Browning v. Bank of Vernal

207 P. 462, 60 Utah 197, 1922 Utah LEXIS 24
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1922
DocketNo. 3695
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 207 P. 462 (Browning v. Bank of Vernal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Browning v. Bank of Vernal, 207 P. 462, 60 Utah 197, 1922 Utah LEXIS 24 (Utah 1922).

Opinion

GIDEON, J.

Respondent (plaintiff below) instituted this action against appellant (defendant below) to recover judgment upon two counts or causes of action separately stated in the complaint. The appellant is a banking corporation.

In the first cause of action it is alleged that the respondent was a depositor with the appellant. In the month of October, 1918, it is stated, appellant wrongfully applied to its own use certain moneys in such deposit against the will and without the consent of the respondent, and has refused and still refuses to pay her checks or orders upon such deposit. Judgment was asked for the amount claimed to have been thus applied and for interest. In the second count respondent seeks to recover damages for the refusal of appellant to pay [199]*199checks or orders drawn by her against the account. The answer admitted the deposit of certain amounts to the credit of respondent, but denied that the money so deposited was the property of respondent, or that it had wrongfully or without respondent’s consent applied to its own use any of the moneys placed to the credit of respondent. The jury gave respondent judgment on the first count for the full amount claimed, and upon the second count for $500 damages.

A motion for a new trial was denied. The ruling of the court in denying that motion is the only error assigned. Two of the grounds stated in the motion for a new trial are (a) misconduct of jury, and (b) “excessive damages, appearing to have been given under the influence of passion and prejudice.” Other grounds are stated in the motion, and, while not waived by appellant, are not discussed at any length in the brief. The two grounds above stated are the only ones, in our judgment, that require consideration.

It appears from the affidavit of the assistant cashier of appellant that one of the jurors sustained the relationship of debtor to the bank at the time of the trial. It likewise appears that in the examination of such juror he failed to disclose the fact of such relationship. From the affidavits submitted on the motion for a new trial it appears that the juror had executed a note with others as a joint maker. This note was, on the morning of the trial, presented to the appellant bank and by it accepted and a loan made. It does not appear, however, that the juror was aware that the note had been presented to the bank or that a loan had been made at that' time. Be that as it may, it is also made to appear that the assistant cashier had personal knowledge of the relation-, ship of the juror to the bank, was present in court at the time of the examination of the jurors respecting their qualifications to act as jurors, made no objections to the juror serving, and did not advise appellant’s counsel of the fact of the relationship. The fact that a juror sustains the relationship of debtor or creditor to a party to an action does not disqualify the juror to act, but it gives to the [200]*200litigant the right to challenge for cause such juror. That is a right that can be waived. Under all the authorities that, we have examined, where the parties knowing the fact of the relationship neglect to interpose a challenge, the right to afterwards object is lost. The law applicable is concisely stated in 17 Std. Ency. Pro. 132 as follows:

“No matter how good one’s canse of challenge may be, It is clearly waived where no objection is made when the jury is impaneled, especially when he knew the facts constituting the grounds of challenge. It must appear that neither the party nor his counsel had knowledge of the disqualification.”

See, also, 16 R. C. L. 287.

Counsel for appellant cites, in support of its contention, the opinions of this court in State v. Morgan, 23 Utah, 212, 64 Pac. 356; State v. Thompson, 24 Utah, 314, 67 Pac. 789; Tarpey v. Madsen, 26 Utah, 294, 73 Pac. 411. These cases do not support counsel’s position. It will be found upon an examination that in each case neither the party complaining nor his counsel knew of the disqualification at the time of impaneling the jury. To permit appellant now to insist upon the disqualification of the juror as grounds for new trial, when the fact of such disqualification was known to the officers of the appellant at the time of the trial, would be to permit litigants to trifle with the court.

Respecting the second ground urged, it is made to appear from the complaint and from the evidence that the respondent was engaged in business at Pleasant Grove, Utah county, or was opening up a millinery business at that place. The checks drawn by her were in payment of goods to be used in said place of business-. It also appears that the respondent had been engaged in business at other places within the state of Utah, if not continuously, at least intermittently, for the past 20 years. Her testimony was that she had been damaged by the failure of appellant to honor her checks, that she had been humiliated in not having such checks paid, and that certain goods which she had ordered for her business had to be returned to the wholesalers. It is true that the testimony is indefinite as to any specific amount of damage sustained, and it must be admitted that the [201]*201jury was quite liberal iu the amount of damages awarded. However, the only question for determination by this court is, Can it be determined as a matter of law, under the circumstances, that the damages were so excessive as to appear to have been given under the influence of passion or prejudice ?

That a commercial bank refusing to pay a check drawn upon an open account of a depositor is liable in nominal damages cannot and will not be disputed, assuming that at the time the check is presented for payment there are sufficient funds to the credit of the drawer to pay the same. The relationship of a bank to the depositor is such that a failure to honor a check drawn on an account and not in excess of the amount on deposit is a breach of thé contract existing between the parties. The courts generally hold, and such is the common-law rule, that failure of a bank to pay the check of a merchant or trader entitles the drawer to substantial damages without any proof of actual damages. The rule under the common law, and in this country in the absence of statute, as the same affects a merchant or trader, is concisely stated by the Court of Appeals of California in the second headnote to Reeves v. First Nat. Bank, 20 Cal. App. 508, 129 Pac. 800, as follows:

“Where it appears that the plaintiffs suing the hanlr for the wrongful dishonor of their check were established in business, such wrongful dishonor raises the presumption that the drawers have sustained substantial damages, the amount of which it is for the court or jury trying the case to fix, as general compensatory damages, in the absence of any showing of special damages.”

In 5 R. C. L. p. 549, the same principle is stated as follows :

“Although the right to recover substantial damages does not depend on the depositor’s occupation, yet it is held that there is a distinction between an ordinary depositor and a depositor who is a merchant or trader. If the depositor is a merchant or trader it will be presumed without further proof that substantial damages have been sustained. * * *”

In 2 Morse, Banks and Bunking (5th Ed.) p. 63, it is said:

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207 P. 462, 60 Utah 197, 1922 Utah LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/browning-v-bank-of-vernal-utah-1922.