Calamita v. the Tradesmens National Bank

64 A.2d 46, 135 Conn. 326, 1949 Conn. LEXIS 131
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 1, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 64 A.2d 46 (Calamita v. the Tradesmens National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calamita v. the Tradesmens National Bank, 64 A.2d 46, 135 Conn. 326, 1949 Conn. LEXIS 131 (Colo. 1949).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

The complaint in this action alleged that the plaintiff, a depositor having a checking account in the defendant bank, issued a check against it, that five days later he gave the bank written instructions not to pay the check and that the bank negligently paid it and has refused to make restitution. The bank, in its answer, admitted the allegations as to the issuance of the check, the written instructions to stop payment and the payment of the check, but denied that it was negligent; as a special defense it alleged that the check was paid through inadvertence, accident or mistake, and, as exonerating it from liability, it pleaded the terms of the notice to stop payment. This began: “The undersigned hereby requests” the defendant “to stop payment of a check drawn by the undersigned” and described by amount, number, date and name of the payee; then, in a separate paragraph and, as appears in a copy used in argument before us, in much smaller type, the notice proceeded: “The undersigned agrees to hold the above Bank harmless and to indemnify it against any loss, expenses and costs resulting from nonpayment of the said check. Should the check be paid through inadvertence, accident or oversight, it is expressly agreed that the Bank will in no way be held responsible. The Bank receives this request upon the express condition that it shall not be in any way liable for its acts should the check be paid by it in the course of its business.” The plaintiff demurred to the special defense, in effect on the ground that the stipulations in the request were insufficient in *328 law to free the defendant from liability. Thereupon the action was reserved to us to decide the question so presented, with a stipulation that our decision should be accepted as the filial determination of the case.

In a very recent note, 1 A. L. R. 2d 1155, there is a collection of cases dealing with the effect and validity of such provisions in a stop-payment request or order. They show a diversity of opinion upon the question. We shall discuss the principal ones below, but we now point out that they are ample authority for the proposition that it is inherent in the relationship between a depositor and his bank that he has a right to stop payment upon a check he has issued and that, unless the liability of the bank is in some way validly qualified, it must respond to him in damages if, in disregard of a stop request or order, it pays the check, at least if it is negligent in so doing. See 6 Zollman, Banks & Banking, §§ 3701, 3710; Union & New Haven Trust Co. v. Thompson, 134 Conn. 607, 608, 59 A. 2d 727.

In Tremont Trust Co. v. Burack, 235 Mass. 398, 402, 126 N. E. 782, the court briefly upheld provisions similar to those before us against the claim that they were opposed to public policy. In Hodnick v. Fidelity Trust Co., 96 Ind. App. 342, 183 N. E. 488, the court (p. 347) discussed at some length the question whether such stipulations were against public policy and held that they were not and then (p. 350) made the categorical statement that they were based on a sufficient consideration. In Gaita v. Windsor Bank, 251 N. Y. 152, 155, 167 N. E. 203, the court construed a request which was in terms much like the one before us as a qualified or limited notice, stating that if the drawer of the check desired to hold the bank to its common-law liability the notice should be positive and unqualified. In Hiroshima v. Bank of Italy, 78 Cal. App. 362, 248 P. 947, it appeared (p. 373) that the *329 drawer of the check could not read the English language, in which the stipulations were written, that they were not read to him and that he was told that if he wanted payment stopped he must sign the order; and the court held that the case was thereby brought within a provision of the California code which entitled him to recover; the court then discussed (p. 374) the question whether the stipulations were against public policy and held that, under another provision of the code, they were. The latter part of this opinion was followed and applied in Grisinger v. Golden State Bank, 92 Cal. App. 443, 445, 269 P. 425. Finally, in the recent and very well considered case of Speroff v. First Central Trust Co., 149 Ohio St. 415, 79 N. E. 2d 119, stipulations in a stop-payment request quite similar to those before us were held to be without supporting consideration, against public policy and ineffective to relieve the bank from liability.

The opinions in these cases suggest three questions which may arise out of such a situation as that before us. Was the stop-payment order in this case a limited or qualified request or was it an unqualified notice to which it was attempted to annex certain contractual obligations? If the latter was true, were the stipulations without sufficient consideration to support them and were they against public policy?

In its introductory argument the defendant stresses the fact that, by reason of the size of many modem banks, the great number of employees they have and the complications resulting from the many accounts of depositors which they handle, it is difficult for them to be sure that stop orders will be honored, and the defendant contends that a greater leniency should be extended to them as regards the effect to be given to such stipulations as those before us. Certainly it is a novel proposition of law that because a bank chooses to as *330 sume the proportions of a large business the usual principles of law should not be applied to it; and the contention would lead logically to the impossible conclusion that one law should be applied to small banks and another to large ones. We are unable to see any sound reason why, as between a depositor who, having issued a check, for some reason desires to stop payment upon it and the bank to which he has intrusted his account, the latter should occupy a preferred position. As stated in Cincinnati, H. & D. R. Co. v. Metropolitan National Bank, 54 Ohio St. 60, 71, 42 N. E. 700: “The relations of bank and general depositor is simply the ordinary one of debtor and creditor, not of agent and principal, or trustee and cestui que trust. The bank agrees with its depositor to receive his deposits, to account with him for the amount, to repay to him on demand, and to honor his checks to the amount of his credit when the checks are presented; and for any breach of that agreement the bank is liable to an action by him. . . . The bank’s agreement with the depositor involves or implies no agreement with the holder of a check. The giving of a check is not an assignment of so much of the creditor’s claim; it passes no title, legal or equitable, to the holder in the moneys previously deposited, nor does it create a lien on the fund, for there is no special fund out of which the check can be paid, nor does it transfer any money to the credit of the holder; it is simply an order which may be countermanded and payment forbidden by the drawer any time before it is actually cashed or accepted.”

In determining the first question stated above, we must seek the intention of the parties as expressed in the writing.

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Bluebook (online)
64 A.2d 46, 135 Conn. 326, 1949 Conn. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calamita-v-the-tradesmens-national-bank-conn-1949.