147 S.E. 12 | N.C. | 1929
STACY, C. J. , not sitting. This is a civil action brought by plaintiff to recover on bonds given by J. W. Bryan, as principal, and United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company as surety, to the town of Jacksonville. J. W. Bryan was water-rent collector and tax collector for plaintiff. He entered upon his duties 1 January, 1925, and gave two bonds 1 October, 1925. One bond was for $1,000 as water-rent collector, and on the other was for $5,000 as tax collector, his surety in both bonds being United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company. This appeal presents a controversy alone over the $1,000 water-rent collector bond. In the water-rent collector bond we find the following: United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company "(1) hereby agrees that it shall reimburse the employer (the plaintiff) for any pecuniary loss sustained, not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000) of money, securities, merchandise or any property occasioned by any act or acts of larceny or embezzlement by the employee (J. W. Bryan) in the performance of the duties of the position as aforementioned, during the period commencing from 1 October, 1925, to 1 October, 1926, subject to the conditions expressed in this bond, which shall be conditions precedent to the right of the employer to recover hereunder. . . . (2) This bond may be continuedfrom year to year by the payment of the annual premium to the surety andthe issuance by the surety of its continuation certificate, provided thatthe liability of the surety shall not exceed the amount above written,whether the loss shall occur during the term above named, or during anycontinuation thereof, or partly during said term and partly during saidcontinuation." (Italics ours.)
The judgment of the court below was: "That the plaintiff have and recover of the defendant, J. W. Bryan, the sum of $1,814.10 with interest thereon from 1 October, 1926, and the further sum of $876.34, with interest thereon from 1 October, 1927; and that the plaintiff recover of the defendant, United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company *723 the sum of one thousand dollars, the penalty of the bond issued by it to cover water rents collected by its codefendant, which amount, when paid, shall be credited on the above amounts adjudged to be due the plaintiff by said J. W. Bryan. "
The water-rent bond for $1,000 was given 1 October, 1925, for one year ending 1 October, 1926, and then continued by the issuance of the "continuation certificate" for one year ending 1 October, 1927.
The sole question presented upon the record is whether the bond for water rents can be construed as securing the plaintiff to the extent of $1,000 each year of the defendant Bryan's incumbency. Plaintiff contends that said surety liability is $2,000, instead of $1,000, as held by the court below. Each year the defendant Surety Company received from the plaintiff the annual premium without abatement and issued its continuation certificate.
S. v. Martin,
Speaking to the subject in Colt v. Kimball, 190 N.C. at p. 173, citing numerous authorities, it is said: "Having executed the contract, and no fraud appearing in the procurement of the execution, the court is without power to relieve the defendant on the ground that he thought it contained provisions which it does not. He is concluded thereby to the same extent as if he had known what due diligence would have informed him of, to wit, its plain provisions. " Cromwell v. Logan, ante, 588; Mich. Mortgage-InvestmentCorp. v. Amer. Em. Ins. Co. (October, 1928),
It may not be amiss to say that from the many cases that reach this Court, similar to the present, those who make contracts like the one in controversy — officials and others — should read them with care. This Court cannot write, but must construe contracts as written. Relief can only be granted in a case like this for mutual mistake or fraud. An interesting article can be found in the Michigan Law Review (February, *724 1928), p. 442, entitled "Fidelity Bonds — Does it pay to renew them?" It criticises [criticizes] severely a bond like the present as "heads I win tails you lose. " It suggests a relief by the companies themselves orlegislative action. The judgment below is
Affirmed.
STACY, C. J., not sitting.