192 P. 1092 | Okla. | 1920
Clyde Coon was the agent of the Boston Insurance Company, and this action was on his bond executed for the faithful performance of his duties as such agent. It was alleged Coon had failed to pay to the insurance company the sum of $302.31, collected as such agent. To reverse the judgment, it is urged the evidence was not sufficient to support same or to prove that Coon had, in fact, collected the money. The proof consisted of monthly statements covering the business transactions for the particular month and showing the balance due the company after Coon's commission had been deducted. It is urged these statements were not competent, either against the principal or the sureties on the bond. Under the terms of the bond, Coon was required to make these statements, and his clerk, who made them out and transmitted them to the company, testified to their correctness, and that the making of said reports was a part of her regular duties. The general rule is that declarations of an agent, while acting within the scope of his authority, are admissible against the principal. Oklahoma State Bank v. Airington, 68 Oklahoma,
These statements, having been made by Coon's clerk in the regular course of her duties, under the provisions of the bond requiring same, and while Coon was acting as such agent, must be treated as part of the res gestae, and, therefore, admissible against the sureties. Dietrich v. Dr. Koch Veg. Tea Co.,
It is also urged that this court should take judicial notice of the custom of insurance agents to make reports of the business to their companies, and that such reports are treated as mere statements of policies written, and not statements of liability. *297 Counsel has not called our attention to any authority supporting this contention, and we know of no authority under which we should take judicial notice of the particular method of keeping books and records in the office of an insurance agent. The statements purported to show the balance due the company, and, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, must be held to support the judgment.
Therefore, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
KANE, HARRISON, JOHNSON, and BAILEY, JJ., concur.