This is an action at law on a bond issued by defendant, a surety company, to guarantee to plaintiff, a wholesale merchant, the fidelity of- T. W. Knauber, who was employed by plaintiff as a salesman and collector. By consent of parties, Frank Brumback, Esq., a member of the Jackson County Bar, was appointed “referee to try the issues of law and fact.” In due course, he filed his report,- in which appear findings of fact and conclusions of law, with the final conclusion that plaintiff is entitled to recover judgment against defendant in the sum of $933.10, with interest from the date of the bringing of the suit. Exceptions to this report were filed by defendant and overruled by the court. Judgment was rendered accordingly and defendant appealed.
• Much of the attack on the judgment made by counsel is directed against the findings of fact and is based on the contention that facts stated .by the referee are in conflict with the evidence. As to all such matters, we shall follow the well-settled rule of treating the report of the referee in a law case as the equivalent of a special verdict of a jury. We shall not weigh the evi-’ dence, but shall adopt as finally settled the facts stated by the referee which we find to be supported by substantial evidence. [Wiggins Ferry Co. v. Railway, 73 Mo. 389; Lingenfelder v. Wainwright Brewing Co., 103 Mo. 578; Howard County v. Baker, 119 Mo. 397; Berthold v. O’Hara, 121 Mo. 88; Tufts v. Latshaw, 172 Mo. 359.]
The case may be stated as follows: Knauber was employed by plaintiff on May 1, 1900, to sell cigars and tobacco in portions of Kansas City and to make col*425lections from his customers. His salary was fixed at $180 per month, with the understanding that within a month or so he could exercise the option of being paid a commission of fifty per cent, of the profits on his sails in lieu of a salary. May 19th, he applied to defendant for a bond guaranteeing his fidelity to plaintiff. In the written application, he was required to file, he was ashed many questions, among them:
“Q. If paid by salary, state annual amount and when payable.” To which he answered, “$130 per month, payable monthly.” “Q. If you are remunerated on any other basis, state nature of engagement, with amount of probable monthly earnings.” No answer was made to this question. It was- stated that the applicant was employed by plaintiff as salesman and collector and had been since May 1st. Attached to the application was an “employers’ statement” signed by plaintiff in which the statement appears that “the replies of the applicant herein are to the best of my knowledge and belief correct.” The bond issued to plaintiff on May 26th provided that it would continue in force for one year from May 1, 1900, and that on the faith of the statement made by the employer as a part of the application, defendant would “make good and reimburse to-the employer all and any pecuniary loss sustained by the employer, of money, securities or other personal property in the possession of the employee, or for the possession of which he is responsible, by any act of' fraud, or dishonesty, on the part of said employee, in connection with the duties of the office or position here-inbefore referred to, and occurring during the continuance of this bond, or any renewal thereof,” etc. Liability was limited to $1,000. Among the recitals of the instrument are the following:
“The company shall not be liable under this bond for the amount of any balance that may be found due the employer from the enxployee, and which may *426have accrued prior to the date hereof, and which maybe discovered within the period hereof; it being the true intent and meaning of this bond that the company shall be responsible as aforesaid, for moneys, securities, or property diverted from the employer through fraud or dishonesty on the part of the employee within the period specified in this bond.
“The company shall be notified in writing, addressed to the president of the company, at its office, in the city of Baltimore, State of Maryland, of any act of omission, or of commission on the part of the employee, which may involve a loss for -which the company is responsible hereunder, immediately after the occurrence of such act shall come to the knowledge of the employer.
“The company, upon execution of this bond, shall not thereafter be responsible to the employer, under any bond previously issued to the employer on behalf of said employee, and upon the issuance of any bond subsequent hereto upon said employee in favor of said employer, all responsibility hereunder shall cease and determine, it being mutually understood that it is the intention of this provision that but one (the last) bond shall be in force at one time, unless otherwise stipulated between the employer and the. company.”
At the end. of the month of May and after the bond had been issued, Knauber decided to. work on a commission basis and thereafter was credited by plaintiff with one-half of the profits made on his sales, less the amount of bad accounts which were charged to his account. He was permitted by plaintiff (and the practice continued until March 8, 1901) to draw $25 per week on account of commissions, and plaintiff made further advances to pay some debts contracted by him. All of these payments were made by plaintiff voluntarily and none of the items charged to Knauber represented money of plaintiff collected by him. On the *427date last mentioned, Knauber’s account was overdrawn in the sum of |315.03, and plaintiff notified Mm that no more money would be paid him until the overdraft had been paid. He continued to work and in the latter part of April, becoming discouraged, applied to another concern for employment. Defendant contends that he was given the employment sought and actually left the service of plaintiff, but the referee finds, and we think is supported in the finding by substantial evidence, that Knauber did not discontinue his employment by plaintiff. Learning that such change was contemplated, plaintiff, to prevent it-, began paying Knauber $22 per week on account and permitted him to draw that amount until the discovery of the fact that he was a defaulter.
