The answer contained pleas in bar, denied the breaches complained of, and alleged nonperformance on the part of the plaintiff of stipulations forming the basis of the contract.
His Honor entered the following compulsory order of reference:
"In this cause, it appearing to the court from an inspection of the pleadings and the record in the cause, that the trial of the (321) pleas in bar raised by the pleadings and other issues of fact herein will involve the examination and taking of a long account, it is ordered that the trial of issues of fact and of law be referred to C. F. Warren, referee, pursuant to the provisions of subsection (1) of section 421, of the Code."
The defendant resisted the motion, contending that the cause was not referable, excepted to the order, and appealed therefrom. This is an action brought upon a penal bond given by the defendant, the Fidelity and Deposit Company, to secure the plaintiff against all loss from any fraudulent acts of its codefendant, Mehegan, as cashier of said plaintiff bank. This bond, which seems to have been modeled after some form of insurance policy, is extremely complicated, and is based upon an application containing a large number of questions and subquestions. There appear to be 23 sections in the bond and 31 questions in the application. All the answers are made "conditions precedent." The complaint alleged the execution of the bond and its renewal, and set out the several alleged fraudulent acts of the defendant Mehegan, upon which it relied. It further alleged, "18. That immediately upon ascertaining the several fraudulent acts of the said James G. Mehegan, cashier as aforesaid, the plaintiff bank notified the defendant company thereof, and permitted the agent of said defendant to examine the books of said bank, and furnished said defendant with proof of said loss more than three months before the bringing of (322) this action." After demurrer overruled, the defendant company answered in part as follows:
"5. That in answer to allegation 5 of the complaint, the defendant admits that there was a bond of indemnity executed by the defendant and said Mehegan, the defendant executing the same as the surety of the said Mehegan, upon the date mentioned, and for the amount named, but the defendant denies that the terms and conditions of said bond are properly, correctly and truly alleged. That a copy of the contract of *Page 194 suretyship entered into by the defendant with the plaintiff, and a copy of the notice of the expiration, statement by bank and renewal receipt, are hereto attached and asked to be taken as a part of this answer.
"6. That allegation 6 of the complaint is admitted. But the defendant further answering same, says and alleges, that said contract and agreement was entered into and based upon the following statement and representations, to wit: those set out in the attached papers set out in the preceding paragraph hereof, which said statement, at the time it was made, to wit, 15 December, 1896, was incorrect and untrue, and by reason of the incorrect and untrue statements contained therein, the defendant was induced to execute and deliver to the plaintiff the said renewal receipt, and the defendant submits that it is not liable on account thereof."
The further defense of defendant company alleges:
"2. That by the terms, conditions and covenant of said contracts of suretyship, the plaintiff assumed, obligated and contracted to do and perform certain obligations therein named, the carrying, out and performance of which by the said plaintiff was necessary to make said contract valid and binding upon the defendant; and to entitle the plaintiff to bring and maintain this action. That the said plaintiff has neglected and failed to perform and carry out its obligations as (323) aforesaid, and therefore is not entitled to recover in this action.
"3. That the plaintiff has failed to set out and allege that it has in all respects complied with and performed its part of the contract made with the defendants, as it was its duty to have so done, and the defendant submits that the plaintiff is not entitled to maintain and prosecute this action.
"4. That the said plaintiff has failed and neglected to carry out and perform its part of said contract, thereby causing and doing a wrong in the premises, and thereby discharging the defendant from liability on account of said contract."
The court below made the following order:
"In this cause it appearing to the court from an inspection of the pleadings and the record in the cause that the trial of the pleas in bar raised by the pleadings and other issues of fact herein will involve the examination and taking of a long account, it is ordered that the trial of issues of fact and of law be referred to C. F. Warren, referee, pursuant to the provisions of subsection 1, of section 421, of the Code." The defendant resisted the motion, contending that the cause was not referable.
In this we think there was error. The answers of the defendants, which were substantially to the same effect, raised pleas in bar which if found in their favor would put an end to the action and render a reference *Page 195 entirely unnecessary. Until such pleas are decided, a compulsory reference can not properly be ordered. If the plaintiff has no right to recover at all, it makes no difference what amount he might be entitled to recover if he had a cause of action. R. R. v. Morrison, 82 N.C. 141, 143; Cox v.Cox, 84 N.C. 141; Neal v. Becknell, 85 N.C. 299; Commissioners v.Raleigh, 88 N.C. 120; Smith v. Goldsboro, 121 N.C. 350, and cases therein cited.
