116 Ky. 38 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion of the court by
Affirming.
This action was brought in the .Warren circuit court by the Warren Deposit Bank against Luther R. Porter and the appellee, the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, -upon a bond given .to the bank by Luther R. Porter as principal and the surety company as hi-s surety, conditioned that the surety company should, within three months after the receipt of satisfactory proof, rmmburse the bank to an .amount no,t exceeding $20,000 for such pecuniary loss -of money, securities, or .other personal property belonging to the bank, as the bank might sustain by any fraudulent act or acts committed by Porter in the performance of the duties of cashier of the bank during the term beginning May 1, 1900. Upon the trial, on motion of the surety company, the court, at the conclusion of the evidence for the plaintiff, peremptorily instructed the jury to find for-
The petition avers the fact that Porter was cashier of the hank, the execution of the bond and its terms, and then avers the breach of the bond as follows: “That while the said bond was in full force and effect, and within the term beginning May 1, 1900, and ending May 1, 1901, the plaintiff suffered pecuniary loss by reason of the fact that the defendant Luther R. Porter fraudulently and unlawfully, while acting as cashier aforesaid, and in violation of his duties as such cashier, embezzled, appropriated, and used twenty thousand ($20,000) dollars of the money of the plaintiff, and fraudulently failed and refused, upon demand, to pay the same, or any part thereof, to plaintiff, or, in whole or in part, to reimburse the plaintiff for said loss,, or to any one for its use and benefit.” The answer of the surety company, besides traversing the allegations of the-embezzlement charge in the petition within the period covered by the -bond, pleaded a number of matters in avoidance of its liability. The only -one of them that we have found it necessary to determine in this case is contained in the fdurth paragraph -of the answer, which avers -that before making the bond the defendant required the bank to an.■swer certain questions in writing relating to the duties and accounts of Porter, cashier; that the bank, through and by its president, C. G. Smallho-use, did make and deliver to the company written answers to such'questions; that the bond sued on was made upon the faith of such answers, and that the company believed them to be true; that the written paper upon which the questions were propounded and answers made, and the bond itself, provided that the
It is pleaded and most earnestly argued on behalf -of appellant that the president had not the inherent power, by virtue of his office, to represent the bank in this matter, and that it was not a duty pertaining to his office, either by the powers conferred by the charter or by-laws of the bank, or by its usage or custom, or by vote or resolution of its board of directors. It is claimed that, on the contrary, the board of directors alone had the power and authority, under appellant’s charter and under the law, to represent the, bank in the transaction of contracting bond for its cashier, and of making statements and representations to the surety on behalf of -the bank regarding same. While it may be true that, as a matter of law, answering 'questions such as tho-se propounded to the president in this ■case, and making the representations' therein -contained,, were not within either the actual or the apparent scope <of the duties of that office, and that the president was not authorized expressly either by the charter or by anything
Appellant contends that the provisions of section 639, Kentucky Statutes, 1899, as follows: “All statements, or descriptions' in any application for a pol'icy of insurance shall be deemed .and held representations and not warranties ; nor shall any misrepresentations, unless fraudulent or material, prevent .a recovery on. the policy” — should apply, and that the representations contained in the statements made by Smallhouse can not, under that section, be treated as warranties. Previous to the enactment of that
That these misrepresentations were material to the risk in this case there can be noi manner of doubt. That they were indisputably false is equally clear. Whether they were fraudulent or not is not, therefore, particularly material. We are of opinion that the effect of these material misrepresentations was to invalidate the bond.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.