AmSouth Bank v. Reliable Janitorial Serv., Inc.

548 So. 2d 1365, 10 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 903, 1989 Ala. LEXIS 379, 1989 WL 74758
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 16, 1989
Docket87-924
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 548 So. 2d 1365 (AmSouth Bank v. Reliable Janitorial Serv., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AmSouth Bank v. Reliable Janitorial Serv., Inc., 548 So. 2d 1365, 10 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 903, 1989 Ala. LEXIS 379, 1989 WL 74758 (Ala. 1989).

Opinion

Reliable Janitorial Service, Inc., Reliable Carpet Cleaning, Inc., and Sentry Mutual Insurance Company ("Sentry") filed an action against AmSouth Bank, N.A. ("AmSouth"). The two "Reliable" corporations (which shall sometimes be referred to together as "Reliable") alleged that AmSouth converted checks made payable to the corporations and that AmSouth negligently or willfully and wantonly diverted the funds from checks made payable to the corporations to some other entity, not Reliable; Sentry claimed that it would be subrogated to a recovery by Reliable. The trial court entered summary judgment for the plaintiffs on the conversion claims and made the judgment final pursuant to Rule 54(b), A.R.Civ.P.

Reliable Janitorial Service, Inc., and its subsidiary, Reliable Carpet Cleaning, Inc., have a bank account with AmSouth; the claims of those two plaintiffs are identical. Reliable has about 150 employees, most of whom work providing janitorial services; Reliable also employed at the time of the transactions involved in this lawsuit a bookkeeper/office manager named Rosa Pennington. Pennington was the only full-time employee in Reliable's office, and Pennington managed many day-to-day financial matters for Reliable. Pennington deposited checks made payable to Reliable, but did not have authority to write checks on Reliable's account. AmSouth sent monthly statements to Reliable showing deposits to and withdrawals from Reliable's account. Reliable and AmSouth dispute how active a role Reliable's president had in managing Reliable's financial affairs.

Beginning in January 1985, Pennington obtained counter deposit slips from AmSouth. She wrote on the deposit slips that the depositor was "Reliable Janitorial Service, Inc.," or "Reliable Carpet Cleaning, Inc.," but, in the space for the account number, Pennington wrote the account number for her own personal account with AmSouth. She stamped checks, which were made payable to "Reliable Janitorial Service, Inc.," or "Reliable Carpet Cleaning, Inc.," with the indorsement "For Deposit Only, Reliable Janitorial Service, Inc.," or "For Deposit Only, Reliable Carpet Cleaning, Inc." Reliable alleges that over an 11-month period Pennington used 80 of the counter deposit slips described above to deposit 169 checks so indorsed; Reliable further alleges that AmSouth credited the deposits to Pennington, not Reliable. Pennington, since then, has spent all the funds that she diverted to her account.

Reliable filed this action against AmSouth, alleging conversion as well as negligent or willful and wanton conduct in depositing the funds into Pennington's account. Reliable had an employee theft insurance policy with Sentry, and Sentry paid $25,000, the limit of its liability under the policy, to Reliable to reimburse Reliable for the funds Pennington diverted to her account. Sentry joined Reliable's suit, alleging it was a subrogee to the extent of its payment to Reliable. AmSouth asserted both the common law defense of account stated and the defense found in Ala. Code 1975, §7-3-406. The trial court rejected both of these defenses, and, after fairly extensive discovery, the trial court granted Reliable's motion for summary judgment on the conversion claims. The trial court entered final judgment for Reliable Janitorial Service, Inc., for $43,271.57, for Reliable Carpet Cleaning, Inc., for $1,444.42, and for Sentry for $26,925.59.

AmSouth's first issue is whether the trial court erred by granting summary judgment on Reliable's conversion claim. To examine this issue, we look to the statutes concerning restrictive indorsements and those concerning conversion. There is no dispute that Pennington stamped the checks whose funds she misdirected with the indorsement "For Deposit Only, Reliable Janitorial Service, Inc.," or "For Deposit Only, Reliable Carpet Cleaning, Inc." Sections 7-3-205 and 7-3-206, Ala. Code 1975, address such indorsements. Section 7-3-205 provides: *Page 1367

7-3-205. Restrictive indorsements.

"An indorsement is restrictive which either:

"(a) Is conditional; or

"(b) Purports to prohibit further transfer of the instrument; or

"(c) Includes the words 'for collection,' 'for deposit,' 'pay any bank,' or like terms signifying a purpose of deposit or collection; or

"(d) Otherwise states that it is for the benefit or use of the indorser or of another person."

Undeniably, the indorsements Pennington stamped on the checks were restrictive indorsements within the meaning of §7-3-205(c).

Section 7-3-206 addresses the effect of such an indorsement, and, pertinently, that section provides:

"(3) Except for an intermediary bank, any transferee under an indorsement which is conditional or includes the words 'for collection,' 'for deposit,' 'pay any bank,' or like terms (subparagraphs (a) and (c) of section 7-3-205) must pay or apply any value given by him for or on the security of the instrument consistently with the indorsement. . . ." (Emphasis added.)

Thus, under the exact words of the statute, AmSouthmust apply the value of Reliable's checks consistently with the indorsement, i.e., for deposit to Reliable's account.

Construing Ala. Code 1975, § 7-3-419, the trial court found AmSouth liable for conversion as a matter of law. The pertinent portions of § 7-3-419 provide:

"(1) An instrument is converted when:

". . . .

"(b) Any person to whom it is delivered for payment refuses on demand either to pay or to return it. . . .

"(4) An intermediary bank or payor bank which is not a depositary bank is not liable in conversion solely by reason of the fact that proceeds of an item indorsed restrictively (sections 7-3-205 and 7-3-206) are not paid or applied consistently with the restrictive indorsement of an indorser other than its immediate transferor." (Emphasis added.)

The trial court entered summary judgment for Reliable on its conversion claim based on § 7-3-419(1)(b). That section addresses conversion by "Any person to whom [an instrument] is delivered for payment"; in this situation, AmSouth was a depositary bank, not a drawee/payor bank, which § 7-3-419(1)(b) addresses.1 Section 7-3-419(1)(b) thus does not address this fact situation, where AmSouth, for the purposes of this lawsuit, served solely as a depositary bank. Accordingly, the trial court should not have based the summary judgment for Reliable on § 7-3-419(1)(b).

Nevertheless, § 7-3-419(4) applies in this fact situation. That section provides that intermediary or payor banks that arenot depositary banks are not liable in coversion "solely by reason of the fact that proceeds of an item indorsed restrictively (§§ 7-3-205 and 7-3-206) are not paid or applied consistently with the restrictive indorsement." The inference from that section is that banks that are depositary banks may be liable in conversion2

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
548 So. 2d 1365, 10 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 903, 1989 Ala. LEXIS 379, 1989 WL 74758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amsouth-bank-v-reliable-janitorial-serv-inc-ala-1989.