(after stating the facts as above). Tbe principal contention of the surety company is that it was error to deny its motion for an instructed verdict in its f'a.vor. Upon some of the facts the evidence was conflicting. The defendant in error resided in California. During the year 1921 he was represented by Ms brother, who resided at Burley, Idaho, to whom he had given a power of attorney to execute a bond to the surety company to secure it against liability on its undertaking on the appeal. Neither ho nor his brother had any control over the certificate of deposit issued to the clerk of the state court, and when tho certificate was issued in the name of the surety company neither he nor his brother was consulted, or was aware of the exact nature o£ the transaction. The surety company directed the form of the certificate. There was evidence that the surety company could have collected the money, if at any time prior to the day irreeeding the date o£ the closing of the bank it had made demand therefor, and evidence tending to indicate that the surety company assumed the responsibility of leaving the money on deposit. There is absence of evidence to show that it consulted the defendant in error as to the disposition of the money. The surety company knew of a run on the bank in April, 1921, and there was evidence tending to show that it know that by general reputation of the bank in the community it was considered of doubtful solvency. The court below carefully instructed the jury as to the issues and the evidence, and duly safeguarded the rights of the surety company.
*802We find no warrant for saying that the court, which heard the testimony and thus submitted the cause to the jury, erred in denying the motion for an instructed verdict. The surety company was .a trustee of the money so deposited in the bank; It was bound to the exercise of ordinary prudence and diligence both in making and continuing the deposit, 26 R. C. L. 1314; Norwood v. Harness, 98 Ind. 134, 49 Am. Rep. 739; Philadelphia Finance Co.’s Appeal, 144 Pa. 499, 22 A. 831, 14 L. R. A. 103. It is held that the amount which a trustee may leave lying in a bank at one time must not be too great (note, 14 L. R. A. 103, 105), and that he must not keep money on deposit for an unreasonable time (Barney v. Saunders, 16 How. 536, 14 L. Ed. 1047), and that, by depositing trust money in a bank and taking a certificate of deposit payable in 12 months, a trustee becomes liable for the same in case of its loss through the insolvency of the bank before the time of payment (Baer’s Appeal, 127 Pa. 360, 18 A. 1, 4 L. R. A. 609). If he deposits the money in his own name, thereby vesting himself with legal title, he is likewise responsible in case of loss. Naltner v. Dolan, 108 Ind. 500, 8 N. E. 289, 58 Am. Rep. 61; Williams v. Williams, 55 Wis. 300, 12 N. W. 465, 13 N. W. 274, 42 Am. Rep. 708. See, also Corya v. Corya, 119 Ind. 593, 22 N. E. 3; O’Connor v. Decker, 95 Wis. 202, 70 N. W. 286; Re Arguello, 97 Cal. 196, 31 P. 937.
We are not impressed with the argument that the defendant in error is in no position to charge the surety company with negligence in leaving the money in the bank, for the reason that he had first deposited the money there, taking a certificate of deposit in the name of the clerk of the court, and had permitted it to remain in the bank, and at no time demanded that it be taken therefrom, or protested against the issuance of the certificate to the surety company, or demanded 'that the surety company withdraw the money. At the time when the defendant in error deposited the money, so far as the evidence goes, no question had been made of the solvency of the bank. The certificate of deposit then issued was accepted by the clerk as cash, and was by him renewed as cash, and so remained until more than a year later, when the surety company executed the appeal bond and took over the money so deposited. It was after that date that questions arose as to the solvency of the bank, and explanation of the silence and nonaetion of the defendant in error may be found in the fact that during the whole of the time involved in the controversy he resided in California, and that his power of attorney, .executed to his brother in Idaho, was but a power to assign certain collaterals, in addition to the money deposited in the bank, to secure the surety company against loss upon the bond.
It is said that it was error to permit the receiver to state the cash balances, as shown by the daily statements of the bank, when the figures thus given were admittedly incorrect, and to permit him to testify that the bank could have paid the certificate at any time after August 16, 1921, on 30 days’ notice, except possibly the last day before the bank closed.' The receiver admitted that the bank’s statements, purporting to show the amount of cash in the bank at the close of business each day, included cash items which were not cash, and that he could not say, nor did the books from which he was testifying show, the amount of actual cash in the bank. But he testified that the bank had reserves in other banks, from which it could have drawn to meet its demands, and it was shown that the bank had such a reserve in the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco and other depositories. The evidence was admissible to show that the capacity of the bank to pay the deposit, if the surety company had demanded payment, did not depend upon the actual cash in the bank, but upon its ability to obtain money from all sources. The receiver’s testimony that the certificate could have been paid was the expression of his judgment, derived from an examination of the books and records of the bank and the bank’s condition covering several months of investigation. We think there was no error, therefore, in admitting the testimony.
Nor do we think it was error to refuse to strike out the receiver’s testimony that on August 16,1921, the bank had $111,-450.61 in certificates of deposit outstanding; whereas, on November 19, 1921, it had but $67,847.51. The purpose of the testimony was to show that the surety company was negligent in failing to withdraw the money on its maturity, August 16,1921, for, as we read the certificate of deposit, it was payable on August 16, 1921, provided that payment had been demanded 30 days prior thereto. The evidence showed that depositors generally were demanding payment of their certificates, and it tended to show that, if the surety company had chosen to do so, it might have obtained payment of the certificate in question.
