102 So. 617 | Ala. | 1925
This was an action by appellant against appellee on a bond guaranteeing the fidelity of appellant's cashier and bookkeeper. The sole question presented in argument has to do with the legal sufficiency of plea No. 10. A demurrer to this plea was overruled. To state the plea in brief, in its application for the contract of indemnity appellant entered into warranties as shown by the following questions and answers:
"Question 12. (a) What means will you use to ascertain whether his accounts are correct?
"Answer: (a) Will have the books audited.
"Question: (b) How frequently will they be examined?
"Answer: (b) Once a year.
"Question 13. How often will his books and accounts be audited and verified with funds in hand and in bank, and by whom?
"Answer: By public accountant."
The breach alleged is "that plaintiff failed to have the books audited once a year by a public accountant during the period beginning the 18th day of September, 1918, and ending the 18th day of September, 1921," the life of the contract. The substance of the argument for the demurrer is that the warranty is ambiguous, must be construed with favor to the insured, and that, so construed, it does not intend that plaintiff promised "to have the books audited once a year by a public accountant." More narrowly considered the argument is that, since in answer to the question "How often will his books and accounts be audited and verified with funds in hand and in bank, and by whom?" plaintiff answered, "By public accountant," therein ignoring that part of the question which asked, "How often," it made no promise as to how often the books and accounts of its cashier and bookkeeper would be audited by a public accountant, and so no promise to have his books and accounts audited and verified at any time before the loss alleged. It is not insisted that within the meaning of plaintiff's warranty, or warranties, there is any substantial difference, or any difference at all for that matter, between the examination and audit of books and accounts, nor does audit appear to mean either more or loss than examination. Nor does the plea take note of the verification of audits by an accounting for funds in hand or bank. It seems reasonably clear that an audit verified by an accounting for funds would tend to relieve the fidelity company of some risk to which it would be exposed if only examination without more were required, though the last-named method might also serve a valuable purpose by keeping some sort of check against the dishonesty of the employee, and we would say that consideration of this difference must be held to have been in the mind of the parties when answers to the two questions which have a common element of inquiry, viz., the frequency with which examinations or audits should be made, were required and given. Nevertheless, we think plaintiff's contention that its answer to question 13 must be considered wholly apart from its answer to question 12 (b), and so that plaintiff entered into no engagement to have the books kept by its employee examined by a public accountant once a year during the period stated in the plea — this contention, we think, cannot be successfully maintained.
It is freely conceded that if the language of an indemnity bond is reasonably susceptible of two sensible constructions, the courts will in general adopt that one most favorable to the beneficiary, if consistent with the objects for which the bond is given — familiar law in this state — and that the legal effect of issuing a policy of insurance *341
or contract of indemnity upon the answers as they stand when received from the insured is to eliminate the unanswered questions and to waive any objections on the ground of defects in the answers given. Phœnix Life Ins. Co. v. Raddin,
Our judgment is that the man in the street, reading the contract in this case with the purpose to ascertain what plaintiff intended when it answered the questions put to it by defendant, could not fail to understand that plaintiff agreed thereby to have the books kept by its employee, the subject of the contract, audited by a public accountant once a year at least. Likewise, we think, the conclusion would be that defendant requested information and a warranty as to audits to be verified by reference to funds in hand and bank, and that plaintiff's promissory warranty was that once a year at least the books and accounts of its employee would be audited and verified by reference to cash in hand and bank. And such is our conclusion. That defendant alleged in its plea only that plaintiff failed to have an audit of the employee's books by a public accountant, whereas the warranty was that plaintiff would have an audit verified by reference to cash in hand and bank, cannot be held against the sufficiency of the plea, for, obviously, if there was no audit by a public accountant, there was no such audit verified by reference to cash in hand or bank.
Plaintiff's insistence that the two answers, viz., (12) Will have the books audited once a year, and (13) By public accountant, shall be considered separately, each without reference to the other, would lead to the conclusion that the second (13) meant, and was intended to mean, nothing of any advantage to the defendant. That construction we think cannot be sustained on any solid ground, for it would mean that plaintiff promised to have the books and accounts of the insured employee audited by a public accountant and verified by reference to funds in hand and bank, but not during the life of the contract.
The ruling by which the trial court sustained the sufficiency of the plea in question was correct.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.