Central National Bank of Cleveland v. Gallagher

234 N.E.2d 524, 13 Ohio App. 2d 115, 42 Ohio Op. 2d 226, 1968 Ohio App. LEXIS 409
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 21, 1968
Docket28562
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 234 N.E.2d 524 (Central National Bank of Cleveland v. Gallagher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central National Bank of Cleveland v. Gallagher, 234 N.E.2d 524, 13 Ohio App. 2d 115, 42 Ohio Op. 2d 226, 1968 Ohio App. LEXIS 409 (Ohio Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

*116 Corrigan, C. J.

We have before us an appeal on questions of law from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County against two defendants in the amount of Nine Thousand, Nine Hundred and Seventy-five Dollars with interest.

The cause was tried on an agreed statement of facts which reflect that the defendant John Gallagher and the decedent, Michael J. Gallagher, his father, on March 1, 1962, opened a joint and survivorship savings account in the amount of $10,000 at the Kenmore branch of appellee bank. Upon the terms of the deposit agreement, either party was authorized to withdraw any or all of the amount upon presentation of the passbook.

On April 3, 1962, Michael J. Gallagher went to the bank and asked to withdraw the entire balance of $10,000. Since he was unable to present the passbook, he signed the following indemnity agreement:

“Representation as to loss of Passbook
“It is hereby represented that a certain savings Passbook No. 24565 issued by the Central National Bank of Cleveland and owned by the undersigned has been lost, mislaid, stolen or destroyed; that the account evidenced by the above passbook has not been assigned or pledged to any person whatsoever;
“That there is now due the undersigned on said account the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000.00). In consideration of the crediting or paying of said amount or the issuance of a new passbook without surrender of said original passbook the undersigned hereby agrees to indemnify the said bank and save it harmless against any claim arising out of the presentation of said original passbook.
“Dated this 3rd day of April 1962.
“[Signed] Michael J. Gallagher”

The bank then released the $10,000 to Michael J. Gallagher who immediately put the amount into a new account held solely in his name. Michael J. Gallagher died on April 24, 1962, and, on April 25, 1962, the defendant-appellant, John Gallagher, presented the allegedly lost passbook on the original joint account No. 17-24565 at the bank. At John *117 Gallagher’s request, the teller erroneously paid to him $9,975 in cheeks and cash. When the error was discovered at the end of the business day, the bank officials contacted John Gallagher and asked him to return the money. He refused. Later the bank sued John Gallagher and the executor of Michael J. Gallagher’s estate for the amount paid by mistake to John Gallagher. Following a finding and judgment of the trial court in favor of plaintiff bank, the defendant-appellant executor appealed to this court.

Defendant-appellant assigns four claims of error as follows:

1. In enforcing a purported indemnity agreement which was void ab initio as violative of public policy.

2. In failing to apply required common-law standards of strict construction to said indemnity agreement.

3. In failing to abrogate said indemnity agreement for want of consideration.

4. In failing to abrogate said indemnity agreement as contrary to the express provisions of Section 1304.03 (A), Revised Code.

The question posed by the first and third assertions of error is whether a bank can enter into an agreement with a depositor who has lost his passbook, whereby the bank is indemnified against its own negligence.

On this issue appellant argues that such an agreement designed to protect a bank from its own negligence is against public policy and lacks consideration. Contra, appellee cites Ohio cases which hold that contractual exemptions of negligence are valid. See St. Paul Mercury Indemnity Co. v. Kopp (1954), 70 Ohio Law Abs. 259; Kay v. Pennsylvania Rd. Co. (1952), 156 Ohio St. 503; Georye H. Dingledy Lumber Co. v. Erie Rd. Co. (1921), 102 Ohio St. 236; Direct Transportation Co. v. Baltimore & Ohio Rd. Co. (1953), 96 Ohio App. 204; New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. Kilroy Structural Steel Co. (1959), 81 Ohio Law Abs. 527.

The applicable rule which is quoted in full in Kopp, supra, follows the Restatement of the Law of Contracts, Volume II, Section 575. The last part of this rule, which is to the effect that a party who is charged with a duty of *118 public service is forbidden to make a contract exempting his own negligence, is chiefly the basis of appellant’s argument. Appellant does not urge that contracts exempting negligence are illegal in Ohio, but does maintain that banks fall within the exceptions to that rule, i. e., that they are public service institutions.

This exception is fully stated in 39 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d 490, Negligence, Section 8:

“In regard to contracts which purport to exempt a party from liability for negligence, the first, and evidently the basic, principle is that contractual exemption from liability for negligence is rarely allowed to stand where the contracting parties are not on roughly equal bargaining terms. The farther apart the contracting parties are in their relative strength the greater is the probability that the exculpatory clause will be held invalid. Conversely, the closer they come in approaching absolute equality in bargaining strength the greater is the probability that the clause will be held valid. * * *
“* * * Aside from the cases in which the employer seeks freedom from liability for his negligence toward an employee, which have generally been held invalid as contrary to public policy and are also made void by statute, and the cases in which a common carrier attempts to exculpate itself from liability for negligent damage or injury to passengers or goods, the typical situations involving such an inequality of bargaining strength are those where public utilities or companies serving semipublic functions remuire their customers as a prerequisite to doing business with them to sign stipulations exempting the companies from liability for negligence. In the case of contracts between public service corporations and their customers the difference in relative bargaining power is so pronounced as to make any attempt on the part of the corporations to exemnt themselves from liability for their own negligence particularly obnoxious. * * *”

Appellant cites four cases in support of the argument that banks are “charged with a duty of public service” in the sense used in II Restatement of the Law of Contracts, *119 Section 575. Those cases do contain language to the effect that financial institutions are engaged in a business that concerns the public welfare and are, therefore, regulated and chartered by the state. Two of the cited cases —State Bank of Drummond v. Nuesse (1961), 13 Wis. 2d 74, 108 N. W. 2d 283; and Wyandotte Savings Bank v. State Banking Commr. (1956), 347 Mich. 33, 78 N. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 N.E.2d 524, 13 Ohio App. 2d 115, 42 Ohio Op. 2d 226, 1968 Ohio App. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-national-bank-of-cleveland-v-gallagher-ohioctapp-1968.