to the value of not less than five *Page 885 hundred dollars until complete performance of the condition of the attachment bond, and the bonding company is authorized to apply the collateral security, or any part thereof, or the proceeds of the sale thereof, or any part thereof, to reimburse itself for the payment of any claims, losses, or expenses of any kind that the bonding company may become liable for by reason of the execution of the attachment bond. It is further provided that upon the complete performance of the condition of the attachment bond and full reimbursement to the bonding company for any losses or expenses incurred, the bonding company will return to the depositor the collateral security or any balance or proceeds thereof, if any, remaining in its hands.

Later the Fourth Liberty Loan bond became due and was paid, and the sum of five hundred dollars received in payment of the bond was substituted as collateral in lieu of the bond, and at the same time the parties executed another agreement just like the agreement executed when the bond was deposited except that the collateral was described as five hundred dollars in cash.

The trial of the plea in abatement in the attachment suit resulted in a finding in favor of Trogdon, and on February 20, 1935, the attachment was dissolved.

The trial of the suit on the merits resulted in a judgment in favor of Finney and against Trogdon in the sum of $8.92.

On motion of the sheriff, charges in the sum of $82.50 for the storage of Trogdon's Chevrolet sedan seized under the writ of attachment, were ordered taxed as costs in the attachment proceeding against Finney and in favor of the sheriff.

On April 12, 1935, the bonding company paid to Frank W. Trogdon five hundred dollars by way of compromise and settlement of a claim for damages made by Trogdon against the company, and took from Trogdon a release wherein it is recited that the release is in full settlement and satisfaction of all claims for damages by reason of the attachment and for all attorney's fees, court costs, and damages, arising out of and by reason of the filing of the attachment suit and the giving of the attachment bond. The amount of Trogdon's claim was more than the amount of the attachment bond.

On March 20, 1936, the bonding company paid to the sheriff $85.90, the amount taxed as costs in his favor, for storage charges on the Chevrolet sedan.

Susie M. Wilson, plaintiff in this case, had no personal interest in the attachment suit. She deposited the collateral with the bonding company as a matter of accommodation to Lamine Finney.

Trogdon was in the employ of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen at the time the attachment suit was commenced, and the Brotherhood was summoned as garnishee under the attachment writ. The Chevrolet sedan levied upon under the attachment writ was used by *Page 886 Trogdon as a means of transportation in the transaction of the business he was engaged in as an employee of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen.

At the time of the service of the garnishment it appears that the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen owed Trogdon earnings in the amount of $581.42.

The sedan was levied upon and attached on November 7, 1933, and the garnishment was served on November 9, 1933, so that the sedan and earnings were held under the attachment for more than fifteen months.

The items of damage as claimed by Trogdon were for loss of the use of the sedan while under attachment, for attorney's fees and expenses incurred in obtaining a dissolution of the attachment, and for the detention of the earnings due from the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen while under garnishment. The claim was made on March 11, 1935, by letter through Trogdon's attorney.

On April 17th, some three weeks after the bonding company and Trogdon had agreed upon the settlement, Trogdon wrote the bonding company that unless the amount agreed upon was paid promptly he would be forced to retrace his steps and enter suit at once. He further stated that he had turned over the amount agreed upon in the settlement to his attorney for fees.

It appears that the judgment in the court below was arrived at on the theory that the bonding company was not entitled to reimbursement for what it paid in settlement of Trogdon's claim for damages because the payment was made without any judgment having first been obtained establishing liability for the amount paid, in other words, that the payment having been made by the bonding company without a judgment establishing liability, it was a voluntary payment for which the company was not entitled to reimbursement.

We do not think the judgment can be upheld on that theory. If what the bonding company paid Trogdon was paid in discharge of its liability as surety under the bond, it was entitled to reimbursement from Finney as the principal under the bond without the necessity of having its liability established by judgment, and, of course, liability of the bonding company to Trogdon depends upon the liability of Finney to Trogdon.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 944, 238 Mo. App. 882, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-massachusetts-bonding-insurance-moctapp-1945.