13 Ga. App. 826 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
The John Church Company filed a petition against the .¿Etna Indemnity Company to recover $7,785.55, alleged to be the liability of the defendant company upon one. bond and two renewals thereof. It alleged that the liability assumed by the ¿Etna. Indemnity Company on the original bond was $3,000, and that this liability was for any moneys misappropriated by J. P. Holmes during the period covered by the original bond, to wit, from September 24, 1904, to September 24, 1905; and that the indemnity company assumed a like liability for any misappropriations by Holmes upon the two renewals of the original bond, one extending from September 24, 1905, to September 24, 1906, and the othe,r from September 24, 1906, to September 24, 1907. The bond itself was as follows:. "Know all men by these presents that
The controlling issue between the plaintiff and the defendant is whether the indemnity company, under the allegations of the petition and the exhibits attached thereto, is liable for the sum of $7,785.55 and interest thereon, or only liable to the extent of
The plaintiff alleged that the defendant was liable to it for $2,864.75 upon the bond, $3,000 upon the first premium receipt, and $1,920.80 upon the second premium receipt, making the total of $7,785.55 as aforesaid. The defendant, in its demurrer, challenged the petition on the ground, among others, that the action was upon a bond by the terms of which the defendant’s liability was limited to $3,000, while the plaintiff sought a recovery of more than twice that amount. The demurrer further challenged the right of the plaintiff to recover $500 expenses, alleged to have been incurred in auditing the accounts of Holmes. The court sustained these grounds of the demurrer, and ruled that the ease might proceed for the amount of $3,000, and ordered that the 'allegations as to the claim of $500 for expenses incurred be stricken. The court also restricted all statements as to the renewal receipts to the mere point of payment of the cost of the bond, and directed that the petition be recast by amendment so as to conform to the court’s opinion. The plaintiff in open court refused to make th'e required amendments, and the court thereupon dismissed the ease. The plaintiff has abandoned its exception to the judgment upon the item of $500, and this is out of the case; but it is still insisted on the part of the plaintiff that the bond and the two receipts were each a separate contract of fidelity insurance, each instrument insuring for one year’s time and limited in liability to the period of one year from its date; and that the bond was not a contract of suretyship, binding during Holmes’s incumbency in office, but was a contract of fidelity insurance, each receipt for premiums constituting an additional contract of insurance for one year.
The defendant contends that its contract was one of suretyship, whereby it bound itself in the sum of $3,000 for the faithful accounting by Holmes for all moneys and assets which had come into his hands by virtue of the said decree; that the bond was made in pursuance of the decree, which required a bond for $3,000 and did not require insurance, and that it did not require Holmes to
Viewed as insurance contracts, the contracts of an organization writing fidelity insurance are to be governed by the rules applicable to insurance companies, and when the contract is fairly susceptible of two constructions — one favorable and the other unfavorable to the indemnity company — the latter is to be adopted. It is a familiar rule that ambiguities are to be construed ■ most strongly
The real question in the present case is not whether the contract is one of fidelity insurance or an ordinary contract of suretyship, but rather whether the renewal receipts had the effect of continuing from year to year, as long as premiums were paid, the fixed liability on the bond, or of distinct undertakings, adding new and distinct liability year by year for any shortage of Holmes. In other words, did the parties by their contract intend that the defendant should assume any greater liability than $3,000; and was the payment of the premium anything more than a charge proportionate to the length of time that the liability of the indemnity company might continue? Practically the identical question now before us was decided by the Supreme Court of Tennessee in First National Bank v. Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 110 Tenn. 10 (75 S. W. 1076, 100 Am. St. R. 765). The Fidelity & Guaranty Company in that case gave a bond in the sum of $7,000, agreeing to indemnify the bank against all or any pecuniary loss occasioned by fraud or dishonesty of one W. W. Lea, a bookkeeper, occurring during the continuance of the bond or of any renewal thereof, and discovered during such continuance or renewal or at 'any time thereafter. The bond was dated May 1, 1898, and was renewed on May 4, 1899, from May 1, 1899, to May 1, 1900. The Court of Chancery Appeals found that from May 1, 1898, to May 1, 1899, the complaining bank sustained pecuniary loss of $7,217.50, occasioned by the dishonesty of the said W. W. Lea, and that during the currency of the renewal
It is clear to us that, so far as the defendant is concerned, the bond in the instant case is nothing more nor less than a contract of suretyship. The indemnity company stood surety for Holmes’s good behavior in the matter therein referred to. Holmes is a party to the contract and the principal obligor. The indemnity company is a mere surety for the performance of Holmes’s obligation to faithfully account for all moneys which he might collect for the account of John Church Company. If the contract were strictly one of fidelity insurance, issued by the indemnity company, it would seem that Holmes would not have signed the contract or have assumed any obligation under it, and the burden of the obligation for his proper conduct would have rested upon the indemnity company alone. Though, under section 2550 of the Civil Code, fidelity insurance companies may be sureties. on bonds, yet ordinarily a contract of fidelity insurance is entered into between the insurer and the party for whose protection the contract is made, and the
The cases cited by the learned counsel for the plaintiff in error refer to term insurance, where the term of the contract is specifically fixed. And where there is a right of renewal, as was the case in Mayor and Council of Brunswick v. Harvey, 114 Ga. 733 (40 S. E. 754), this right is specifically conferred by the contract itself. Either an ordinary contract of suretyship or a contract of fidelity insurance might contain a provision limiting it as to the time the liability of the insurer should continue; but that is not this case. The contract binds both Holmes and the indemnity company to make good any default on the part of Holmes so long as he continues to act as trustee, within the statutory limitation of twenty years. There is nothing unreasonable in the fact that the indemnity company required the payment of the premium annually. As pointed out by the judge of the city court in his opinion in this case, the time necessary to accomplish a certain result may be uncertain; certainly in the present case it would appear to be uncertain how long a time would be necessary to enable a trustee to collect the assets which were to be turned over to the plaintiff. Ordinarily a contract in which an indemnity company assumes liability for the misconduct of another, or for his misappropriation of funds (such as the official bond of a county officer), is somewhat similar (as to the payment of premiums) to the usual policy of life-insurance, while a contract of fire-insurance usually limits the term during which the insurance continues. This distinction is not dependent upon the fact that the contract may be one of suretyship or one of fidelity insurance. In a contract of ordinary life insurance the obligation of the insurance company is to pay a stipulated sum at the death of the insured or the maturity
Construing this contract according to the rules laid down in these two decisions, and keeping in view the fact that the John Church Company can not recover from the indemnity company more than it could recover from Holmes on this bond, we are clear
2. The judge directed the plaintiff to amend the petition so as to conform to the ruling above stated; and, upon the plaintiff’s refusal to comply with this direction, he dismissed the suit. That was not error. See Hicks v. Hamilton, 3 Ga. App. 118 (59 S. E. 331).
Judgment affirmed on the main bill of exceptions. Cross-bill of exceptions dismissed.