In January or February, 1901, Knauber told the manager of plaintiff’s cigar department that while drunk he had been drugged in a saloon and robbed of $200. He spoke as though the money were his own and plaintiff did not know or suspect that he had misappropriated or lost any of its money. It appears that Knauber’s customers were chiefly dramshop keepers and that it was usual for cigar salesmen such as he to spend money at the places of such customers in drinking and treating others.
May 1, 1901, defendant issued the following renewal certificate to plaintiff: “In consideration of the sum of five dollars, the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company hereby continues in force bond No. 68400, in the sum of one thousand dollars, on behalf of T. W. Knauber, in favor of Long Brothers Grocery Company, for the period beginning the 1st day of May, 1901, and ending on the 1st day of May, 1902, subject to all the covenants and conditions of said original bond heretofore issued on the 1st day of May, 1900.” This certificate was issued on the faith of the following statement made by plaintiff: “This is to certify that *428on the 1st day of March, 1901, the books and accounts of T. W. Knauber, in our employ as salesman and collector, Avere examined by us and we found them correct in every respect, and all moneys handled by him accounted for. He has performed his duties in an acceptable and satisfactory manner, and we know of no reason why the guarantee bond should not be continued. His salary is now commission, and he is employed as salesman and collector.”
Between the 1st day of May, 1901, and the 8th day of September of the same year, Knauber collected from his customers money belonging to plaintiff in a total amount of $933.10, which he failed to turn in and converted to his own use. Plaintiff first learned of the existence of a shortage on the 18th day of September and promptly notified defendant of the loss. After*the exchange of some correspondence relating to the claim, -defendant declined to pay it and this suit followed. Defendant contends that “the original bond was void by reason of false representations in the application therefor,” and that “the renewal of the bond was void by reason of false statements in the employer’s statement therefor.”
Preliminary to the solution of the questions argued under these two heads, it is important to have in mind the principles and rules which govern the Interpretation of fidelity bonds issued by surety companies for hire. The ordinary surety or guarantor is the favorite of the laAV find his contract should be construed most liberally in his favor, but corporations whose business it is to issue contracts of guaranty or indemnity should be classed as insurers and their contracts must be interpreted by the principles and rules applicable to policies of insurance. If the bond is fairly and reasonably sus-cetible of two constructions, one favorable to the beneficiary and the other to the surety company, “the former, if consistent Avith the objects for which the bond is *429given, must be adopted, and this for tbe reason t-liat the instrument which the court is invited to interpret was drawn by the officers or agents of the surety company. This is a well-established rule of the law of insurance.” [American Surety Co. v. Pauly, 170 U. S. 133.] Being what has been termed a “common surety” engaged in business for profit and on terms and conditions fixed by itself, it is but just that the bond emitted by defendant be construed most liberally in favor of plaintiff. [1 Cooley’s Brief on the Law of Insurance, p. 9, and cases cited; Guaranty Co. v. Bank, 183 U. S. 402.]
The two propositions of defendant above quoted -are adduced from these principal points presented in its brief and argument: (1) The bond issued May 1, 1900, was void for the reason that in the failure to state in the application and employer’s statement that the applicant had the option of working on a commission basis, a fact material to the risk was fraudulently concealed. This point was sustained by the referee and trial judge. (2) The renewal certificate issued May 1, 1901, did not create a new and independent contract but operated merely as a continuation of the old bond which, being void, could not be. vitalized by such extension. (3) Plaintiff perpetrated a fraud on defendant in stating in his application for the renewal certificate that Knauber’s accounts were correct and that it knew of no reason why the bond should not be continued, when it knew that he had largely overdrawn his account and had been robbed of $200 while in a drunken stupor. (4) " Knauber, by leaving the employment of plaintiff, terminated the obligation of defendant, if any, under the bond, and his subsequent employment by plaintiff on substantially different terms, did not serve, to restore the obligation.
