Cirar v. Bank of Hartshorne
This text of 1977 OK 148 (Cirar v. Bank of Hartshorne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The only question on appeal is whether the Bank of Hartshorne, and its employee, were protected from liability under the pro[97]*97vision of 12A O.S.1971 § 4-4051 when, with notice of the death of William F. Marlow, it cashed a check drawn by decedent within ten days of his death to pay for repairs incurred by the bank as the result of damage caused by decedent to its drive-in window facility.
The administratrix of the decedent’s estate, Adelaide Cirar, appellant, brought an action against the Bank of Hartshorne and H. L. Dollins, Jr., appellees, seeking a judgment against them for improperly paying a check drawn by decedent when it was presented for payment, and negotiated by the bank as payee. The case was tried to the court after the parties agreed that the cause of action involved strictly a question of law and stipulated to the following facts:
“ . . . It is stipulated by both parties that the check in question was written by William F. Marlow to the Bank of Harts-horne on May 14, 1974. It is further stipulated that the check was sent to The National Bank of McAlester on or about June 1st and that the same was returned to the Bank of Hartshorne on or about June 3, 1974, and the same was paid by the Bank of Hartshorne on June 4, 1974.
It is further stipulated that Mr. Mar-low departed this life on May 30, 1974, and that the plaintiff by virtue of Letters issued on June 3,1974, is the Administra-trix of his estate.
It is further stipulated that on or about May 31, 1974, the plaintiff did present herself at the Bank of Hartshorne and did inform George Dollins, a bank official, that her father was deceased, and this is the extent of her notification to the Bank of Hartshorne.
It is further stipulated that Mrs. Cirar telling Mr. Dollins of Mr. Marlow’s death did place the bank upon notice of his death on May 30, 1974.
It is further stipulated that the $1,250 has been paid from the Marlow account and that the recipient of the money was the Bank of Hartshorne.”
The trial court entered judgment in favor of appellees. The court found: the appellant notified the bank of the death of her father on or about May 31,1974; her father died on May 30, 1974; and that she did not affirmatively, in any manner, order the bank or appellee Dollin to stop payment on the check. The court held before a bank may be held liable under the provisions of 12A O.S.1971 § 4-405(2) for payment of a check drawn on the account of a decedent and paid by the bank within ten days after the death of the drawer, in addition to being notified of the fact of death, the bank must be ordered to stop payment by a person claiming an interest in the account.
It is asserted on appeal that the court erred in its application of 12A O.S.1971 § 4-405(2) because the section applies only to the bank as a payor bank and not to the bank when it is a holder of the checks as payee. We do not agree. A holder is a person who is in possession of an instrument issued to him or to his order.2 A payor bank may, pursuant to 12A O.S.1971 § 4-401 make payment to a holder and charge its customer’s account any item which is properly payable from the customer’s account.3
[98]*98A check does not of itself operate as an assignment of any part of the drawer’s funds deposited with the bank upon which the check is drawn,4 but is merely an order upon a bank to pay from the drawer’s account. It may be revoked at any time by the drawer before it has been certified, accepted or paid by the bank.5 The check is revoked by operation of law ten days after the death of the drawer, although the drawee bank is not liable where it has in good faith honored such instrument without knowledge of the depositor’s death, or where it has not been ordered to stop payment by a person claiming an interest in the account.6
AFFIRMED.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1977 OK 148, 567 P.2d 96, 22 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 428, 1977 Okla. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cirar-v-bank-of-hartshorne-okla-1977.