125 Iowa 174 | Iowa | 1904
been paid, shall constitute a surrender value fund.” At the end of ten years the certificate holder was entitled “ to receive within 90 days of maturity his equitable and just portion of the surrender value fund as thus created.” The fund had been invested in first mortgagee on real estate and in an office building occupied in part by the officers of the association and in part rented to others. During the. period of the first bond the net amount of rent and interest, after paying taxes, was $623.35, and during the period of the second bond $380.45. These items were entered as a parof the general or expense fund, and made use -of for that purpose, whereas it is said they belonged to the surrender value fund. Without deciding whether the moneys so collected were properly expended, it is enough to say that the president was not responsible for the mistake, if any, made. His statement that he had no knowledge of the error, if it was such, is uncontradicted. As pointed out in Sherman v. Harbin, 124 Iowa 643, submitted with this case, the duty of determining to which fund the moneys belonged devolved upon the cashier, and, though Harbin may have occasionally glanced over the books of account, accurately indicating the source of every item and its disposition, it does not appear that his attention was directed to any of these. Auditing the books was no part of his duty, and it cannot be said in not discovering errors overlooked by the auditing committee of the board of directors year after year he was derelict in the performance of his duties as managing officer. See Batchelor v. Planters’ Nat. Bank, 78 Ky. 435. The fault, if any, was that of the cashier, from whom a bond was exacted in the same amount as that of the president.
V. The evidence tends to show that certain losses were
But the circumstances may be such that the obligee is bound to disclose facts within his knowledge which increase the hazard of the risk, even though no inquiry has been made. Thus, in Maltby’s Case, 1 Dow. Parl. Cases, 294, a party knowing himself to have been cheated by a clerk concealed the fact, and applied for security in such a manner and under such circumstances as to hold out the clerk as one whom he considered a trustworthy person, and thereby induced another to become his surety. Silence, under such circumstances, being treated as expressive of confidence, was held to invalidate the contract. See Franklin Bank v. Stevens, 39 Me. 532. In Etting v. Bank, 11 Wheat. 59 (6 L. Ed. 419), the Supreme Court of the United States was equally divided as to whether the omission to make known to the surety the fact that the principal, a cashier, had previously misappropriated money of the bank, Would release the surety, and the decision of the Circuit Court was affirmed. In that case the suretyship was of the cashier's note to the bank, and the question was whether the, bank was bound to make known the character of the indebtedness. In Franklin Bank v. Cooper, 36 Me. 179, 196, the question w’as considered at length, and the conclusion reached that
It is generally admitted that an omission to communicate circumstances materially affecting the risk known to one party and unknown to the other will destroy the validity of the contract whenever the party having the knowledge is bound to communicate it. The difficulty consists in arriving at a correct conclusion under what circumstances one is so bound. He is bound when the relations are such that the other party is entitled to repose any particular confidence in him, and when inquiries are made respecting the suretyship. Is he equally bound when he has suitable opportunity to make them known ? * . * * One who becomes a surety for another must ordinarily be presumed to do so upon the belief
See, also Dinsmore v. Tibdall, 34 Ohio St. 411; Bellevue B. & L. Ass’n v. Jeckel, 20 Ky. 460 (46 S. W. Rep. 482); Third Nat. Bank v. Owen, 101 Mo. Sup. 558 (14 S. W. Rep. 632).
We have not found any case deciding that in no event is the obligee obliged to disclose his knowledge of the past conduct of the principal in absence of inquiry, nor, on the other hand, is there any decision saying that such information must always be given if opportunity is afforded. Statements of this character have been incorporated in some text-books, however. What is exacted necessarily depends on the circumstances of each particular case, but certainly the information which must be imparted should relate to the subject-matter of the suretyship. As certainly the situation must be such that the obligee, as a matter of fairness, ought to state what he knows, and the omission to do' so may be attributed to an intention to withhold information in aid of some advantage to himself. In other words, there must be an intent in some way to mislead, either by silence or what is said, for without an improper motive there can be no fraud such as to invalidate the contract. If the bond is tendered by or received from the surety under conditions indicating that the obligee must have known the surety was acting without knowledge of past misconduct increasing the
Before the execution of the contract beginning March 2, 1899, Harbin prepared and the secretary signed the following statement addressed to the defendant company:
The bond does not purport to be based on this statement, nor is it made a part thereof. What the secretary did was without the authority of the board of directors or its executive committee, and was no part of his duty as such officer. He merely acted for the accommodation of Harbin, with whom he had joined in the improper use of these funds. As what he did was not within the scope of his agency, the association was not chargeable with notice thereof or bound thereby. As fully supporting these views, see Amer. Surety Co. v. Pauley, 170 U. S. 133 (18 Sup. Ct. 552) 42 L. Ed. 977); Perpetual Building & Loan Ass’n v. The U. S. Fidelity & Guarantee Co., 118 Iowa, 729.
Had the money belonged to the association, then probably it must have advised the surety upon discovering Har
In the instant case the assessments had been made for the benefit of the beneficiaries of deceased members, and the moneys realized were in the hands of the association for the purpose only of distribution to said beneficiaries. Neither the officers nor directors of the association had any right to make any other use of them. Any of them who participated in so doing violated the law and the articles of incorporation, and in no manner represented beneficiaries or the association in so far as it acted as trustees for such beneficiaries. Knowledge of the diversion of the funds so acquired cannot' be imputed to the association. On three different occasions the president, secretary, and another — supposedly a director — on the pretense of acting as an executive committee, entered orders, one for the transfer of money from the beneficiary fund to -the general fund “ on account of the expense of first year’s premiums-, said am mint, having been expended in defense of the beneficiary fund against fraudulent claims,” and the other two for the payment of small items for attorney’s fees from such fund. As they w'ere engaged in the commission of a wrong, their knowledge of what they did cannot be imputed to the association, then acting as the trustee of the funds taken. This is on the ground that, having perpetrated an act of fraud or dishonesty, of which the association as well'as the beneficiary, whom it represented, might complain, they would not be likely to disclose wha.t they had done to either, and for this reason they are not to be presumed to have imparted such information. American Surety Co. v. Pauley, 170 U. S. 133, and authorities therein cited. Possibly, had the information reached the board of trustees, it ought to have