The conclusion we have reached respecting the second point relieves us of the necessity of discussing the *430first. We may concede for argument, without so bold-ing, that tbe original bond was yoid on account of tbe omission of plaintiff to disclose tbe real nature of tbe employment, but since tbe fact appears in tbe statement made by plaintiff for renewal of tbe bond that Knauber was being paid by commissions on bis sales, defendant, after accepting and retaining tbe premium for a renewal and issuing a certificate therefor, will not be heard to complain of tbe original misrepresentations whether or not such misrepresentation constituted a breach of warranty. In Proctor Coal Co. v. U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 124 Fed. 424, defendant successfully maintained tbe contention that a renewal certificate of a bond identical in form Avith that here under consideration constituted a new contract of insurance; “that each renewal was a sen arate and distinct obligation of suretyship; tbe renewals having embodied in them all tbe terms and provisions of tbe original bond as is expressly stated in tbe renewal receipts.” We find tbe conclusion reached by tbe learned judge who wrote tbe opinion in that case well supported by authority. Tbe rule is generally recognized that “a renewal of a policy constitutes a separate and distinct contract for tbe period of time covered by such renewal. It is, however, a contract with tbe same terms and conditions as is evidenced by tbe bond which is renewed, because tbe renewal receipt recites that it is renewed in accordance with tbe terms of tbe bond.” [DeJernette v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. of N. Y., 33 S. W. 828; Railroad v. American Surety Co., 99 Fed. 674.; Insurance Co. v. Walsh, 54 Ill. 164; Brady v. Insurance Co., 11 Mich. 425.] Possessing knowledge of the true fact when it issued tbe new contract, defendant, by no sort of reason or logic can sustain tbe position that it might, accept tbe benefits of a new contract and then, when a loss occurred, repudiate its burdens because of a misrepresentation in tbe original application. Tbe only *431warranties on wbicb it would be beard to rely are those embodied in.the original application as modified or changed in the subsequent application for a renewal.
Passing to the third point, we perceive no reason for disturbing the conclusion of the referee that “plaintiff was not by the terms of the bond or by the terms of the notice for continuance, or of the certificate for continuance, or by law, to notify the defendant, either of the fact that Knauber had been drunk and had lost or been robbed of money, or'of the fact that he had so told Louis J. Long.” . . . Nor “to notify defendant that Knauber had been paid toward his compensation more money than he had earned by way of commission.” Under the provisions of the bond above quoted, it was made the duty of plaintiff to notify defendant “of any. act of omission, or of commission on the part of the employee, which may involve a loss for which the company is responsible hereunder, immediately after the occurrence of such act shall come to the knowledge of the employer.” Since the obligation of defendant was to indemnify plaintiff against loss on account of fraud or dishonesty on the part of Knauber, it is manifest that in defining the duty of plaintiff with respect to-the giving of notice, we must hold that such duty was intended to relate. only to acts of Knauber affecting the question of his integrity. Under the rule of interpretation we have adopted, we could not extend the scope of this duty beyond that just stated without reading into the contract terms not expressly stated nor to be implied necessarily from what is stated. The fact that Knauber drank to excess on one occasion and was robbed of his own money - (which was understood by plaintiff to be the fact when it applied for a renewal ), did not bespeak any act of fraud or dishonesty, nor impugn his integrity. Nor can it be said that in voluntarily permitting Knauber to overdraw his account, the integrity of Knauber in any wise was af-*432feeted. If defendant thought it material to be advised ■of such facts, it should have stipulated in the contract for notice of them.
The case before us is essentially different from that of Guaranty Co. v. Bank, supra, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States and greatly relied on by defendant. There the contract provided that “the employer shall at oneé notify the company on his becoming aware of the said employee being engaged in speculation or gambling or indulging in any disreputable or unlawful habits or pursuits.” The employee did gamble; the employer became aware of it and failed to notify the company. That this was a breach of a contractual obligation of the employer is apparent. But we have no such provision before us in the present case and we do not hesitate in saying that it was not incumbent on plaintiff to notify defendant of any acts of omission or commission on the part of its employees, except such as might relate to his integrity.
Finally, as to the fourth point. The question here involved is one of fact which was settled by the referee adversely to the contention of defendant. The finding of 'the referee was supported by substantial evidence and for reasons hereinbefore stated, we Shall not go behind it. Knauber did not leave the service of plaintiff nor were the terms of his employment changed. The tact that plaintiff discontinued the practice of making •advances to him on account of commissions and then resumed the practice, was wholly foreign to the terms of the contract of employment and was not an alteration thereof.
Since it clearly appears that the renewal receipt ■stated a new contract of insurance, that the embezzlement, on account of which a recovery is sought, occurred during the period covered by said new contract, and that plaintiff gave immediate notice of the loss on receipt of the information that its employee was a de*433faulter, it follows, from wbat lias been said, that the judgment must be affirmed. Accordingly, it is so ordered.
All concur.