207 N.W. 42 | N.D. | 1925
This action was brought by the plaintiff, as receiver of of the First National Bank of Towner, North Dakota, to recover the penalty of a fidelity bond. The defendant denied liability and sought to counterclaim for and set off certain payments made by it under the terms of a surety bond issued for the insolvent.
The First National Bank of Towner, North Dakota, was a banking corporation, organized and existing under and by virtue of the National Banking Act. It became insolvent and was closed by order of *506 the comptroller of the currency on December 20th, 1920. Subsequently, the plaintiff Gilbertson, was appointed and qualified as receiver. The defendant is, and was, a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of North Dakota and engaged in the business of writing fidelity and surety bonds for profit. In the course of its business the defendant, in 1915, issued and thereafter renewed a fidelity bond to the Bank of Towner, undertaking thereby to indemnify the bank against any loss which it might suffer through the misconduct or dishonesty of one Bergh, the bank's cashier. In October, 1919, the Bank of Towner was desirous of being designated as a depositary for moneys of the Bank of North Dakota. In that behalf it applied to the defendant for, and the defendant issued, pursuant to the provisions of chapter 147, Sess. Laws 1919, a bond in the sum of $25,000, conditioned upon the repayment to the Bank of North Dakota, on demand, of any funds not exceeding that sum which might be deposited by the Bank of North Dakota in the Bank of Towner. One of the considerations for the issuance of this depositary bond was the agreement on the part of the Bank of Towner, to indemnify and reimburse the defendant for any payments required to be made by the defendant under the terms of the bond, together with such costs and expenses as might be incurred in connection therewith. Subsequently, Bergh, the principal in the fidelity bond, embezzled funds of the Bank of Towner and the defendant became liable on account thereof in the full penalty of the bond. After the issuance of the depositary bond to the Bank of North Dakota, that bank deposited moneys in the Bank of Towner, and at the time of the closing of the Bank of Towner, had a large amount on deposit therein. Thereafter the Bank of North Dakota made demand upon the defendant for the payment of the amount of its deposit with interest, and on April 13th, 1921, the defendant paid to the Bank of North Dakota, under the terms of the depositary bond, the sum of $10,319.05. The Bank of North Dakota thereupon assigned and delivered to the defendant its claim against the Bank of Towner and the receiver's certificates issued therefor. Thereafter the defendant received such dividends as were paid on account of this claim. In March, 1921, the defendant also filed a claim with the receiver in anticipation of payments that it *507 might be required to make under the terms of the depositary bond, and on April 21st, 1921, filed its supplemental claim for the amount paid to the Bank of North Dakota. In June, 1922, the plaintiff Gilbertson, as receiver, began this action to recover of the defendant the penalty of the fidelity bond on account of the defalcation of Bergh. The defendant admitting liability on its fidelity bond to the Bank of Towner, sought to counterclaim for and set off against such liability the amount of the payments made by it to the Bank of North Dakota in so far as was necessary to discharge its liability on the fidelity bond. The facts were stipulated as hereinbefore set out. The District Court dismissed the counterclaim and ordered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for the penalty of the fidelity bond. This appeal is from the judgment entered in accordance with the order of the district court.
Thus, there is no question as to the liability of the defendant on account of the fidelity bond. Neither is there any question as to the amount that was required to be paid and was paid by the defendant on April 13th, 1921, in discharge of its obligation under the terms of the depositary bond to the Bank of North Dakota. Nor is there any question but that the defendant has a valid claim for the amount so paid by it against the estate of the insolvent Bank of Towner. The whole question in the case is as to whether the right of set-off exists in favor of the defendant and as against the plaintiff receiver.
The contentions of the respective parties on this appeal may be stated as follows. The defendant contends first, that it is entitled to recover as against the insolvent, not only as assignee and subrogee of the Bank of North Dakota, on account of the payments made under the terms of the depositary bond, but that it also has a wider right of recovery under the contract of indemnity entered into by and with the Bank of Towner at the time the depositary bond was written. That the action brought by the plaintiff on the fidelity bond is an action in contract; that defendant likewise has a cause of action in contract as surety and under the indemnity contract. That it has, under the facts, the right to counterclaim and set-off its demand under § 7449, Comp. Laws 1913, providing that a counterclaim may be interposed: *508
"(2) In an action arising on contract, any other cause of action arising also on contract and existing at the commencement of the action. The defendant may set forth by answer as many defenses and counterclaims as he may have, whether they are such as have been heretofore denominated legal or equitable, or both. They must each be separately stated and refer to the causes of action which they are intended to answer in such manner that they may be intelligently distinguished."
and § 7679, Comp. Laws 1913, providing:
"Judgment may be given for or against one or more of several plaintiffs, and for or against one or more of several defendants; and the court may determine the ultimate rights of the parties on each side as between themselves.
