Carolina Life Ins. Co. v. Bank of Greenwood

60 S.E.2d 599, 217 S.C. 277, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 18, 1950
Docket16386
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 S.E.2d 599 (Carolina Life Ins. Co. v. Bank of Greenwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carolina Life Ins. Co. v. Bank of Greenwood, 60 S.E.2d 599, 217 S.C. 277, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 120 (S.C. 1950).

Opinion

Baki:r, Chief justice.

Omitting the forma! allegations, the complaint of the plaintiff-respondent alleges :

“3. That the plaintiff has carried an account with the defendant Bank for a number of years and on or about November 28, 1942, an agreement was made between the plaintiff and the defendant Bank whereby the plaintiff on or about that date deposited the sum of two thousand five hundred and no/100 ($2,500.00) dollars with the said defendant in a so-cailecl dormant account and the defendant agreed to recognize the signatures of only certain officials of the plaintiff company on checks against said account, and defendant further agreed, in consideration for said deposit, to make no service charges for handling the plaintiff’s ordinary account with said defendant bank.

“4. That since said date the defendant Bank has allowed checks to be drawn against said bank by other than duly authorized officials of the plaintiff company and has made service charges against the plaintiff, all in breach of the aforesaid agreement and by reason of which the plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of one thousand six hundred eight and 73/100 ($1,608.73) dollars.

*280 “5. That due and timely demand has been given to the defendant for this amount and has been refused, and that the defendant is thereby indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of one thousand six hundred eight and 73/100 ($1,608.73) dollars, and costs.

“6. That plaintiff’s loss as aforesaid, or the greater part thereof, was caused by the negligence of the defendant Bank in causing said two accounts to be jumbled and in futher negligently allowing checks by other than duly authorized officials of the said company to be charged against the so-called dormant account.”

The answer of the defendant-appellant admits the formal allegations of the complaint, but denies all and singular the other allegations therein contained except as thereinafter admitted.

“3. That defendant admits that on or about November 28, 1942, plaintiff deposited with it the sum of twenty-five hunderd ($2,500.00) dollars, subject to withdrawal by checks signed by certain designated persons whose signatures were furnished the defendant on one of its regular signature cards for the use of depositors; that while said deposit remained dormant defendant agreed to waive or not charge the regular service charges applicable to ordinary checking accounts, but it was agreed that a charge of twenty-five (25‡) cents for each check drawn against the account and returned for insufficient funds should be made against the account at the close of the business day upon which the item should be presented: that defendant, upon receipt of said sum, credited the same to the regular or ordinary checking account of the plaintiff and issued therefor its duplicate deposit ticket and delivered the same to plaintiff; that the said ordinary account of the plaintiff in which the said sum was deposited had been carried in the defendant bank for some time prior to said special deposit; that said account has since shown many credits and debits and monthly statements of the said account, showing and in- *281 eluding the deposit of the sum of twenty-five hundred ($2,-500.00) dollars as- aforesaid, were thereafter promptly and in due course periodically furnished the plaintiff, together with all cancelled checks drawn against said account by agents and employees of the plaintiff; that at no time, until on or about November, 1946, or about five (5) years later, did the plaintiff make any complaint in respect to said special deposit, or question any withdrawal from said account by any officer, agent or employee of the plaintiff; that all checks charged to said amount, including any which may have reduced the said special deposit below the original amount thereof, were for sums duly remitted to and received by plaintiff and were drawn by its agents and employees having charge of said account; that plaintiff by reason of said facts and circumstances, and otherwise, had full knowledge of the handling of the said special deposit and of the alleged impairment of same in and through its ordinary checking account, as aforesaid, and acquired such knowledge and information in respect to the same for about five (5) years before making any complaint or taking any exception in respect thereto, and by reason thereof cannot now be heard to complain and object and to bring and' maintain this suit to recover the alleged impairment of said special deposit.”

Such confusion as exists in this case, and that which furnishes some slight basis for the position of the appellant that the amount claimed by the respondent above the sum of $118.62, and the amount for which judgment was rendered above the said sum of $118.62, was for special damages which it alleges are not recoverable under the allegations of the complaint, granting that the contract had been breached by the appellant, arises from the manner in which the respondent undertook to prove the allegations of its complaint, and disprove the defenses set out in the answer of the appellant. The appellant offered no testimony.

*282 We think it is clear that the complaint alleges that respondent had suffered damages in two ways by reason of the appellant’s breach of its contract (1) in honoring checks against the $2,500.00 deposit signed by a person or persons not authorized to sign checks against this fund, and (2) in continuing to make service charges.

There appears to be no question about $118.62 being the amount of the service charges which should not have been collected from the respondent, and it further appears that there is no dispute here as to $1,022.26 being the correct amount of the depletion of the $2,500.00 deposit by reason of checks paid on unauthorized signatures. We assume that this amount was arrived at by subtracting the balance as shown on deposit by respondent in appellant bank from $2,500.00; otherwise the complaint would have demanded the full $2,-500.00, plus the service charges, and judgment would have been rendered accordingly. In other words, while over the period of time involved, unauthorized checks against the $2,500.00 deposit were paid totaling a sum much greater, yet $1,022.26 was the amount of damage suffered by the respondent by reason of the breach of its contract by appellant in the payment of checks signed by a person or persons unauthorized to sign such checks. None of the officers of the respondent who were authorized to sign checks against this $2,500.00 deposit had ever signed a check in any amount against this deposit or dormant account until after the commencement of this action, and payment of such check, which was in the sum of $2,500.00, was refused, the endorsement placed thereon reading: “Insufficient funds-account in litigation.” (The letter transmitting the dormant deposit of $2,-500.00 to the appellant designates and limits the officers of the respondent who were authorized to sign checks against this deposit to two, but the record as a whole indicates three, but this is immaterial since no part of this deposit was withdrawn on checks of those authorized to sign such checks.)

*283

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 S.E.2d 599, 217 S.C. 277, 1950 S.C. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carolina-life-ins-co-v-bank-of-greenwood-sc-1950.