Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Eickhoff

MITCHELL, J.

The plaintiff, a foreign corporation, is what is termed a “guaranty insurance company,” engaged in the business of guarantying to employers the fidelity of their employés. This action was brought to recover money alleged to have been paid to the Bed Biver Elevator Company, defendant’s employer, upon a bond by which the plaintiff obligated itself to make good, and reimburse to the elevator company, such pecuniary loss as it might sustain by reason of the infidelity of the defendant as its receiving agent in one of its grain ele*176vators. The appeal is from an order sustaining a demurrer to the complaint on the ground that it did not state facts constituting a cause of action.

The material conditions of the bond, which is set out in the complaint, are as follows: “The company [the plaintiff] shall, * * * subject to the conditions and provisions herein contained, * * * make good and reimburse to the said employer, such pecuniary loss as may be sustained by the employer by reason of the fraud or dishonesty of any or either of the employés [of whom defendant was one] named upon said schedule or added thereto, as hereinafter provided, in connection with his duties as receiving agent or buyer: * * * Provided, * * * that the company shall be liable only for the acts of fraud or dishonesty on the part of the persons mentioned in the schedule, who act as receiving agents, for shortages in their grain accounts, as follows, viz.: There shall be deducted from the total amount of grain and dockage received by the receiving agent at said elevator or elevators screenings and dirt from such grain as has been cleaned at said elevator or elevators, together with the amounts of shipments based upon weights of grain and dockage at terminals — and if the result shows a deficit, and the shortage is not caused by the various exceptions agreed to, this proof of loss will be accepted as binding on the part of the company. In case where screenings and dirt are burned at an elevator, they shall be weighed before being burned, and the weight reported daily to the employer: provided, that the company shall not be liable for the grading of grain, loss by heating, drying, or leakage of cars, or other damage, shortages caused by defective weighing apparatus or appliance or for shortages in any elevator or elevators, caused by the failure of any of the parties mentioned in said schedule to take dockage enough to make good their weights for grain checks issued, as the employer hereby assumes the risks of its superintendents, traveling men, and officers in giving instructions to its receiving agents as to the amount necessary to take to make good the amount of dock-age at terminal points, and the action of receiving agents in taking dockage, the loss by cleaning grain and the ordinary shrinkage arising from dust in handling of said grain in elevators. And it is further agreed that the company shall not be liable for errors or carelessness in weighing of grain, nor for thefts of grain by persons other than those covered by this bond, nor for robbery or thefts of money from the *177persons so covered, where proofs of such errors, carelessness, thefts, or robbery are conclusive; as negligence is not covered by this bond.”

The complaint alleges that defendant, in consideration of plaintiff’s becoming a guarantor for him by executing this bond, agreed to indemnify it against any losses, damages, or expenses it might sustain or become liable for in consequence of executing the bond; also, that this bond was in the form requested by the defendant; also, that defendant further agreed “to admit the voucher or other proper evidence of such payment by plaintiff as conclusive evidence against himself as to the fact and extent of his liability to this plaintiff.” It is further alleged that defendant, within the scope of his employment as receiving agent of plaintiff, issued tickets for, received, and took in, at one of the elevator company’s elevators, a certain number of bushels of wheat and dockage, but, of the same, only delivered to the elevator company a certain less number of bushels at the termination of his employment; leaving nearly 1,000 bushels which he never delivered, although requested to do so. The complaint then states specifically the manner in which this shortage was ascertained and made to appear, which was the exact manner provided for in the bond. It then negatives specifically that this shortage was caused by any of the exceptions named in the bond. It is then alleged that the elevator company presented its claim for this shortage to the plaintiff; that the latter was compelled to pay the same, and now holds the elevator’s voucher for the same, but that defendant refuses to indemnify the plaintiff for the money thus paid out in his behalf. Counsel for plaintiff asks us to pass upon numerous questions touching the construction of this bond; but as it is a novel contract, and its provisions prolix, somewhat obscure, and sometimes apparently contradictory, we deem it unwise, upon a demurrer, to decide much except what is necessary to determine whether a cause of action is stated. Hence we shall confine ourselves mainly to the specific objections made by defendant’s counsel to the sufficiency of the complaint.

1. The first objection urged against the complaint is that it does not allege that the plaintiff had a license to do an insurance business in this state, as required by G. S. 1891, § 3331. Notwithstanding that there would seem to be some decisions holding otherwise, we are of opinion that the case is one where the maxim, “Omnia rite acta prsesumuntur,” is applicable. Noncompliance with the laws of this state *178will not be presumed, but, if it exists, must be set up in defense. Williams v. Cheney, 3 Gray, 215.

