Cluett v. Couture

140 A.D. 830, 125 N.Y.S. 813, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3051
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 16, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 140 A.D. 830 (Cluett v. Couture) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cluett v. Couture, 140 A.D. 830, 125 N.Y.S. 813, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3051 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Houghton, J.:

The plaintiffs carry. on the business of selling musical instruments, under the style of Cluett & Sons, and have a number of branch stores throughout the country. One Poche was manager of the branch store at Plattsburgh, and his territory extended from Ticonderoga to Rouses Point. He had general charge of the store and the making of the contracts for the selling of musical instruments and was authorized to collect payments therefor in cash or checks. He was paid a salary and had the right to deduct the expenses which he incurred while traveling in his territory upon the business of the firm from collections of money which he made. He also had authority to indorse checks payable to the firm for" deposit in the First Rational Bank of Plattsburgh. In granting to him this authority no particular form of indorsement was prescribed, and it appears to have been his custom to simply write “ Cluett & Sons ” across the back.

The defendant is a hotelkeeper at Rouses Point, and in May, 1908, Poche, the agent, while on business of his firm, stopped at the defendant’s hotel over night, and in the morning, when he was about to pay his bill, asked the defendant if he could cash a check of sixty dollars as he was short of money. On the defendant assenting he produced a check for that amount which he had taken in payment of a claim due the plaintiffs, payable to Cluett & Sons, which name he had indorsed on the back in blank. The defendant deducted the amount of the hotel bill and gave the balance to the agent in money. The defendant knew that the plaintiffs were dealers in musical instruments, with their main store at Troy and a branch store at Plattsburgh, and that Poche was their manager, but did not know his general or special authority and made no inquiry in that respect.

This action is brought for conversion of the check and judg[832]*832ment has been awarded to the plaintiffs, from which the defendant appeals.

The learned trial court before wh m the case was tried without a jury, found that Poche had no authority to indorse the name of duett & Sons on the check, or on any check or other negotiable paper payable to them or their order except for the purpose of deposit, and that all of the plaintiffs’ banking business was done at the First National Bank of Plattsburgh, N. Y., where such deposits were to be made. At the request of the defendant he further found that in taking the check and paying the money to the plaintiffs’ agent the defendant acted in good faith and without any information or knowledge that the agent did not have authority to use the check for the purpose and in the manner in which he used the same.

The theory upon which judgment was rendered against the defendant was that the agent had no implied authority to transfer title to the check and that his actual authority was confined to the indorsing of checks for the purpose of deposit, and that, therefore, he could not pass title by simple indorsement and delivery even to a bona fide holder.

' I concur with the learned trial court in his conclusion that the facts "would not warrant a finding of implied authority on the part of the agent, but it seems to me that the agent did have actual authority to indorse and thereby transfer title to the check to a bpnafide purchaser without notice of any restrictions or knowledge of any facts putting him upon inquiry. The question is not whether the agent had general authority to transfer .title to property belonging to his principals, but whether he had such authority as protects a bona fide purchaser of a negotiable instrument.

Concededly the indorsement was not forged. There was no restriction upon the manner in which the agent should make the indorsement. He was given power to indorse and his customary way was to write the name of Cluett & Sons on the back without further words, and this he had authority to do. If he had indorsed the check as he did and had done the further thing of depositing it in the bank to plaintiffs’ credit he would have been strictly within his authority and have carried out his instructions to the letter. But after he had indorsed precisely as he was authorized ■ to do, he [833]*833departed from his instructions with respect to depositing and delivered the check to the defendant for full value.

While plaintiffs granted full power to their agent to indorse checks in blank by writing their firm name on the back without any restrictive words, they restricted the use which he should make of the check after he had indorsed it, by requiring him to deposit it in the bank to their credit. Any departure by the agent from such authority and instructions was a mere diverting of a negotiable instrument from an authorized use, in which case it is not disputed the loss, if any, must fall on'the principals of the agent guilty of the diversion rather than on a bona fide holder for value without notice.

In Schmidt v. Garfield National Bank (64 Hun, 298; affd., 138 ,N. Y. 631) the authority given to the agent was not to indorse, but to use a rubber stamp which when filled out made it impossible to do other than deposit, and it was very properly held that such authority gave no right to indorse in blank by writing the name of the payee.

Lack of authority, express or implied, to indorse was the basis of the decisions in People v. Bank of North America (75 N. Y. 547) and in Robinson v. Chemical National Bank (86 id. 404). In Morris v. Hofferberth (81 App. Div. 512) and in Burstein v. Sullivan (134 id. 623) the effect of payment of an indebtedness by check to a general manager was under discussion, and not simply the question of title to checks which they had transferred.

The rule laid down in Salen v. Bank of State of New York (110 App. Div. 636) seems to me to be particularly applicable to the question involved. In that case the agent was manager for a foreign commission house, and was given power in writing to indorse their names to checks and drafts in blank for deposit in a specified bank. Instead of depositing in the bank the agent indorsed the firm name, followed by his own, and delivered them to a stock brokerage firm,' with whom he had an individual speculative account. The brokers ■ deposited such checks with the defendant which was sued for conversion. In an exhaustive and careful opinion Mr. Justice Clarke points out the fact that the agent having authority to indorse, although coupled with a direction to make deposit in a particular bank, could by such indorsement transfer good title to a [834]*834purchaser for value without notice, and held that no action would lie against the bank, although it received title through the brokers against whom an action would lie because of the notice which was necessarily imputable to them arising from the circumstances under which they received the checks. The-decision was concurred in by the entire court, and has neither been overthrown nor criticized, and would be identical with the case at bar if the action were against the Champlain Bank, in which defendant deposited the check in question.

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Bluebook (online)
140 A.D. 830, 125 N.Y.S. 813, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cluett-v-couture-nyappdiv-1910.