American Sash & Door Co. v. Commerce Trust Co.

56 S.W.2d 1034, 332 Mo. 98, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 444
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 8, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 56 S.W.2d 1034 (American Sash & Door Co. v. Commerce Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Sash & Door Co. v. Commerce Trust Co., 56 S.W.2d 1034, 332 Mo. 98, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 444 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

ELLISON, J.

This case was certified to this court by the Kansas City Court of Appeals, that court deeming its opinion reported in 25 S. W. (2d) 545, to be in conflict with Equitable Life Assur. Co. v. Natl. Bank of Commerce, 181 S. W. 1176, decided by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in 1916.

The plaintiff-appellant sues the defendant-respondent trust company for $2226.30, the amount of fifty certain payroll checks, which it is álleged the defendant wrongfully charged to the plaintiff’s deposit account during the three months’ period between September 15 and December 15, 1922, the indorsements of the payees’ names having been forged on the backs of said checks, and the defendant trust company having paid the amounts thereof to persons not entitled thereto.

The defendant’s answer was a general denial coupled with a plea of the affirmative defense that at the end of each of said three months it had returned to plaintiff all cancelled checks paid during the month together with a statement of the account showing all debits and credits, on which was printed a notice or stipulation that if no errors were-reported in ten days the account would be considered correct. The answer avers this constituted an account stated; that the plain *105 tiff negligently failed to discover and report the forged indorsements, or that the checks ‘ ‘ were in any manner incorrectly charged, against the plaintiff’s account;-” within said ten days; and further failed to report said forged indorsements within a reasonable time, as a result of which the defendant trust company was deprived of an opportunity to protect itself against loss.

The plaintiff’s reply amounts to a specific'denial of the allegations of the answer, except one affirmative charge that the defendant negligently failed-to exercise reasonable care to ascertain the rightful owners or holders of the checks and to identify the forger to whom the checks were paid. ;

The cause' was-tried before the Circuit Court of Jackson County sitting as a jury. The only evidence offered, outside of the. checks and indorsements and two letters, was the testimony of four of plaintiff’s employees, this being introduced by the plaintiff. ' The defendant presented no evidence. At the close of the case the defendant filed a motion to dismiss and for judgment (called, in the record a demurrer) - which was sustained. The plaintiff requested nine declarations of law. The trial court refused seven of these, gave one, modified one, and rendered a general finding .and judgment for defendant. The plaintiff appealed to the Kansas .City Court of Appeals. That court reversed the judgment and remanded the cause with directions, to enter a judgment for plaintiff, but certified the ¡case to. this court for the reason- first above stated.

The plaintiff company had about three hundred employees. In January or February, 1922, it employed one Joseph Tschupp as payroll clerk and timekeeper. ITe made out the weekly payroll from certain time cards which he kept, without the use of a time clock, and turned it over to a bookkeeper, Mrs. Hubbard, who checked.the same,, verified the multiplications- and made out checks accordingly. She delivered the checks to Mr. Simms, plaintiff’s.secretary and treasurer. Simms signed the checks in behalf of .the corporation relying on the information thus presented to him. It may be conceded, as respondent argues, that he executed the checks “perfunctorily” but nevertheless the power to issue or not to issue was vested in him and it was by his authority alone that the checks were brought.into existence. After the checks were signed Tschupp, would take-them to the various department heads who distributed them..

Tschupp worked for the plaintiff company practically. the whole year of 1922., During the last three months of his employment he began to pad the payroll by inserting therein each week the names of persons who had not, in fact, worked for the company during the week. One of these persons was .an. employee named Dabney, who was engaged outside the plant and whose name did not belong on the list. Another was a nonexistent person. Five others were, former employees not in the service of the company at the time. . Over the *106 period of three months between September 15 and December 15, Tschnpp fraudulently inserted one or another of the foregoing seven names in the payroll fifty times and thereby induced the bookkeeper to make out, and the secretary and treasurer, Simms, to sign, fifty checks payable to said seven persons. These checks ranged in amount from $35 to $54.10. After the payroll checks for each week had been executed by Simms, Tschupp would abstract therefrom the fraudulent checks and cash them, forging the indorsements of the payees. He testified by deposition at the trial and admitted all this, and a letter in the record states he had pled guilty and been sentenced to four years in the penitentiary.

In perpetrating these frauds Tschupp began carefully. For the first four weeks only one spurious name was added to the payroll; the fifth week, two names; the sixth week, three names; the seventh and eighth weeks, four names. For the remaining six weeks five or six names were fraudulently inserted each time. The highest amount obtained by him in any one week seems to have been about $300. The plaintiff discovered the fraud about December 20 and promptly notified the defendant trust company, making an appropriate demand. Of the fifty checks wrongfully cashed twenty-eight were presented by Tschupp to the defendant drawee bank. The other twenty-two were cashed at other banks and in due course came to the defendant bank. At least the defendant so states in its brief, saying Tschupp “cashed checks amounting to one thousand one hundred fifty-four dollars and forty-five cents ($1154.45) at the Commerce Trust Company (the defendant) and checks totaling one thousand seventy-one dollars and ninety-five cents ($1071.95) at other banks which were later paid by the defendant.” Furthermore, the checks with their indorsements were introduced in evidence. They bear the paid cancellation mark of the defendant bank and no intermediate indorsements, indicating they passed through no other hands and were paid direct, except, as stated above, that twenty-two of them were presented to some other bank in the first instance and thence went to the defendant.

If this conclusion is correct it means that during the week of December 1 Tschupp impersonated five different people and cashed five of the checks at the defendant trust company; and that he did the same thing the week of December 15. There is probably enough in the record to justify us in taking notice of the fact that the defendant trust company is a large institution. It had three departments, a “Blotter Department,” a “Savings Department” and the Trust Company itself. The record further shows that checks were cashed at each of these three departments, so it seems not improbable that Tschupp did impersonate five different people and cashed that many checks at the defendant trust company each of the two weeks mentioned, although there is no direct testimony on the point. Tschupp in his deposition merely said he cashed part of the fifty checks and *107 “caused'” the others to be cashed, and he did not say where he cashed any of them.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.W.2d 1034, 332 Mo. 98, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-sash-door-co-v-commerce-trust-co-mo-1933.