First National Bank v. Kansas Casualty & Surety Co.
First National Bank v. Kansas Casualty & Surety Co.
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The action was one by a bank to recover on its cashier’s surety bond. The plaintiff prevailed, and the defendant appeals.
The bond obligated the defendant to reimburse the bank for loss of money sustained by any dishonest act committed by the cashier in performance of the duties of his office. The bond obligated the bank to give notice to the insurer of any act of the cashier which might be made the basis of a claim, immediately on becoming"aware thereof; provided that the bond should be void if the bank, without consent of the insurer, continued the cashier'in office after becoming aware of any act which might be made the basis of a claim; and provided the bank should make no settlement with the cashier for loss, or do any act whereby the cashier’s liability to the bank, in case of loss, should be changed. The petition alleged: “That by reason of the dishonest acts of said William W. Honomickl while employed as cashier as aforesaid, plaintiff sustained losses as follows:” Then followed three specifications of loss. The answer
On cross-examination of directors of the bank, the defendant elicited, without objection, the fact that the cashier had frequently made large overdrafts upon his account with the bank, and the fact that he had frequently made loans to himself and to a partnership of which he was a member, in excess of the amount permitted by the national banking law. Evidence to the same effect was introduced on behalf of the defendant. It is contended these transactions were dishonest acts, of which the defendant should have been notified. The contention is made for the first time in this court.
'The trial was before the court, without a jury, and there is nothing to indicate that counsel for plaintiff or the court understood the testimony referred to was introduced by way of enlargement of the issues. The defendant requested the court to make findings of fact. The requested findings were limited to dishonest acts of the cashier alleged in the petition, and no request was made for findings that the cashier had been guilty of dishonest acts other than those alleged in the petition. It is true that, after requesting findings covering the issues made by the pleadings, the defendant made the following request:
“That if the evidence shows that the plaintiff suffered any pecuniary loss by reason of any dishonest acts of said William W. Honomickl as alleged in*178 its petition, it does not show that the plaintiff ever gave any written notice to the defendant of any dishonest acts shown by the evidence. ...”
If by the words, “any dishonest acts shown by the evidence/' the defendant meant dishonest acts not alleged in the petition, the meaning was too faintly manifested. Until the court’s attention was directed to the subject, and it made or refused findings of dishonest acts outside the issues, a finding relating to notice of such acts could be of no consequence; and it so happens that, when the defendant was inquiring about the cashier’s overdrafts and excessive loans, notice to the defendant of those delinquencies was not inquired about. The result is, the defendant presents to this court a new case, involving issues of fact and of law on which the judgment of the district court was not taken. To consider that case would be to exercise other than appellate jurisdiction.
The defendant contends this court should regard the answer as amended to include the defense now relied on, and the cases are cited in which amendments have been approved or considered as made. In the case of Custer v. Royse, 104 Kan. 339, 179 Pac. 353, cited by the defendant, the judgment of the district court was not reversed for failure tó treat issues as enlarged by consent, but' for other reasons, and in no case cited has an amendment substantially changing the claim or defense, and not suggested to the trial court, been treated by this court as if made, in order to overthrow a judgment. To do so would be unfair to the district court.
Other errors assigned are not deemed to be of sufficient gravity to require special mention and discussion, and the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.