Nor do we find that it was error to admit in evidence the special power of attor*803ney from the defendant in error to Ms brother, offered in connection with the testimony of the brother. The objection was that tho brother had testified that he was in Burley in charge of the business of the defendant in error, and he had testified that he did not at any time notify the defendant in error of Ms doubt or suspicion in regard to tbe solvency of the bank. Tbe instrument was admitted for its possible effect intending to show absence of knowledge on the part of the defendant in error, and that he did not know or realize that he was assuming any primary responsibility on tho bond, but was merely guaranteeing and indemnifying the surety company against loss. The instrument bears that construction. Tbe power which it confers is to deliver certain collateral to tbe surety company to guarantee it against loss by reason of its giving “any bond or other security to the First ISTational Bank of Burley, Idaho, in consideration of said bank paying over to me the sum of $21,000 or thereabouts,'now on deposit to my credit in said bank.”
Error is assigned to tho exclusion of a certified copy of an answer and counterclaim filed by the defendant in error in an action brought against Mm by tbe Federal Beserve Bank. Tbe action was brought in a state court of Idaho to recover on the promissory notes of the defendant in error, -whereby he borrowed funds to make np tho sum total of his original deposit in the Burley bank. The answer and counterclaim were offered in evidence in the case at bar, for their allegations that the Federal Reserve Bank, knowing the insolvency of the Burley bank, had kept that bank open for business and fraudulently induced tbe defendant in error, “through his agent, the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland” to deposit in the bank on February 16, 1921, $24,500; that the bank would have closed its doors prior thereto and said deposit would not have been made, but for tbe conspiracy of the Federal Reserve Bank and tbe Burley bank, through their officers, and their fraudulent acts; and that ho would have withdrawn said deposit from the bank prior to its failure, bad it not been for said conspiracy and fraudulent acts. There were other allegations of like nature.
The evidence was excluded obviously, and properly, we think, for tbe reason that the-answer and counterclaim were not signed or sworn to by the defendant in error, and tho admissions contained therein were not made by Mm. He was in Los Angeles at the time, and it is not shown that he was aware of the contents of the pleading, or was consulted concerning the same. “It has been held that a party is bound by admission contained in a pleading prepared by his attorney, although he did not know of the statements •therein, and even though he had no actual knowledge of the existence of the pleading. But the more generally accepted view recognizes a distinction between statements contained in pleadings in another case, .which are emanation of counsel, and those which can fairly be regarded as statements by the party, and as a result requires, as a condition of admissibility, that the statement be affirmatively connected with the party as one which he has made because it was true.” 22 C. J. 335; Combs v. Hodge, 21 How. 397, 16 L. Ed. 115; Delaware County v. Diebold Safe Co., 133 U. S. 473, 10 S. Ct. 399, 33 L. Ed. 674; Smith v. Davidson (C. C.) 41 F. 172; Creal v. Gallup, 231 F. 100, 145 C. C. A. 284.
The surety company, invoking the doctrine that the rules of evidence in state courts are ordinarily followed by the federal courts in civil cases at law, contends that the Supreme Court of Idaho has adopted a rule at variance with that of the federal courts and the courts of the United States generally, and cites Pence v. Sweeney, 3 Idaho, 181, 28 P. 413, and Shurtliff v. Extension Ditch Co., 14 Idaho, 416, 94 P. 574. All that was held in the Ponce Case was that an answer verified by the defendant, admitting tbe allegations of the complaint, was admissible in evidence, although it was made and sworn to without tho knowledge or consent of the defendant’s attorneys. In the Shurtliff Case the court held that a complaint sworn to by tbe plaintiff’s attorney, and not by tho plaintiff, should have been admitted in evidence, but it appeared in that case that, although the plaintiff did not verify the complaint, he gave to Ms attorney the facts on which it was based. The case was thus brought within the exception recognized in cases where “information with respect to the facts set forth could have come to the attorney only from Ms client.” 22 C. J. 335; Johnson v. Russell, 144 Mass. 409, 11 N. E. 670.
We are not convinced that it was error to permit witnesses to testify as to the general reputation of the bank for solvency from tbe time of the run upon it in April, 1921, until it was closed. Although the general agent of the surety company lived at Boise, more than 200 miles distant from Burley, the company had at the .latter place a local agent, and at the time of. the run on the bank the general agent obtained from the local agent a report upon the condition of *804the bank at that time and the circumstances attending the run. It knew that the bank paid the premium for the bond, and it had such knowledge of the business of the bank as might come to it frota the fact that it had furnished bonds for the fidelity of the officials and employes of the bank. We think there was sufficient evidence to be submitted to the jury, and. sufficient to bring the case within the rule cited by the surety company, to the effect that the party sought to be charged with knowledge of the notoriety of a fact must be a resident of the immediate neighborhood.
We axe unable to see reversible error in the denial of the surety company’s requested instruction concerning the effect of the agreement which it made with the defendant in error at the time when it executed the bond. That agreement Contained the provision: “The Fidelity Company shall not be responsible for any loss resulting to the above-described security from any cause other than .its own neglect of its officers and employes.” The security so referred to was the certificate of deposit for $24,500 and certain shares of stock in four corporations, pledged to tke surety company as collateral. The requested instruction was that, under that agreement, no duty rested upon the surety company at any time prior to the failure of the bank to cash the certificate of deposit, and that its failure to do so was not evidence of any negligence on its part. The court below found nothing in the agreement to change or modify the rule of the common law that a pledgee of collateral is required to "exercise reasonable diligence in the matter of its protection and is liable to the pledg- or for loss by reason of his negligence. The court so instructed the jury, and submitted to them the question whether the surety company acted carelessly, or used the eare which an ordinarily prudent person would have exercised under the circumstances. No exception was taken to that, or to any other portion of the instructions.
The surety company relies further upon that pro vision, of the contract which gave it the. right “in its discretion to retain said collateral as hereinafter provided, until the liability of the Fidelity Company on account of having signed said bond shall cease and determine.” That provision is but an expression of the right of every pledgee under a contract of pledge, unless it is otherwise stipulated. It has no effect or tendency to relieve the surety company of the effect of its failure to exercise due diligence.
The judgment is affirmed.