2. The second point urged is that a contract guarantying the honesty of employés is void as being against public policy; that it is the duty of all employers dealing with the general public to employ honest agents; that the effect of such a contract as set out in the complaint is to make it a matter of indifference to an elevator company whether it employs honest or dishonest agents to deal with the patrons of the elevator. There is nothing whatever in this objection. The same principle is involved in every bond exacted from a public officer or a private agent as security for the faithful performance of his duties. And it is wholly immaterial whether the guarantor is a private person, or an incorporated guaranty insurance company. The advantages • of the latter over the former mode of suretyship, if properly conducted, are very apparent. 2 May, Ins. § 541.

3. The third objection is that the stipulation between the plaintiff and defendant that the voucher, or other evidence of payment by plaintiff to the elevator company, should be conclusive evidence against the defendant as to the fact and extent of his liability to the plaintiff, is void as being against public policy.

This question is not really involved in this appeal, but, as it is one which will necessarily arise at the very threshold of the trial of the action, it may properly be considered now. The right of a party to waive the protection of the law is subject to the control of public policy, which cannot be set aside or contravened by any arrangement or agreement of the parties, however expressed. Thus,, an agreement to waive the defense of usury is void. So, also, according to the weight of authority, is an agreement, made at the time of contracting a debt, to waive the prospective right of exemption. The agreement under consideration is more than a mere enlargement of contractual rights, or the establishment of a rule of evidence. It provides that the plaintiff may, by his own ex parte acts, conclusively establish and determine the existence of his own cause of action. In short, he is made the supreme judge of his- own case. The case is not at all analogous to the common provisions in building and construction contracts, by which the determination of some third person such as the architect or engineer, as to the *179amount or character of the work, is made conclusive between the parties, in the absence of fraud or mistake. Nor is it at all analogous to a provision in an executory contract for the sale or manufacture of an article to the satisfaction of the buyer, 'where, if the article is declined, the parties are, in contemplation of law, left in statu quo. In the present case the attempt is to provide that, after the alleged cause of action has accrued, the plaintiff shall be the sole and exclusive judge of both its existence and extent. Such an agreement is clearly against public policy. If the provision had been that the voucher, or other evidence of payment, should be merely prima facie evidence of the fact and extent of defendant’s liability, — thus merely shifting the burden of proof, but leaving the defendant at liberty to rebut this prima facie evidence, — although even then a somewhat drastic provision, we do not think that it could be held to contravene public policy. To that extent, we think this provision is valid, but, in so far as it assumes to make the voucher of payment by plaintiff conclusive of defendant’s liability, it is void.

á. The fourth objection urged against the complaint is that, while the bond only covers acts of fraud and dishonesty, it contains no allegation that this shortage was caused by the fraud or dishonesty of the defendant.

Whoever drafted this bond used language very loosely, and employed a great many words to express, or else conceal, very few ideas. But after taking it by the four corners, and considering all its provisions, our construction is that the plaintiff was only bound to make good, and reimburse the elevator company for, loss sustained by reason of a shortage of grain caused by the actual fraud or dishonesty of the defendant. But the bond also provides how the existence and amount of a shortage shall be ascertained^ and that, when thus ascertained, it shall be accepted as evidence that it was caused by the fraud or dishonesty of the defendant, and not by any of the various other causes, enumerated as exceptions, for which the plaintiff was not to be liable; in other words, that a shortage ascertained in the manner prescribed should be prima facie evidence of its existence, and that it was caused by defendant’s fraud or dishonesty, thus casting the burden upon the plaintiff to rebut this prima facie case by proof. It is not bound to do this by affirm*180ative evidence showing the particular one of the causes, enumerated as exceptions, which produced the shortage, hut may do it by negative evidence showing that it was not caused by the fraud or dishonesty of the defendant, and hence must have been produced by one or more of the excepted causes. This it may do by a fair preponderance of evidence as to any of the excepted causes, except errors or carelessness in weighing, and thefts by persons other than those covered by the bond, in which cases the proofs must be conclusive. The word “conclusive,” in that connection, we think, must be construed as meaning so strong as to require a finding or verdict that the shortage resulted from the cause alleged. This may also be done by negative or circumstantial evidence. So much for the construction of .the bond.

The bond having been executed at the request of the defendant, and in the form requested by him, it follows that his obligation to indemnify the plaintiff is coextensive with that of the plaintiff to reimburse the elevator company; also, that any provisions in the bond, as to proof of liability, binding on the plaintiff in favor of the elevator company, are equally binding on the defendant in an action brought by the plaintiff against him to recover indemnity for what it has paid in his behalf. Therefore it. follows that the complaint alleges facts which, under the provisions of the bond, constitute a cause of action against the defendant; that is, if all the facts alleged are proved on the trial, it would follow, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff would be entitled to recover. That the facts alleged are, in one sense, merely evidentiary, and may be rebutted by other evidence, is not material, inasmuch as, by the agreement of the parties, they make out prima facie a cause of action, and if not rebutted they conclusively make it out. Otherwise expressed, under the contract of the parties, the facts alleged prove that the shortage was caused by defendant’s fraud or dishonesty. Under these circumstances, an express and direct allegation that it was so caused was unnecessary. The complaint states a cause of action.

Order reversed.