DocketNumber: Civ. No. 23802
Judges: Ford
Filed Date: 5/23/1960
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of Fletcher Jones Company, a corporation, in the sum of $4,540.
The appellant, United Pacific Insurance Company, a corporation, issued to respondent a contract entitled “Comprehensive Dishonesty, Disappearance and Destruction Policy.” That policy was in effect from June 9, 1953, to January 2,
The claim of the respondent, an automobile dealer, arose out of the acts of a manager of its used-car department, one Harold M. Crecy. During the period from January 2, 1955, to October 16, 1955, he sold certain used automobiles belonging to the respondent and collected therefor the sum of $2,040 which he failed to turn over to his employer. On January 3, 1955, Crecy obtained from the respondent a check "for $2,500 in which Crecy was named as payee. The check was obtained by him for the ostensible purpose of purchasing a used car for the respondent but Crecy presented the cheek for payment and converted the proceeds to his own use. The appellant concedes that the evidence is sufficient to support the findings of the trial court with respect to the occurrence of such acts. The amounts of money so obtained by Crecy form the basis of the judgment of the trial court.
The appellant’s attack upon the judgment is founded on the claim that, under the evidence, no ultimate loss in excess of $190 was suffered by the respondent. The evidence upon which reliance is placed will now be summarized.
So that the theft of $2,500 might be concealed, Crecy prepared documents indicating that the $2,500 check had been used to purchase a 1954 Buick automobile on January 17; 1955. No such automobile was bought. Upon the expiration of the policy of the appellant, there became effective as of January 2, 1956, a fidelity bond issued by the New Amsterdam Casualty Company in the penal sum of $20,000 whereby that company agreed to indemnify the respondent for any loss it might sustain by reason of the fraudulent or dishonest acts of respondent’s employees. Between February 14, 1956, and July 5, 1956, inclusive, Crecy obtained six more cheeks from the respondent which were for a total amount of $24,650. These checks were respectively made payable to various used-car dealers but the proceeds were obtained by Crecy for his own use. To cover these transactions, Crecy caused false records to be made so as to indicate that such checks had been used to purchase automobiles and that such automobiles were in stock.
One of the checks to which reference has' been made bore the date of February 14, 1956, and was in the amount of $3,350. The payee named therein was one Tony Laskill.
On July 17, 1956, the sum of $3,500 was paid by Crecy to the respondent. This payment appeared to be for a sale on behalf of the respondent under the date of May 22, 1956, of used cars to a dealer known as Fletcher Motors. Such transaction was fictitious in nature and had been recorded by Crecy in such a manner as to make it appear that automobiles which had been purchased with the check of February 14, 1956, had been sold.
As stated above, the specific defalcations as shown by the evidence were m the sums of $4,540 in 1955 and $24,650 in 1956, or a total of $29,190. The New Amsterdam Casualty Company paid $20,000 to the respondent under its bond. A bank paid to the respondent the sum of $3,000 with respect to a claim against it relating to one of the 1956 checks. These payments and the sums of $2,500 and $3,500 received by the respondent in 1956, as above set forth, resulted in a recovery by the plaintiff of $29,000. Accordingly, the appellant contends that its liability is limited to $190.
