181 A. 574 | Pa. | 1935
This action was brought by the secretary of banking in possession of the Dollar Title and Trust Company of Sharon to recover from the Continental Casualty Company the amount stipulated to be paid ($50,000) on a "Banker's Blanket Bond" given by it to the trust company conditioned to indemnify the latter against loss due to the dishonesty of the trust company's officers and employees. The court by agreement heard the case without a jury, decided in plaintiff's favor and entered judgment for the amount of the bond, with interest. The defendant appeals.
Appellant urges upon us, as it did upon the trial court, that it is relieved of liability because in procuring the bond Ralph E. Matthews, who was secretary and treasurer of the trust company, perpetrated a fraud upon appellant by falsely representing, in the written application for the bond, which he signed in the trust company's behalf, that no losses had been sustained by it during the preceding five years from any of the causes against which indemnity was to be given, and that there had never come to the notice or knowledge of the trust company any fact or information, indicating that any of its officers were dishonest or unworthy of confidence, whereas, at that very time, he, Matthews, was an embezzler of the trust company's funds to the amount of $26,000.
The court held this defense unavailing because Matthews' information of his own dishonesty was unknown to the trust company, and his knowledge was not imputable to it, since in embezzling the money he was acting adversely to it. For the conclusion reached reliance was placed upon Metropolitan Ins. Co.'s App.,
Incidental to his determination of liability, the trial judge held that the written application for the bond, signed by Matthews as secretary and treasurer of plaintiff, *558 in which the false representations were made, was not admissible in evidence, because not attached to the bond, basing this ruling upon section 318 of "The Insurance Company Law" of May 17, 1921, P. L. 682, 40 P. S., section 441, which reads as follows (Italics supplied): "When Application, Constitution, By-Laws, and Rules Are Considered Part of Policy.— All insurance policies, issued by stock or mutual insurancecompanies or associations doing business in this State, in which the application of the insured, the constitution, by-laws, or other rules of the company form part of the policy or contract between the parties thereto, or have any bearing on said contract, shall contain, or have attached to said policies, correct copies of the application as signed by the applicant, or the constitution, by-laws, or other rules referred to; and, unless so attached and accompanying thepolicy, no such application, constitution, or by-laws, or other rules shall be received in evidence in any controversy between the parties to, or interested in, the policy, nor shall such application, constitution, by-laws, or other rules be considered a part of the policy or contract between such parties."
The argument of appellee's counsel is that because the section speaks of a "policy or contract" issued by an insurance company, while in section 202c there is included among the purposes for which insurance companies may be incorporated that of (1) "Guaranteeing the fidelity of persons holding places of public or private trust; . . . indemnifying banks . . . against the loss of any bills of exchange, notes, drafts, acceptances of drafts, bonds, securities, evidences of debt, deeds, mortgages, documents, currency, and money," any contract for such purpose issued by an insurance company is within the provisions of section 318, with the result that the requirement exists that the application must be attached to the bond if it is to be admissible in evidence. We cannot so interpret the section. It was intended to cover policies or contracts of insurance as commonly understood. *559
The fact that we have said that the business of surety companies is in all essential parts that of insurance, as in Young v. American Bonding Co.,
There is no indication throughout the act to use the words "bond" and "policy" interchangeably. Words in a legislative enactment are to be taken in their ordinary and general sense: Com. v. Wark,
This brings us to the main question in the case: Was the plaintiff at the time the bond was applied for visited with notice of Matthews' defalcation through his knowledge of his own dishonesty? Matthews was, as the testimony clearly shows, the chief executive and managing officer of the bank. He was its secretary and treasurer, its highest salaried officer, giving his full time to its business and affairs. The president was not salaried, but was engaged in other business and did not give his full time to plaintiff's affairs. The directors and president had instructed Matthews to procure the bond and had caparisoned him as the bank's representative in doing so. He was held out as its fit instrument to answer truthfully and fairly the queries which the defendant desired information upon to guide it in deciding whether it would assume the obligation to the bank. As our late brother Mr. Justice SIMPSON when the case was here before (
Under these circumstances, there would seem to be some confusion of thought in the application of the rule that a principal is not visited with notice through an agent where the agent at the time is acting adversely to his principal and where it would be to the interest of the agent not to disclose his action or information to the principal. In procuring the bond Matthews was not acting *561
