All the checks given by Block to the order of the Terryville bank were paid on presentation; so that until the payment of $5,000 to Block's trustee in bankruptcy the bank suffered no loss whatever. This sum was paid in settlement of the trustee's claim that a much larger aggregate amount had been received by the bank from Block under circumstances which made the whole of it recoverable by the trustee as a voidable preference. The plaintiff's claim is that the sum so paid is, in the words of the bond, a "loss . . . through the . . . wrongful abstraction of Frederick A. Scott." That is literally true. It has been expressly held that a loss through the "kiting" of checks by a bank cashier is covered by a policy of fidelity insurance similar to the policy in suit. FirstNational Bank v. U.S. Fidelity Guaranty Co.,150 Wis. 601, 137 N.W. 742. It may, therefore, be assumed, for the purposes of this opinion, that the plaintiff would be entitled to recover in this action if the facts necessary to establish the receipt by the *Page 202 Terryville bank from Block, of voidable preferences to the amount of $5,000, had been affirmatively adjudicated either in this action or in a suit brought against the bank by the trustee in bankruptcy. The facts have not been so adjudicated. There is no finding that Block was insolvent at any time before June 25th, 1918, when the last advance was made by Scott for Block's accommodation. Nor is the borrowing of money (for that is the theory on which the result of preferential payments is worked out), especially when it is promptly repaid, sufficient evidence of insolvency.Wrenn v. Citizens National Bank, 96 Conn. 374,114 A. 120. It follows that no basis exists for discussing the other necessary element of voidable preference, which in this case would require proof that Scott continued to make a number of successive advances of the bank's funds and credit to Block after he knew, or had reasonable ground for believing, that Block was insolvent.
This complaint was framed and this action tried, on the theory that the settlement of the trustee's claim, provided it was a prudent and reasonable one, affords, as against the defendant, sufficient evidence of a legal liability on the part of the bank, and therefore sufficient evidence of its right to indemnity under the bond. The plaintiff relies on a line of cases which are concerned with policies of liability insurance, and which hold that an insurer who has agreed to take full charge of and defend or settle all suits brought to enforce an alleged liability of the kind insured against, and who refuses to do so, may become liable under the policy to repay to the insured the amount of any prudent settlement of the litigation. In all these cases the contract was not only for indemnity against loss, but for protection against liability, and the theory of the decisions is that when such an insurer *Page 203 refuses to perform his agreement to manage and defend the action, he leaves the insured free to manage it and to make the best defense he can and the best settlement he can. As Mr. Justice Holmes said in the case next cited: "The defendant by its abdication put the plaintiff in its place with all its rights." St.Louis Dressed Beef Provision Co. v. MarylandCasualty Co., 201 U.S. 173, 182, 26 Sup. Ct. 400;Interstate Casualty Co. v. Wallins Creek Coal Co.,164 Ky. 778, 176 S.W. 217; Rieger v. London Guarantee Accident Co., 202 Mo. App. 184, 211, 215 S.W. 920;Wisconsin Zinc Co. v. Fidelity Deposit Co.,162 Wis. 39, 51, 155 N.W. 1081.
In the present case, however, the contract is simply one for indemnity against loss through the wrongful misconduct of Scott as treasurer. The defendant did not agree to protect the assured against liability, nor to defend any actions against the assured brought by third persons, and therefore it was under no obligation to assume the management and control of the negotiations between the plaintiff and Block's trustee in bankruptcy. Nor was it asked to do so. It had the right to keep its hands off and it has done so; and that being so, we are unable to see how it has lost its right to have the issues of fact on which its liability under the policy depends, litigated and determined in a court of competent jurisdiction.
There is in this particular case another reason why the defendant is not bound by the settlement, for it is found that "among the chief reasons actuating the Bristol Trust Company to make such compromise was to avoid publicity," etc.; and of course the defendant cannot be called upon to indemnify the plaintiff in respect to any part of the price which the latter was willing to pay to avoid publicity.
Another consideration not without force is, that in *Page 204 indemnity insurance the insurer on payment of a loss is subrogated to the rights of the insured against the wrongdoer; and in respect of the uncertain amount which the plaintiff was willing to pay to avoid publicity, the defendant would have no right of subrogation.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.