The phrase dishonest act appears regularly in employment agreements, fidelity bonds, crime insurance policies, and executive compensation plans. Its meaning shifts depending on context—but in every context, it defines a category of conduct that triggers consequences: termination, forfeiture of benefits, denial of insurance coverage, or personal liability.
Dishonest Act Definition
A dishonest act generally refers to conduct involving deception, fraud, theft, embezzlement, or intentional misrepresentation for personal gain or to the detriment of another. In legal instruments, the phrase is used both as a defined term and as a general descriptor depending on how the document is drafted.
Courts interpreting “dishonest act” clauses typically require: (1) an intentional act (not mere negligence), (2) an element of deception, fraud, or knowing misappropriation, and (3) that the act was committed for personal benefit or to harm the other party.
Dishonest Acts in Employment Agreements
Employment contracts—especially executive agreements and agreements with access to financial assets—often include “dishonest act” as a cause for termination for cause. Typical contract language:
“The Company may terminate Employee’s employment immediately for Cause, which shall include… (c) any dishonest or fraudulent act committed by Employee in connection with Employee’s duties or in a manner that adversely affects the Company.”
The significance: termination “for cause” typically results in forfeiture of unvested equity, severance, and other benefits. Employees terminated for a dishonest act may lose significant compensation they would otherwise have received.
Dishonest Acts in Fidelity Bonds and Crime Insurance
Fidelity bonds (also called employee dishonesty bonds) and commercial crime insurance policies cover losses caused by employee dishonest acts. These policies typically define “dishonest act” or “dishonest or fraudulent act” as:
- Acts committed with the intent to obtain an improper financial benefit for the employee or another person
- Acts that the employee knows are dishonest
- Acts involving theft, embezzlement, forgery, or misappropriation
Courts have consistently held that mere negligence—even gross negligence—does not constitute a “dishonest act” under most insurance policy definitions. The intent element is critical. An employee who makes a bad business decision that costs the company money has not committed a dishonest act unless they knew their conduct was improper and acted for personal gain.
Dishonest Acts and Clawback Provisions
Many executive employment agreements include clawback provisions that require repayment of previously paid compensation if the executive engaged in a dishonest act. This is separate from termination—it can apply even after the employment relationship ends if the dishonest act is later discovered.
Sarbanes-Oxley Section 304 and the SEC’s clawback rules (adopted in 2023) require publicly traded companies to recover incentive compensation from executives responsible for financial restatements—a category that overlaps with dishonest acts involving financial reporting.
How Illinois Courts Interpret Dishonest Act Clauses
Illinois courts apply the general principle that ambiguous insurance policy language is construed against the insurer and in favor of coverage. For employment agreements, courts look at the specific contractual definition and the surrounding circumstances to determine whether an act qualifies as “dishonest.”
Key factors courts consider: Was the act intentional? Did the employee know it was wrong? Did the employee personally benefit? Was there a deceptive element designed to conceal the conduct?
FAQ: Dishonest Act in Contracts and Insurance
Can a mistake be a dishonest act?
Generally no. Mistakes—even costly ones—are not dishonest acts absent intentional deception or personal enrichment. Courts consistently distinguish between negligent errors and intentional misconduct when interpreting dishonest act clauses.
Does an employer need a criminal conviction to invoke a dishonest act clause?
No. Employment agreements typically allow employers to terminate for cause based on a reasonable belief that a dishonest act occurred—without waiting for criminal charges or a conviction. The standard is contractual, not criminal.
Fitter Law helps Illinois employers draft airtight employment agreements, including for-cause termination provisions and clawback clauses. Learn about our employment law services or view our flat-fee packages.