adversely to the bank, but in its behalf. The adverse act of embezzling the money, had been consummated previously; in that transaction — the act of embezzlement — his knowledge of his own dishonesty did not carry through him to the bank, because he was then acting adversely to its interests. In arranging for the bond, however, this was not the case. The distinction between the two situations is made clear by reference to Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.'s App.,
It is argued by appellant's counsel, and we think convincingly, that the adverse interest exception to the rule that knowledge of a corporate officer is knowledge of the corporation, applies only where a third person seeks to enforce some demand against the corporation (as in the Metropolitan Insurance Company Case), but the exception has no application where the corporation seeks to enforce the benefit of a fraud perpetrated by its officer on a third person; that the exception to the rule of imputed knowledge is not a vehicle for the consummation *562 of fraud. This is in line with the summing up of the law in the Restatement of the Law of Agency. Section 261 thus enunciates the general rule: "Agent's position enables him to deceive. A principal who puts an agent in a position that enables the agent, while apparently acting within his authority, to commit a fraud upon third persons is subject to liability to such third persons for the fraud." In the comment on the section this appears: "Liability is based upon the fact that the agent's position facilitates the consummation of the fraud, in that, from the point of view of the third person, the transaction seems regular on its face and the agent appears to be acting in the ordinary course of the business confided to him." Section 282: "Agent acting adversely to principal. (1) A principal is not affected by the knowledge of an agent in a transaction in which the agent is acting adversely to the principal and entirely for his own or another's purposes, except as stated in subsection (2). (2) The principal is affected by the knowledge of an agent although acting adversely to the principal: (a) if the failure of the agent to act upon or to reveal the information results in a violation of a contractual or relational duty of the principal to a person harmed thereby; (b) if the agent enters into negotiations within the scope of his powers and the person with whom he deals reasonably believes him to be authorized to conduct the transaction; or (c) if, before he has changed his position, the principal knowingly retains a benefit through the act of the agent which otherwise he would not have received." In the comments on this section, the following is stated: "Meaning of 'acting adversely.' The mere fact that the agent's primary interests are not coincident with those of the principal does not prevent the latter from being affected by the knowledge of the agent if the agent is acting for the principal's interests." The illustration given is this: "A, P's superintendent, knowing that B, a servant working under him, has been stealing *563 from P, and hoping to share B's gains if P can be prevented from becoming suspicious, applies for and receives a surety bond from T, the bond running to P and guaranteeing B's fidelity. T is not liable to P upon the bond." In the standard textbook on agency, we find the following: "So where the act of the agent is apparently within the terms of an express authority, the principal may be bound, although the agent, unknown to the party dealing with him, is secretly engaged in abusing his authority, or has a secret motive to divert the fund either to personal or other illegitimate ends": Mechem on Agency (2d ed.), volume 2, page 1309. See also page 1311, section 1728.
Analysis of our cases discloses consistent adherence to the distinction here made. Gunster v. Scranton Illuminating Heat
Power Co.,
In Bank of Shamokin v. Waynesboro Knitting Co.,
In Thompson on Corporations, volume 3, section 1769, it is said: "Where a principal sends forth his agent to conduct his affairs and contract for his benefit and the agent procures a contract by fraudulent or corrupt practices, although the principal may not have been privy in any way to such conduct of his agent, yet by claiming the benefits of the contract he must take it tainted as it may be by such practice." In the same work (3d ed.), volume 3, section 1778, this appears: "However applicable the dictum that an agent about to commit a fraud will not announce his intention may be in the case of fraud upon his own principal, it has no application when the agent acting in its behalf or ostensibly so commits a fraud upon a third person."
If the rule contended for by the appellee and applied by the court below were to be accepted by us, then the officers of a bank, all of whom were defaulters, could obtain from a bonding company a bond covering their defaults *567 and the bank, invoking the adverse interest rule, could reimburse itself for their embezzlements.
Thurston v. Assets Realization Co.,
It is contended by appellee that there is no warranty in the bond of the truth of the statement made to the appellant. We think this matter was disposed of in our previous opinion (
We are of the opinion, under the circumstances disclosed by this record, considering the relation which Matthews bore to the bank, that his fraudulent representations to the defendant vitiated the bond.
The judgment is reversed and is here entered for defendant. *568