Bulakowski v. Philadelphia Saving Fund Society

113 A. 553, 270 Pa. 538, 1921 Pa. LEXIS 435
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 25, 1921
DocketAppeal, No. 275
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 113 A. 553 (Bulakowski v. Philadelphia Saving Fund Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bulakowski v. Philadelphia Saving Fund Society, 113 A. 553, 270 Pa. 538, 1921 Pa. LEXIS 435 (Pa. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

A savings bank is an institution organized to promote prosperity of persons of small means and limited opportunities, wherein earnings may be gained on aggregate small deposits, which earnings, after deducting necessary expenses, and a reserve for depositors’ security, are divided among the depositors. There is no capital stock, nor are there stockholders in such institutions, and it is not a bank in the commercial sense of that word. It is not, however, for all purposes, a charitable society, and, under certain instances, has been held to be a business corporation: West’s App., 64 Pa. 186; Bank for Savings [541]*541v. The Collector, 70 U. S. 495. The relation between the institution and the depositor is, in some aspects, that of a trustee and cestui que trust (Barrett v. Bloomfield Savings Institution, 64 N. J. Eq. 425, 433; State v. People’s National Bank, 75 N. H. 27, 29); but it has been held the relation is the same as that of a depositor in a commercial bank, that of debtor and creditor: 7 C. J. 863, sec. 906. As affects the question before us, it is difficult to define—probably a little of both. A savings bank is not held to the same high degree of care as that required of a commercial bank, respecting its depositors or creditors: Kelley v. Buffalo Savings Bank, 180 N. Y. 171; 69 L. R. A. 317. A-savings bank is liable to its depositors for want of ordinary care. It does not insure a fund on deposit, nor is its work purely gratuitous ; and, while the depositors are the only ones to derive a benefit, none being secured by the organizers or trustees, it has been deemed wise, as a matter of public policy, to adopt the rule of ordinary care with relation to funds on deposit. The bank is of course required to pay the depositor or his attorney the amount credited in his deposit-book, unless relieved through some extraordinary circumstance; and, inasmuch as the depositors of savings institutions are so numerous and cannot be personally known to the officers of the bank, and as possession of the bank book is, under the deposit contract, prima facie evidence of the right to draw on the fund it represents, it became necessary to adopt rules to guard against imposition, not only by the depositors themselves, but by others through the carelessness of depositors. Accordingly, the rule hereinafter mentioned, or a similar one, with a number of others, has been adopted for the protection of such banks. -These rules are printed in the deposit- or pass-books, by accepting the book, the depositor assents to the regulations and they become a part of the contract of deposit for the protection of the bank and the depositor, binding on both alike: Burrill v. Dollar Savings Bank, 92 Pa. 134; 3 R. C. L. [542]*542707, sec. 339; 7 Corpus Juris, 869, sec. 918. It is not material whether the depositor is able to read the English language. His duty is to make himself familiar with the rules. The situation is not similar to the case of an agent imposing some condition on an illiterate foreigner. Here the savings bank is sought by the depositor for the care of his savings. He should read, or have read to him, everything that relates to the deposits: Burrill v. Dollar Savings Bank, supra.

The rule printed in the depositor’s book reads: “If any person shall present a deposit book at the office of the society pretending to be the depositor named therein, and shall thereby obtain the amount deposited, or any part thereof, and the actual depositor shall not have given previous notice at the office of the loss or theft of the book, the society will not be responsible for the wrongful payment, nor be liable to make good the same; provided that it has been entered in the book when made”; and, where ordinary care has been exercised and the money of a depositor is paid to a person other than the depositor, because of the failure of such depositor to comply with this rule, the bank would not be liable to the owner of the deposit for the loss.

But the bank must not be negligent in paying the money on deposit to another than the true owner or authorized agent, even though the pass-book is presented as authority for the payment and the true owner does not give the notice required by the rule. The bank is bound to exercise ordinary care to safeguard its depositors. Want of care may arise from a number of circumstances, as, where the bank required only the deposit-book to be presented, without other reasonable means of identification, or where knowledge was brought home to the bank’s officers, of doubtful circumstances, calculated to excite suspicion in an ordinarily careful person, as, for instance, dissimilarity in the handwriting, patent to a person filling the position and performing the duties required of bank officers.

[543]*543Under certain conditions there is a presumption the officers performed their duty. But when plaintiff shows money tvas deposited and the bank fails to return it, on proper notice, a prima facie case is made out; so in the present instance, with the money deposited and the bank failing to return it, a prima facie case was made out. It also appears from plaintiff’s statement the bank book was stolen, and the only notice given of the loss was after the money was paid by the bank.

The bank had to exculpate itself from liability, and relied on the rule above quoted; if it is to have any effect beyond the rule of law common as to all deposits, it must somewhere operate to the benefit of the bank. To do so, that institution must present such circumstances in relief as will enable the depositor to test its good faith, accuracy and other diligence in the care of the fund; here such circumstances were presented when it met the conditions stipulated in the rule. Of course it is always essential to show it had not converted plaintiff’s money, and it answered plaintiff under the rule by showing that the holder (plaintiff’s impersonator) presented the pass-book, signed the necessary receipts, and the money was paid to him. But the bank is not yet relieved; it is open to an investigation of its own acts. Plaintiff could show such negligence or want of ordinary care as would make the depositary liable. This was not done by the mere proof of loss in the first instance. The depositor has the burden of proving negligence on the part of the bank (Israel v. Bowery Savings Bank, 9 Daly, N. Y. 507), and here the burden of proof rested on plaintiff to prove the bank had not exercised the care necessary under the circumstances. It was not incumbent on the bank to establish its innocence in this regard further than the rule required. The rule, to be effective, must not be weakened; the fact plaintiff did not know the book was stolen would be immaterial: Levy v. Franklin Savings Bank, 117 Mass. 448. He must know, and to do so he must keep his book in a safe place. If he is [544]*544careless and allows the book to lie around, as here, it is done at Ms peril; he should remember it may be stolen, the money secured before he can give notice, and he be the loser.

In the present case we have an institution doing business as a savings bank, with upwards of three hundred thousand depositors, nearly one-third of whom are foreigners. Plaintiff became a depositor of that institution in 1917. On Saturday, the 15th day of November, 1919, he missed the book and on the following Monday notified the bank of its loss. He claimed the book had been stolen, and he had not received the money on it.

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113 A. 553, 270 Pa. 538, 1921 Pa. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bulakowski-v-philadelphia-saving-fund-society-pa-1921.