We turn first to the contention of the appellant that the sum of $2,500 obtained by Crecy by use of the check of January 3, 1955, was repaid from the proceeds of the check of February 14, 1956, and, therefore, the loss was one occurring at the time the New Amsterdam Casualty Company bond was in effect rather than during the time covered by the policy of the appellant. The difficulty with such position is that the respondent did not receive additional moneys as a result of the February 14, 1956, transaction to any greater extent than would have been the ease if the scheme had been carried out by mere bookkeeping entries. (See Calistoga Nat. Bank v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 5 Cal.App.2d 248 [42 P.2d 1051]; cf. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Union Bank of
It is, of course, true that the appellant could be liable to the respondent only to the extent that the respondent suffered an actual pecuniary loss as a result of Crecy’s acts in 1955. (See Calistoga Nat. Bank v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., supra, 5 Cal.App.2d 248, 258.) It is the contention of the appellant that there was no such loss in excess of $190 because of the moneys paid back by Creey and because of the payments by the New Amsterdam Casualty Company and the
However, the record contains other evidence tending to show that the payment of the amount of its bond by the New Amsterdam Casualty Company was made for the purpose of settling whatever claims the respondent might have against it and was not calculated solely by reference to specific defalcations. James P. Cantillon, the attorney for the re
‘ ‘ I then sent the Proof of Loss along to him, and Mr. Poore completely understood it. I was at the same time attempting to get as much money as I could from the Bank of America on two of the checks in question that they had honored, which were forged over one signature, also with the understanding that I was attempting at the same time to recover from United Pacific our claim against them in the sum of $2,500
It was the function of the trier of fact to weigh the evidence bearing upon the issue of whether there had been reimburse
The appellant also complains that the court below, over objection, permitted the president of the respondent corporation to testify on direct examination as to whether he believed that Crecy’s defalcations during the year 1956 exceeded the sum of $20,000. He was further permitted to express his opinion that Crecy was “stealing about $4,000 a month” for a period of “probably three years.” While there is merit in the contentions of the appellant insofar as the witness was permitted to express his opinion as to the losses suffered as a result of acts of Crecy (cf. Miller v. Lerdo Land Co., 52 Cal. App. 662, 692 [199 P. 1073]), in the light of the other evidence in the record it cannot be said that any ruling of the trial court as to that matter was of such a nature as to constitute prejudicial error.
The judgment is affirmed.
Shinn, P. J., and Vallée, J,, concurred.
That letter contains a paragraph as follows: “Since our total losses are in excess of $23,000, we will be compelled to litigate the remaining amount with the United Pacific Insurance Co. Our claim against the Bank is in no wise effected by the policy with United Pacific for the reason that this policy was in effect only for the calendar year 1955 and relates to claims against Mr. Crecy and others for dishonest acts occurring in that year.”
On cross-examination, Mr. Cantillon testified as follows: “Q. You also testified that you told Mr. Poore that based upon your information that you believed at that time that Fletcher Jones Company had a loss of many thousands of dollars 9 A. Yes sir. Q. What was your information in late August or early September that led you to that belief 9 A. I was informed that Mr. Crecy, when purchasing automobiles in Texas had received moneys under the table on each transaction, which moneys should properly have belonged to the Fletcher Jones Company. I was also informed that Mr. Crecy had sold, as is set forth in the report, some $120,000 worth of automobiles wholesale, actual wholesale fair market value worth of automobiles to Val Culwell for some $95,000 in 1955, that he had continued in this practice throughout the year 1956. I was informed that Mr. Crecy and Miss Cook, who I believe testified here, were frequently at the race track together, that Lee Wissler and Mr. Crecy were frequently at the race track together during working hours, betting large sums of money. I was informed that it was generally known throughout the automobile business that they had been obtaining money through the guise of appraising these automobiles low. In other words, take a $2,000 automobile and trade it in.”
Mr. Poore, on cross-examination by counsel for respondent, testified as follows: “Q. Do you remember a conference at which United Pacific Insurance Company was present, you were present, Mr. Conners, rather, their representative, the attorney, in which you stated in effect, well, there is no point in my being here because we are going to throw in our $20,000; so it is up to you fellows to thrash this out? A. No. I don’t remember saying that specifically. Q. Or words to that effect ? A. But that was the way that I felt. . . . Q. Do you remember making that statement in effect, that you were going to put your $20,000 in, that further, you didn’t see any reason why you were there particularly, that we would have to thrash out our position with United Pacific Insurance Company? A. Well, I don’t remember making that remark about United Pacific Insurance Company, but I do remember that you and I had reached the point where it was clear that the limits of our policy had been reached and that we were going to pay that much. I believe that we had reached that point before the discussion.”
In a letter dated January 21, 1957, from Mr. Poore, attorney for the New Amsterdam Casualty Company, to Mr. Cantillon, attorney for the respondent, Mr. Poore stated: "There is another item which apparently will not be covered by the New Amsterdam Casualty Company. This cheek No. 20464 issued on January 3, 1955 to Harold Crecy for a fictitious Buiek and the money was subsequently replaced on June 30, 3955, with some of the money from the July 5, 1956, $6000 cheek. This item will be covered by the former carrier and we feel that they