Cameron v. Security First National Bank

251 Cal. App. 2d 450, 59 Cal. Rptr. 563, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1993
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 1, 1967
DocketCiv. 30568
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 251 Cal. App. 2d 450 (Cameron v. Security 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
Cameron v. Security First National Bank, 251 Cal. App. 2d 450, 59 Cal. Rptr. 563, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1993 (Cal. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

WOOD, P. J.

Plaintiffs Jack C. Cameron and Barbara D. Cameron, who were the payees of a cheek for $9,832.43, wrote the words “For Deposit Only” on the back of the check and signed their names thereunder. Vivienne D. Sherwood, who was Mr. Cameron’s bookkeeper, took the check to defendant bank and presented it for deposit in the account of Amber Construction Company, a company in which Mr. Cameron had been an officer and director, and the bank accepted the check for deposit in that account. About seven months thereafter, plaintiffs claimed that the check should not have been deposited in said account, and demanded that the bank reimburse them in the amount of the check. The bank did not comply therewith, and the plaintiffs commenced this action for damages for the alleged failure of defendant to honor the restrictive indorsement on the check. The court determined that defendant was not negligent and did not breach any contract of deposit or other duty owed to plaintiffs; that Vivienne D. Sherwood was the agent of Mr. Cameron and had ostensible authority to deposit the check in said account; that plaintiffs were negligent and such negligence was the proximate cause of such deposit; that plaintiffs, by reason of their failure to object to such deposit after having received a state *452 ment from defendant showing such deposit, are estopped to maintain the herein action; and plaintiffs, by reason of their conduct in placing Vivienne D. Sherwood in a position which enabled her to make sneh deposits, must bear responsibility therefor, the bank being an innocent party. The judgment was that plaintiffs take nothing by their complaint. They appeal from the judgment.

Appellants contend that the bank is liable to plaintiffs for defendant’s alleged negligence and breach of contract in failing to honor the restrictive indorsement on the check; and that the court erred in making the following findings: that Miss Sherwood had ostensible authority to deposit the cheek in the Amber account; that defendant was not negligent; that plaintiffs were negligent; that plaintiffs are estopped to maintain this action; and that the bank was an innocent party.

At the time the check transaction occurred (January 1963), and for several years prior thereto, defendant maintained a branch bank at the Malaga Cove Plaza, a commercial center in Palos Verdes. During that time, plaintiff Jack C. Cameron had a business office in the Plaza where he operated several businesses, including P. V. Investment Company, Jack Cameron Enterprises, J. C. C. Enterprises, Inc., and Amber Construction Company. The names Cameron & Hess, and Amber Construction Company, were on the front door of the office.

From 1959 to 1962 Amber Construction Company was owned by Jack Cameron, Max Harber, and Kenny Beaubein. In 1962, Beaubein sold his stock in that company to Amber. Thereafter Cameron and Harber were the only stockholders in Amber, and Cameron was a director and president of Amber. Amber was engaged in construction work and held a contractor ’s license which designated Cameron as responsible managing officer. Several persons were employed at the office, including Vivienne D. Sherwood, who worked as a bookkeeper for plaintiff and for some of the businesses (including Amber).

Amber Construction Company maintained a commercial account, No. 006-783, at the branch bank in the Plaza. "When the account was opened in 1959, a signature card showed that the signatures of Jack C. Cameron, president, and Harber and Beaubein were authorized in connection with that account. The last signature card regarding the account, prior to January 1963 (the time of the deposit involved here), was filed with the bank in January 1962 and it showed that the signatures of Jack C. Cameron, president, Harber, Vivienne Sherwood, and Harry Hess were authorized in connection with the *453 account. Mr. and Mrs. Cameron, as joint tenants, also maintained a savings account at the Plaza branch of the bank. Mr. Cameron maintained a commercial account in his name at the Crenshaw and Santa Barbara branch of defendant bank; and he also maintained an account at that branch in the name P. V. Investment Company.

Miss Sherwood was employed by Mr. Cameron in 1961 to render services at the Plaza office as a bookkeeper, receptionist, and general office worker. Her salary was paid by P. V. Investment Company, but her duties included bookkeeping for the Camerons personally, and for P. V. Investment Company, Amber Construction Company, J. C. C. Enterprises, and Jack Cameron Enterprises. Her duties also included the making of bank deposits in accounts maintained by the Camerons personally, and in accounts maintained in the names of said business enterprises.

During the years 1961 to 1963, Miss Sherwood made deposits, more than once a week, in the Plaza branch of the bank. In general, it was the business practice of Mr. Cameron to take title to land in his name, or jointly with his wife, and then one of the companies would build houses on the land. Checks in connection with the construction projects would come into the office payable to the Camerons or to one of the companies. Miss Sherwood would make deposit slips, including inter-branch deposit slips, and would take the checks and deposit slips to the Plaza branch for deposit in the various accounts. She made a 1 ‘great many” deposits at the Plaza branch during those years and became acquainted with several officers of said bank, including Mr. Theiss, the assistant manager, and Mr. Bagley, the manager.

Mr. Theiss and Mr. Bagley were also personal acquaintances of Mr. Cameron, who had done business with the bank approximately eight years. Mr. Cameron’s father also was a customer of the bank. By reason of financial statements which Mr. Jack C. Cameron had filed with the bank, the officers knew that he, was a wealthy man. They knew that he did business under the names of various companies, and that he maintained accounts with the Crenshaw branch bank. They also knew that Miss Sherwood was making deposits at the Plaza branch on behalf of Mr. Cameron in the Amber account and that, by means of inter-branch deposits at the Plaza branch, she was making deposits in the accounts at the Crenshaw branch.

One of Mr. Theiss’ duties as assistant manager of the Plaza *454 branch bank was to “keep track” of “overdrafts” on accounts. In late December 1962 and early January 1963 an overdraft condition existed in the Amber account. Mr. Theiss told Mr. Bagley that he was permitting the overdraft condition because Mr. Cameron was the principal on that account; and he showed the signature card (with Mr. Cameron’s signature thereon as president) to Mr. Bagley. Those overdrafts subsequently were “cured” (by deposits), but, on January 18, 1963, another overdraft occurred. Mr. Theiss then telephoned Miss Sherwood and asked her when funds would be available to put into the Amber account. (He had made similar calls to her with reference to previous overdrafts.) Miss Sherwood said that1 ‘ they were expecting a check to take care of it.” A few days later (January 21) Mr. Theiss again telephoned Miss Sherwood about the overdraft, and she said that “they were waiting for a cheek to come in that would take care of” the overdraft. On January 23, Mr. Theiss telephoned Miss Sherwood again and asked whether the cheek had arrived.

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Bluebook (online)
251 Cal. App. 2d 450, 59 Cal. Rptr. 563, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 1993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-v-security-first-national-bank-calctapp-1967.