"(2) If a counterclaim established at a trial exceeds the plaintiff's demand so established, judgment for the defendant must be given for the excess; and the court may grant to the defendant any affirmative relief to which he may be entitled."
That the contract of the Bank of Towner to reimburse and indemnify the defendant was made in contemplation of these statutes. That while defendant took an assignment of the claim of the Bank of North Dakota against the Bank of Towner, and received dividends ratably with the other creditors of the bank thereon, nevertheless, it did not thereby waive any claims that it might have had against the insolvent estate under its contract of indemnity. That while the payment made by it to the Bank of North Dakota on the depositary bond was made on April 13th, 1921, and the Bank of Towner was closed on December 20th, 1920, that by virtue of its surety relation and under the terms of its indemnity contract the payment so made related back to the date of such contract, to wit; October, 1919, and therefore, such claim must be considered as having been in existence at the time of the closing of the bank in December, 1920, and so may be set-off in an action brought by the receiver.
On the other hand, the plaintiff insists that the claim against the defendant on the fidelity bond was matured and in existence prior to the date of the insolvency; that the status of the defendant's claim must be determined as of the date of the insolvency on December 20th, 1920; that when the Bank of Towner became insolvent and was closed *509 on that date, the defendant's claim on account of the depositary bond was not in existence; that it took life only at the date of the payment by the defendant on April 13th, 1921; that the claim on account of the fidelity bond was an asset of the Bank of Towner at the date of its insolvency; that as such, the receiver took it and holds it for the benefit of the creditors, including depositors, to be paid ratably to them; that to allow the counterclaim and set-off as contended for by the defendant would constitute a preference; that in any event the defendant was an insurer and nothing more under the terms of subsection 8, § 5210, Comp. Laws 1913, relating to surety companies, and has no other right or claim than that of assignee; that even though entitled to subrogation as a surety, defendant's rights as such, are no more or greater than the Bank of North Dakota had; that though there was an express contract by the Bank of Towner to indemnify and exonerate defendant, defendant can claim nothing thereunder that it would not have had under its right of subrogation as a surety.
We think that there are certain fundamental propositions concerning which there can be no room for controversy and which must be considered in determining the contentions of the parties thus raised. In the first place, the National Banking Act forbids preferences. See §§ 5234, 5236, and 5242, U.S. Revised Statutes (U.S. Comp. Stat. §§ 9821, 9823, and 9834, 6 Fed. Stat. Anno. 2d ed. pp. 850, 865, 903); Scott v. Armstrong,
It therefore becomes necessary in determining the right of the defendant to set off its claim arising by reason of the payment under the depositary bond, to ascertain the status of that claim at the moment of insolvency on December 20, 1920. The condition of the depositary bond was that the Bank of Towner should pay on demand any moneys that might be deposited in it by the Bank of North Dakota. Unquestionably, no demand was made by the Bank of North Dakota for some time after the closing of the Bank of Towner. However, the funds deposited therein were subject to payment on demand, and when the bank closed and it was impossible for it to pay, that moment the moneys therein deposited became due and actionable and no demand was necessary. See Williams v. Johnson,
The plaintiff insists that the defendant had no right of subrogation since it was a surety for compensation. Defendant is equally insistent that it not only had all the rights of a subrogee, but wider rights by reason of its contract of indemnity. We can agree with neither of *511
these contentions. The defendant is a surety company; its business is the writing of surety bonds. When it is issued the depositary bond it became a surety for the insolvent Bank of Towner for compensation. The plaintiff insists that by reason of the fact that it was a compensated surety, defendant cannot claim the rights of subrogation to which the ordinary surety is entitled. We think, however, that defendant's rights as a surety are to be determined by its legal status as surety and not by the reasons which may have induced it to enter into that status. In other words, the fact that the defendant was a surety for compensation did not deprive it of the rights that it was entitled to under the rules governing the relation of principal and surety. See National Surety Co. v. Berggren,
The judgment appealed from must be affirmed. It is so ordered.
CHRISTIANSON, Ch. J., and BIRDZELL, BURKE, and JOHNSON, JJ., concur. *513