In the argument before us, the counsel for defendant company insisted that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to (324) constitute a cause of action inasmuch as it did not set out in full the contract of suretyship, and did not specifically allege that the plaintiff had performed each and all of the conditions and stipulations on which the contract was based. However the plaintiff may have been in fault in not setting out in full the contract of suretyship, it is cured by the pleading of the defendants who have themselves made it a part of their answers. We think, therefore, that the complaint does state a sufficient cause of action. The object of the contract was to secure the plaintiff against the fraudulent acts of its cashier. The complaint alleges the execution of the bond and its renewal, and sets out their substantial features, the alleged fraudulent acts of the cashier, and notice to the defendant company. These facts being proved would have made out the plaintiff's case. Nothing else appearing, the plaintiff would have been entitled to recover, and if the defendant company relied upon breaches of the contract on the part of the plaintiff to defeat a recovery, it should have specifically pleaded them. The burden of proving them would have rested upon the defendant. To require the plaintiff to set out each and all of the fifty conditions and stipulations in the bond and application, and then to prove affirmatively that he had performed each one of them, would practically defeat any recovery, and would amount to a denial of justice. Many of them are mere statements of fact, while some of them are agreements between the coobligors, and do not concern the plaintiff. One of these conditions is as follows: "And lastly, should the employee become a defaulter and seek refuge in any foreign country, he hereby agrees to the enforcement against him of the laws of such country as they are now or may be hereafter enacted relative to the commission of injuries or offenses against an employer resident in such country." How an agreement between private parties can affect the criminal laws (325) of a foreign country we fail to comprehend, and we are glad the question is not before us. We allude to it only to show the complicated nature of the conditions injected into bonds of indemnity which often tend to defeat the primary object of the contract. The old bond of indemnity was a simple instrument which could be easily comprehended *Page 196 and promptly enforced. If these new forms of contract are to take its place we hope they will preserve some of its simplicity and efficiency. This is a matter of great importance, as surety companies are now allowed to make the bonds of trustees, guardians, administrators, and all other fiduciaries; and we would much regret to see the right of orphan children, as well as other helpless beneficiaries, depend not upon the substantial merits of their case, but upon a multitude of technicalities in an instrument to which they were not parties.
In the case at bar the defendant company has failed to specify in its answer the breaches of contract by the plaintiff upon which it relies, except in one instance, and that not very distinctly, but we think sufficiently so to admit of proof. It appears to us that section 6, of the answer, means to allege that the defendant company was induced to renew the bond upon the written statement of the plaintiff bank that the books and accounts of the defendant Mehegan had been examined and found correct in every respect, and that all moneys handled by him had been accounted for; and to further allege that this statement was false. These allegations amounted to a plea in bar which the defendant had a right to have passed upon before a reference could be made.
These surety companies are in the nature of insurance companies, and in fact, many of them do an insurance business of one kind (326) or another. The application before us suggests, mutatis mutandis, that of an insurance policy. It may therefore be well to see what this Court has said with regard to such applications. InBobbitt v. Insurance Co., 66 N.C. 70, it was said in what appears to have been really a dictum, that the application must be set out in the complaint, and, being in the nature of a condition precedent, must be proved by the plaintiff. This rule was distinctly overruled in Britt v.Insurance Co., 105 N.C. 175, where the Court says: "The application is by the agreement made a part of the contract, but it contains only stipulations which bind the assured. It is in possession of the defendant, and if there is a breach of any of its terms which will release the defendant company from its obligation, it is for the defendant to set out such obligation, and aver the breach or breaches thereof on which it relies." In that case the point is fully and ably discussed with numerous citations. While the further point is not professedly decided, upon whom rests the burden of proof, we think it is inferentially settled by the universal rule that whoever is required to allege a fact is also required to prove it. The plea of the statute of limitations is an exception to the rule more apparent than real because it is negative in its character. There the plaintiff is required to prove that the transaction alleged by him occurred within the time limited by statute, as otherwise he would have no legal remedy. *Page 197
The order of reference must be set aside, and the case first heard upon the plea in bar.
Error.
Cited: McCarty v. Ins. Co., post, 823; Bank v. Deposit Co.,128 N.C. 367,372; Kerr v. Hicks, 129 N.C. 144; Oldham v. Rieger, 145 N.C. 260;Alley v. Rogers, 170 N.C. 539.
(327)