114 Ga. 733 | Ga. | 1902
The Mayor and Council of the City of Brunswick brought suit against Harvey and the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company. From the allegations of the petition the following facts appear: In January, 1898, Harvey was elected city treasurer by the mayor and aldermen of Brunswick. The charter of that city required that the treasurer give bond, with security, for the faithful performance of his duties. On January 24, 1898, a bond was accepted by the mayor and council from the Fidelity and Guaranty Company. ' This bond was in the sum of $15,000, and guaranteed the city against the fraud and dishonesty of Harvey as treasurer. The bond was signed by Harvey and by the president and the secretary of the company, and sealed with the seal of the company. It contained no promise or covenant by Harvey to the municipality. The only promise or covenant on his part was that he would save the company harmless from loss on the bond. The bond contained many stipulations and conditions limiting the liability of the company. Some of these will be mentioned in the opinion below. The bond was to be of force from February 1, 1898, to February 1, 1899. In August, 1900, the city authorities discovered that Harvey was a defaulter. On September 15,. thereafter, in compliance with one of the conditions of the bond, notice of the defalcation was given the company. The company sent an agent to the city of Brunswick, who made an investigation of Harvey’s accounts. The company thereupon refused to pay anything on the bond. Suit was brought by the city against Harvey and the company for $15,000, the amount of the bond. To this action Harvey and the company severally demurred. The only grounds of Harvey’s demurrer necessary to mention here urged that there was a misjoinder of parties, and that the petition did not set forth a cause of action; he claiming that the city had no right to recover against him on the bond, because in it he had made no promise or covenant whatever to the city authorities. Harvey also filed a plea in abatement, which, under the view we take of the case, it is unnecessary to set out here. The company demurred on several grounds. One of these was that there was no cause of action set out against it, because it appeared from the petition and the bond attached thereto that the liability of the company on the bond had ceased and determined on account of the failure of the city authorities to discover the defalcation of Harvey, and to give notice thereof
Judgment affirmed.