The suit was on a bank officer’s bond and continuations given by White, its cashier, insuring plaintiff bank against embezzlement, wrongful abstraction, or willful misappropriation of its cash or securities. No written application was made for the bond nor were any oral representations made to obtain it. The defense was fraudulent concealment by the officers of the bank of conduct of White, to wit, misuse of the bank’s funds which unfitted him for a position of trust. The proof was that in October, 1930, before the execution of the obligations sued on, the state bank examiner had discovered and advised the officers and directors that White, without the knowledge and consent of the directors, had become indebted to the bank in the sum of $889.60 by paying his own checks drawn on the bank. It further showed that, upon the matter being called to White’s attention, the credit balances available to White were applied, reducing to $500.80 the net funds of the bank used by him and this was immediately repaid. It showed, too, that the directors reported to the bank examiner that after full investigation they had concluded that Mr. White had had no intention to defraud the hank and that there should be no prosecution. That he had merely temporarily used the funds, having the ability and intention to repay them, and that, White having promised that he would not again do this or any other thing which would not be in line with good banking, they preferred to and would keep him on. The directors also testified that, after hearing White’s explanation, they continued to have the utmost confidence in his honesty and integrity, and in that complete confidence had continued him in the employ of the bank. That they would not have done this had they felt otherwise. They testified, too, that at the time the contracts of insurance were written they had no intention whatever to defraud or mislead the defendant. That they never received any communication from defendant asking for information, and that they did not communicate with it nor undertake to give it any information of any kind.
Plaintiff contended below, and urges here, that the circumstance of the use of the bank’s funds by White to discharge an obligation for which, though not immediately available, he had arranged for funds, his immediate repayment upon demand, his long good record as a banker, his assurance that no irregularity of that kind would again occur, placed the matter, though a violation of a regulatory banking statute, in the category, not of a criminal taking of funds, but of an irregular use by overdraft of the bank’s credit. United States F. & G. Co. v. Oklahoma (C.C.A.)
That therefore the bank’s officers were justified in entertaining the belief that White was fit for, and in their conduct in retaining him in, his trust position. It urged below, and insists here, that, in view of ,the circumstances and of their good faith and their confidence in White, it cannot be said, as matter of law, that their failure to disclose White’s irregularity was fraudulent, that whether their conduct was fraudulent in fact, whether, in short, they really believed in White’s fitness, was for the jury to determine. That the issue was, not whether the matter would have been deemed by defendant material to the risk, but whether plaintiff’s officers, believing that White was unworthy of trust, or that he had committed an act which unfitted him for the position he was to be bonded for, fraudulently kept silent to induce the making of the bond.
Defendant insisted below that, though no inquiries were made of the bank about White, and though its officers in good faith believed in White’s honesty and trustworthiness, and believed the fact of his overdrafts did not unfit him for his position, the fact of his shortage was so material to the risk that the failure to disclose it was fraudulent as matter of law. The District Judge, agreeing .with this view, directed a verdict for defendant.
We think the direction was error. It may not be doubted that, generally speaking, it is fraud for an employer, without making full disclosures, to apply for and accept a fidelity bond upon an employee whom he knows or believes to be untrustworthy, or guilty of conduct which unfits him for a position of trust. American Surety Co. v. Shaw (C.C.A.)
Appellant and appellee each cites cases in support of its contention. Examination of the cases appellee cites shows that they really are not in conflict with those appellant relies on. Some of them deal with contracts of marine insurance, as to which, unlike other contracts of insurance, the obligation of full disclosure is required. Cf. Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Mechanics’ Savings Bank & Trust Co. (C.C.A.)
As to all kinds of insurance, except marine, the statutes and decisions have
Reversed and remanded.
