Central Surety & Ins. v. Medomak Nat. Bank

5 F. Supp. 252, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1175
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedOctober 30, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 5 F. Supp. 252 (Central Surety & Ins. v. Medomak Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Surety & Ins. v. Medomak Nat. Bank, 5 F. Supp. 252, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1175 (D. Me. 1933).

Opinion

PETERS, District Judge.

This suit is brought by the surety on a guardian’s bond to recover the amount it was obliged to pay on account of the defalcation of the guardian, who was also an officer of the defendant bank where the guardian’s deposit was kept; the liability of the bank being based on alleged notice of, and participation in, the wrongful handling of the account. The plaintiff stands in the position of the ward, so far as this suit is concerned, and the jurisdiction of the court, the propriety of this suit in equity, and the title of the plaintiff appear to be conceded. The matter of the liability of the bank is the only question to be decided.

Findings of Fact.

Hadley H. Kuhn, on November 4, 1930, and thereafter until December 25, 1931, when he committed suicide, was vice president, cashier, and a director of the defendant, a small bank in the town of Waldoboro, Me., and had full charge and management of its [253]*253records and business, without interference from the other directors, whose discharge of their duties was more or less perfunctory, except that the president of the bank exercised supervision over investments. On November 4, 1930, Kuhn was appointed, and soon after qualified, as guardian of Mrs. Frances E. Simmons, the plaintiff being surety on the bond required by the probate court. At that time the assets of the guardianship estate consisted of a deposit of $45,421.91, in the savings department, represented by account No. 2810, on the books of the defendant bank. After his appointment as guardian, Kuhn opened a cheeking account in his name as guardian of Mrs. Simmons, and from time to time transferred amounts from the savings account to the checking account in the same bank. Both accounts were known to the bank to be trust accounts, and Kuhn was known to be the trust officer who had the handling of them.

Soon after his appointment as guardian of Mrs. Simmons, Kuhn began speculating in stocks and opened a margin account with Hornblower & Weeks and with Hayden Stone & Co., reputable brokerage houses having branches in Portland.

To finance his speculations and cover his losses, Kuhn used the money of Mrs. Simmons intrusted to him as guardian, and after his death the guardian who was appointed to succeed him collected from the plaintiff surety company the sum of $42,338.99, which, with interest, is the amount sought to be recovered in this suit.

An analysis of the methods by which the money was wrongfully taken from the Simmons accounts is necessary in order to> determine the liability of the bank. Neither of the brokerage houses mentioned would accept cheeks to be credited to a speculative account if they were drawn or appeared to be given by a trust officer in his official capacity. The rule of the brokers to that effect was probably known to Kuhn, because his cheeks to them were always personal cheeks when they were sent out by him. They were all drawn on the defendant bank against his individual checking account, which was at all times trifling and never approaching the amount necessary to honor the cheeks.

Withdrawals from the Estate Checking Account.

Kuhn began his speculative career, so far as this case is concerned, by purchasing a thousand dollar bond issued by the St. Louis & Southwestern Railroad, and leaving it with Hornblower & Weeks as collateral for his margin account. To do this he drew his personal cheek on the defendant bank for $855.-28, and sent it to the brokers to buy the bond. The cheek reached them December 15, 1930. In the regular course of business that cheek, with others on the same bank, reached the Federal Reserve Bank in Boston, and was included in its collection letter of December 16, 1930, sent to the defendant bank. It was the custom of the latter bank and the duty of one Miss Hoak, a clerk therein, on receipt of the daily letter from the Federal Reserve Bank, to open it in the morning of its receipt, ascertain from the individual depositors’ ledger whether cheeks were good, draw the bank’s cheek on its Boston correspondent for the total amount of checks accepted, and on the same day mail the bank’s cheek, signed by its cashier or assistant cashier, to the Federal Reserve Bank in payment of the checks that had been accepted and honored. In pursuance of this routine the cheek for $855.28, drawn by Kuhn, was found by Miss Hoak in the Federal Reserve letter received December 17, 1930. She found that Kuhn’s account would be considerably overdrawn by payment of this check, and called Kuhn’s attention to that fact. He thereupon added the designation “Grdn” after his name — either that or the words “Guardian of Frances E. Simmons.” The cheek signed in that way would be good, because on that same day Kuhn had withdrawn $855.28 from the savings account of Frances E. Simmons and placed it to the credit of his checking account as her guardian. Miss Hoak was unsuspicious, and in several similar cases unwittingly assisted Kuhn in carrying out his plan by showing him the cheeks as they came in as individual cheeks and suggesting that he had forgotten to put the designation “Guardian” on them; whereupon Kuhn would make that addition to his individual name and transfer from the Simmons savings account sufficient money to cover the cheeks, and they would be cleared in the usual way. Substantially the same course of action was pursued in the ease of a cheek for $856.67, paid by the bank December 19, 1930, a check for $1,014.63) received and paid by the bank December 23, 1930, a check for $966.53, received and paid by the bank December 30, 1930, and a cheek for $2,500, received and paid by the bank October 5,1931. The five cheeks mentioned are the items described respectively as (a), (b), (c), (d),and (q) in paragraph 14 of the plaintiff’s bill.

The possible suspicions of Miss Hoak or of any person coming in contact with the transaction were further allayed by the fact that these cheeks, although purporting to be [254]*254Kuhn’s individual checks, were on a particular pink-colored paper which he used regularly to draw money legitimately from the estate cheeking account. The transaction became, in a way, routine. Miss Hoak, on receipt in the collection letter of one of these individual cheeks on pink paper, would at once take it to Kuhn to put on the apparently forgotten designation of “Guardian.”

That this routine occurred in the ease of the $2,500 cheek is not so certain as in the ease of the four cheeks first above mentioned; but I have included it in the same category by reason of the testimony of Miss Hoak that she did not charge any cheeks to the guardianship cheeking account that were not signed as guardian.

Withdrawals from the Estate Savings Account.

On January 23, 1931, Homblower & Weeks received from Kuhn his personal cheek on the defendant bank for $4,000'. This was credited on Kuhn’s account with that firm, and the check was included in the Federal Reserve letter to defendant of January 24, 1931. January 25th was Sunday. On January 26th the fact was called to Kuhn’s attention, either by the clerk Miss Hoak or the assistant cashier Miss Bailey, that his personal account would not stand payment of a cheek of that size. He directed the check to be paid by the bank, however, and it was paid in the usual way on January 26, 1931. The check remained the individual cheek of Kuhn and not his check as guardian.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Supp. 252, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-surety-ins-v-medomak-nat-bank-med-1933.