81 Ga. App. 683 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1950
(After stating the foregoing facts.) While numerous questions are raised in the brief of the plaintiff’s counsel, the first consideration must be whether the petition, as amended, sets out a cause of action under the terms of
While the terms of the master policy are not set out in the petition, the course of dealing between the local agent and the plaintiff is fully described. The local agent assumed a personal liability for the payment of premiums on the policies it issued under this master policy. It paid for them, not with funds collected from individuals insured, but with its own funds, which it borrowed from the bank on its own credit. Had it been unable to collect from individuals insured, it had the right to cancel the policies, but this would not effect its personal liability to the plaintiff until the time of such cancellation. The funds in question, then, are not funds entrusted to the local agent by individuals insured for the use of the plaintiff, but rather funds representing a debt owing directly from the local agent to the plaintiff under the terms of the master policy. The plaintiff recognized this and stated in a letter to the defendant that it intended “to trustee that portion of their indebtedness which is in arrears and it is expected that within a reasonable time the past due indebtedness will be paid off.” (Emphasis ours.) The fact that the plaintiff directed its employee to pay a part of the money owed directly to it, and to pay the balance directly to the bank to cancel out an indebtedness on the part of the plaintiff to the bank, does not change the character of the transaction, the money still being a debt owing by the employee to the plaintiff rather than money entrusted by the plaintiff to the employee for a particular purpose. A mere indebtedness of the local agent to the plaintiff is not a defalcation which authorizes recovery under the terms of the bond, and “a mere debtor does not embezzle the money of his creditor by failing to pay the debt when due.” Milwaukee Theatre Co. v. Fidelity & Co., 92 Wis. 412 (66 N.W. 360); 16 A.L.R. 1500. The proof of a balance due to the employer from the employee is not sufficient for a recovery under a fidelity bond indemnifying the obligee against loss by the larceny or embezzlement of the employee. Williams v. United States Fidelity &c. Co., 105 Md. 490 (66 Atl. 495). The allegations in the instant case, consequently, amount to no more than the non-payment of an indebtedness owing by the employee to the plaintiff, which the
The trial judge did not err in sustaining the demurrers to the petition as amended and in dismissing the same.
Judgment affirmed.