100 F. 559 | 6th Cir. | 1900
The facts in this case are fully stated in the opinion of the court announced when it was previously here, and which is reported in 26 C. C. A. 146, 80 Fed. 766. They need not be repeated, further than to say, generally, that the action is based upon the stipulations of two separate covenants executed by one John Sehart to the Mechanics’ Savings Bank & Trust Company, with the appellant as surety on each, — one binding the appellant to. make good losses which might result from the misconduct of Sehart as teller and bookkeeper of the bank, and the other to make good those losses of the bank, not exceeding $20,000, which might result from such fraudulent conduct of Sehart, as its cashier, as should be equivalent to embezzlement or larceny. After the case was decided here, it was removed by a writ of certiorari into the supreme court of the United States, where the judgment was reversed upon the single ground that the court had not jurisdiction of the appeal, because the judgment upon which the appeal was taken was not final. 173 U. S. 582, 19 Sup. Ct. 551, 43 L, Ed. 818. Upon the return of the case to the circuit court, a final judgment was rendered. This judgment, however, was substantially the same as the one upon which the first appeal had been taken.
Upon the pending appeal, and as the case is again presented, various errors are assigned, some based upon the judgment of the circuit court as it applied to the teller’s bond, and others upon the
It is insisted, however, that this question was not brought to the attention of the court below, and cannot, for that reason, be reviewed here. It is altogether certain that the appellee should not recover from the surety anything which is not embraced within the terms of the contract, and the pleading by which this action was commenced could not properly claim anything else, and in fact did not. By its answer the appellant in plain terms admitted certain abstractions of money by Schart from the funds of the bank, but it by no means admitted (on the contrary, it expressly denied) the accuracy of complainant’s averments as to the amount thereof. While this denial of the answer may not have been as explicit as the complainant could have demanded, and as it may have been entitled to demand, still it was in no sense an admission that the charges of the bill were accurate as to tire amount of loss that came within the stipulation of the surety. The complainant took no step, by exception to the answer or otherwise, to have the issue on that point made more distinct or definite. This condition of the pleadings left the burden upon the complainant to show the extent of its losses resulting from such fraudulent actions of Schart as were equivalent to embezzlement or larceny. As has been indicated, losses from acts of that character are shown by the evidence only
It results from what has been said that the judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed, except as to so much 'of the item of $5,992.85 as may have been included in the decree, and so as to limit the recovery on the cashier’s bond to $16,971.82, and interest thereon. The case is therefore remanded to the circuit court, with directions to modify its judgment to the extent indicated; the costs of this appeal to be borne equally by appellant and appellee.