Atlas Metal Works v. Republic Nat. Bank

176 S.W.2d 350
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 1943
DocketNo. 14575.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 176 S.W.2d 350 (Atlas Metal Works v. Republic Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlas Metal Works v. Republic Nat. Bank, 176 S.W.2d 350 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

McDONALD, Chief Justice.

Appellant was plaintiff, and appellee was defendant, in the court below. Plaintiff was a depositor in defendant’s bank. From June, 1940, until June, 1941, one of plaintiff’s employees, C. B. Kimery, forged checks drawn upon plaintiff’s account in the bank in the total amount of $5,213.57. Plaintiff brought this suit to recover such sum from said bank. The case was submitted to the jury upon special issues. The findings of the jury are in substance: (1) The bank was negligent in failing to discover the forged signatures. (2) Such negligence was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s loss. (3 and 4) Issues and answers not material to any issue made on appeal. (5) Plaintiff assigned solely to Kimery the duty to examine the canceled checks and reconcile the monthly statements received by plaintiff from the bank. (6) Plaintiff failed to examine the canceled checks returned by defendant on July 1, 1940, and each succeeding month thereafter, within a reasonable time. (6a) Such failure to examine the returned checks was negligence. (7) Such negligence was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s loss subsequent thereto. (8 and 9) Issues and answers not material to any issue made on appeal. (10) After the return of the June, 1940, statement and each month thereafter, plaintiff failed to discover within a reasonable time the deposits credited to plaintiff on the monthly statements which were not shown on plaintiff’s books. (10a) Such failure was negligence. (11) Such negligence was a proximate cause of plaintiff’s losses occurring subsequently thereto.

Plaintiff employed Kimery in January of 1940 to serve as an assistant bookkeeper. In June of 1940 plaintiff assigned to him the additional duty of examining the canceled checks returned by the bank, and of reconciling the monthly bank statements with plaintiff’s books. It is undisputed that the canceled checks and a statement of the bank account were delivered each month by the bank. They were received by either the secretary-treasurer or the head bookkeeper, who turned them over to Kimery. for the purposes mentioned. In order to cover up the forgeries, Kimery obtained a duplicate key to plaintiff’s post office box. He would pick out certain letters which he knew contained checks payable to plaintiff, and would deposit these checks in plaintiff’s bank account, but would not post them on plaintiff’s books. The amounts of such deposits would approximately equal the amounts of the forged checks. Kimery then would take the forged checks from those returned by the bank and destroy them. By running off false adding machine tapes, he would make the bank balances appear to correspond with plaintiff’s books. The head bookkeeper would check the totals submitted to him by Kimery. Finally, in a way not necessary to describe, the forgeries were discovered.

Upon the verdict of the jury the trial court rendered judgment allowing to plaintiff a recovery for the checks forged during the first month, but not for those forged thereafter.

Plaintiff appeals, asserting that be should have been allowed judgment for all of the forgeries, and in the alternative asserting that errors were committed which require that the case be reversed and remanded for a new trial. The six points of error and the contentions made thereunder will be discussed in order.

Under the first point of error plaintiff contends that its motion for judgment on the verdict should have been sustained be *352 cause the jury found that the bank was negligent in failing to detect the forgeries. Plaintiff argues that the defense urged by the bank is one of estoppel, and that it cannot be urged here in 'the face of the finding that the bank itself was negligent. It "also argues that the whole question is one of negligence and proximate cause, that the bank’s negligence in failing in the first instance to discover the forgeries was the proximate cause of the loss, and that any negligence of the plaintiff thereafter committed could not have been the proximate cause of the loss.

All of the decisions appear to announce the rule that a bank depositor owes some character of düty to examine canceled checks and statements delivered to him by the bank, and that it is possible for the depositor to lose his right to recover for wrongful payment of forged checks by failure to examine his returned checks and statements and to report errors to the bank. The difficulty appears to have been in applying this general idea to specific cases. The language in some of the opinions is not altogether clear, and in some of them may be found remarks which seem to support plaintiff’s contentions in the case before us. For example, in Coleman Drilling Co. v. First National Bank, Tex.Civ.App., 252 S.W. 215, 216, writ of error refused, the bank was found guilty of negligence in failing to detect the forgeries, and the depositor was found guilty of negligence in failing to call for and obtain his canceled checks and statements for a period of eight months, during which time the forgeries were committed. Plaintiff was allowed a recovery for all of the forg-eries. The appellate court held that a recovery for all of the forgeries was sustainable upon either of two grounds:

First, it held that the plaintiff was not to be denied a recovery upon any ground of estoppel, arising out of the failure to call for and examine his checks and statements, because the bank was itself guilty of negligence, saying, in part:

“Now one principle of estoppel, as stated by Pomeroy in his work on Equity Jurisprudence (section 813), is that—

‘The party who claims the benefit of an estoppel must not only have been free from fraud in the transaction, but must have acted with good faith and reasonable diligence; otherwise no equity will arise in his favor.’ ”

Second, the court held that the bank was in no position to claim that the depositor’s negligence caused the loss, because the bank’s own negligence contributed to the loss. So, the court held, the same result would be reached whether the bank’s defense was predicated upon estoppel or upon negligence.

If the Coleman Drilling Co. case stood alone, we might feel compelled to follow it, in view of the recognition given by the Supreme Court in refusing the writ of error, but we believe that the expressions contained in a later opinion, by the Commission of Appeals, expressly adopted by the Supreme Court, are at variance with conclusions which might otherwise be reached from a study of the Coleman Drilling Company case, and that the later case must be followed. Southwest National Bank v. Underwood, 120 Tex, 83, 36 S.W.2d 141, 142.

In the last mentioned case it is said: “A bank is bound to know the signatures of its customers and cannot charge the amount of forged checks paid by it against the account of the depositor whose name was forged unless such payments are properly attributable to the negligence or other fault of the depositor which misled the bank into paying such forged checks. 7 C.J. pp. 683, 688.’’

It is also said: “Where the bank is negligent in payment of forged checks, it will not be excused merely by reason of the fact that negligence is also attributable to the depositor, unless the depositor’s negligence is shown to have been the proximate cause of the conduct of the bank in paying such checks and of resultant injury to it by reason thereof.”

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.W.2d 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlas-metal-works-v-republic-nat-bank-texapp-1943.