California Pacific Title & Trust Co. v. Crocker First National Bank

21 P.2d 475, 131 Cal. App. 487, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 718
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1933
DocketDocket No. 8680.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 475 (California Pacific Title & Trust Co. v. Crocker First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California Pacific Title & Trust Co. v. Crocker First National Bank, 21 P.2d 475, 131 Cal. App. 487, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 718 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

SPENCE, Acting P. J.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover the sum of $12,559.25, alleged to have been the balance due to plaintiff as a depositor in the defendant bank. The cause was tried by the court sitting without a jury and from a judgment in favor of plaintiff defendant appeals.

The defendant bank came into being as the result of a consolidation and the name of the plaintiff corporation was changed during the time referred to herein but neither the consolidation nor the change of name is material here, so we may simply refer to the institutions involved as plaintiff and defendant. In 1922, plaintiff issued a check on the defendant bank in said sum of $12,559.25 payable to “Mary Baldwin Wood, Extrx., and Baldwin Wood, Extr., of the estate of William Sidney Wood, dec’d.” It is this check which is the center of controversy. Said check was indorsed by Baldwin Wood by signing the names of both payees in the same manner as said names appeared upon the check and he thereafter deposited the same in an account carried in the American National Bank in the name of “Estate William S. Wood, Deceased.” This estate account was a very active account, the funds in which were subject to withdrawal upon the signature of Baldwin Wood alone. The record does not disclose what, if anything, was done with the money received by Baldwin Wood in payment of this particular check after said money was placed in the last-.mentioned account. Mary Baldwin Wood testified “The check was not paid to me,” but it also appears from her testimony that Baldwin Wood regularly deposited large sums in her personal account from 1908 until his death, which occurred some time subsequent to 1925. She did not know the exact source of the funds so deposited, but testified, “I got enough to spend seven or eight hundred dollars a month from 1908 until his death.”

It was the theory of plaintiff that the indorsement of said check in the manner described constituted forgery on the part of said Baldwin Wood and that plaintiff was en *489 titled to judgment against the bank for the full amount represented by said check. This action was not commenced until 1928, being six years after the payment of said check by the defendant bank. The bank defended upon the ground that all money on deposit had been paid out upon plaintiff’s order, and the defendant bank further pleaded the statute of limitations. In other words, the bank took the position that the indorsement was not forged but was an authorized indorsement, and further took the position that even if the indorsement was forged, plaintiff’s claim was barred. The trial court found against the bank on both of these defenses and gave judgment in favor of plaintiff for the full amount of the check.

On this appeal the defense of the statute of limitations is not urged, for it is now well settled that under the statute in force at the time of the commencement of this action this defense was not available to appellant. (Atwell v. Mercantile Trust Co., 95 Cal. App. 338 [272 Pac. 799] ; Merchants Nat. Bank v. Continental Nat. Bank, 98 Cal. App. 523 [277 Pac. 354].) Appellant’s main attack is therefore directed at the findings of the trial court to the effect that said indorsement was unauthorized and forged. We will therefore briefly set forth the evidence relating to this issue which is found solely in the testimony of Mary Baldwin Wood.

William Sidney Wood died in 1908 and shortly thereafter his widow, Mary Baldwin Wood, and his son, Baldwin Wood, were appointed executrix and executor respectively of his will. The proceedings in the probate court were apparently still pending at the time this litigation was commenced in 1928. It is quite evident that Mrs. Wood relied entirely upon her son and paid little, if any, attention to the estate affairs. Shortly after being appointed executrix she went to Europe and subsequently made two other trips there. She also spent two years in the Orient and later she lived in New York for a period of two years. We quote the following excerpts from her testimony: “After my appointment I qualified as executrix, but I have not been acting as such because I have been out of town so much. ... I signed a power of attorney after my husband’s death. I gave my power of attorney to. my son. I think it was about when I went abroad. ... I gave the power of attorney to my son *490 so that he could handle all of my affairs—everything. . . . The only paper that I ever signed after my husband’s death was that one power of attorney. . . . Part of the estate was what they called the Wood Building at Merchant and Kearney Streets. I never signed any papers in connection with leases for that estate, my son entirely attended to that. I suppose he told me he received rents, but I never knew. I had enough to live on from month to month, and that was all that was necessary. My son paid me the money to live on through the Crocker National Bank, and I understood that that was coming from the estate. I do not remember signing any papers in connection with the business of my husband’s estate at all. I took no part in the business of the estate at any time—never. The last time I had to do with the estate was the time I was in court before Judge Coffey—just after my husband died. I knew that all that I had to live on came from the Wood Building and possibly other sources coming into the estate. It came in to my son. I had not the slightest objection to his collecting this money and handling it. My son never paid me anything. I went to the Crocker Bank and drew out the money myself. My son never made me a personal payment at any time. Pie had all my collaterals. When I went abroad I gave him the collaterals and whatever monies I drew were monies that were in the Crocker Bank and I drew them out on my check. They were put there by my son from various sources. It was the estate property that my husband left to us. When I drew money from the Crocker Bank I signed my checks and handed them in and got the money. The account in the Crocker Bank was in my individual name alone, Mary Baldwin Wood, not as executrix. ... I left everything to my son Baldwin to take care of. . . . I was not a business woman and just naturally left it to my son. I trusted him implicitly in that matter and that was the situation throughout the whole matter. . . . None of those claims were approved in my handwriting; never approved by me in the slightest way. He paid them and that was sufficient. I consented that they should be paid. I do not remember if there were proceedings in 1909 when some stocks and bonds were distributed to me, some to my son, and some to the trust company for Mrs. Welty, because 1 had my own stocks and bonds. I think that I got *491 some stocks atid bonds which were part of the estate immediately after my husband died ... I never got any money from my son or from the estate in any other way than through the Crocker Bank in the way I have described. He never gave me any check on an account in the American National Bank. I never knew anything about the American Bank. I did not know of the existence of an account there. I never discussed with my son where he was putting the money that he got from the rents of the Wood Building and the question never came up. ... I knew that my son was collecting the rents from the Wood Building. I knew he was collecting the coupons coming off the bonds and the interest coming in on the stocks and I raised not the slightest objection to that. . . .

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 475, 131 Cal. App. 487, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-pacific-title-trust-co-v-crocker-first-national-bank-calctapp-1933.