Commercial Trading Co. v. Trade Bank & Trust Co.

286 A.D. 722, 146 N.Y.S.2d 570
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 29, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 286 A.D. 722 (Commercial Trading Co. v. Trade Bank & Trust Co.) 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
Commercial Trading Co. v. Trade Bank & Trust Co., 286 A.D. 722, 146 N.Y.S.2d 570 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

Breitel, J. P.

This is an action on three checks by the drawer against the drawee bank, for payments made on the checks and charged to the drawer’s account. The drawer contends that the payments and charges were improperly made because the named payee, a corporation, never properly indorsed the checks, and the proceeds were diverted by an officer of the payee.

[724]*724After a nonjury trial, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff drawer. Defendant, the drawee bank, appeals. The third-party defendant, an intermediate collecting bank impleaded by the drawee bank, in turn appeals from the judgment over in favor of the drawee bank.

The case involves two questions. The first is the nature and extent of liability of the intermediate collecting bank and that of the drawee bank. The next question is whether the drawer of a check may recover from the drawee bank on a claim of payment with notice of possible wrongful diversion of the check or its proceeds, without proving the actual diversion to its detriment.

At the trial, the evidence established that plaintiff, Commercial Trading Co., in a loan transaction, drew three checks on defendant bank, payable to the Kelly Rubber Company, the borrower. One W. F. Kelly, president and general manager of the payee, then indorsed two of the checks ‘1 The Kelly Rubber Co. per W. F. Kelly,” followed by W. F. Kelly,” individually, and deposited them in his personal account with the State Bank Company of Massillon, Ohio, which bank was also the depositary for the Kelly Rubber Company. The same course was followed with respect to the third check, except that it contained the word Pres.” following the clause per W. F. Kelly.” The State Bank Company then indorsed the checks and had them forwarded to the Federal Reserve Bank, the third-party defendant, for collection in New York. Subsequently, they were presented and paid by defendant, the drawee bank.

Plaintiff, apparently after it did not receive payment of its loan (evidenced by the checks) from the Kelly Rubber Company, instituted an action in Ohio against the rubber company and W. F. Kelly. The record, however, does not indicate the basis of the action. All that was put in evidence was an Ohio judgment in favor of plaintiff against W. F. Kelly and dismissing the complaint against the Kelly Rubber Company.

Plaintiff then instituted this action to recover the face amount of the checks less the sum paid by W. F. Kelly, alleging payment by defendant drawee bank with notice of the ‘ ‘ unauthorized and forged ” indorsements of W. F. Kelly. The drawee bank then impleaded the Federal Reserve Bank, the intermediate collecting bank. The plaintiff drawer recovered judgment against the drawee bank and the latter recovered judgment on its claim over against the intermediate collecting bank. These judgments should be reversed, for the reasons to be discussed. But, a new trial is required, because there is some indication that W. F. [725]*725Kelly may have, in fact, wrongfully diverted the checks to plaintiff drawer’s detriment and if that he established, since the drawee bank had notice of such possible diversion, its liability can be fixed.

Initially it must be noted that the record did not disclose what the Ohio law is with respect to the liability of the State Bank Company in Massillon, nor have counsel briefed the issues that would arise therefrom. Indeed, this record does not reveal why plaintiff Commercial Trading Company, the drawer, has been or is unable to assert its claim for the balance of the loan that it made to the Kelly Rubber Company. We can only surmise that the Kelly Rubber Company has successfully disputed or can successfully dispute that the loan was in fact made to the Kelly Rubber Company. But, on the other hand, it then becomes difficult to understand how the Commercial Trading Company, the plaintiff here, was able to recover part payment of the loan, as is alleged in the complaint.

The foregoing considerations may be important in determining the nature and extent of the liability of the intermediate collecting bank, the Federal Reserve Bank. These are material, too, in determining the nature and extent of liability of the Trade Bank and Trust Company in New York, the drawee bank. Assuming that notice and the obligation which might flow from such notice of possible diversion would not be imposed on the Ohio bank under Ohio law, it does not necessarily follow that the drawee bank would be exculpated. The drawee bank was authorized to make payments chargeable to the drawer’s-account only upon checks which were issued and indorsed' in accordance with the instructions of the drawer. Under the New York rule and section 95 of the Negotiable Instruments Law, a bank is not protected merely because an indorsement is not condemnable as forged or unauthorized under section 42, thus preventing the passage of title. Even if an indorsement is sufficient to pass title, if the bank knows of extrinsic facts or is put on notice, by reason of individual indorsement by a corporate officer and deposit to his personal account of a corporate instrument, that there has been a diversion, the bank may be liable. (Negotiable Instruments Law, §§ 94, 95.) That stems from the nature of the contract between the drawer and the drawee. If the drawer’s check is presented to the drawee bank with indorsements or lack of indorsements which are sufficient under New York law to give, notice of diversion, and as a consequence of which the drawer suffers a loss, the drawee bank may be liable.

[726]*726The first question then which should be considered is whether the checks presented at the drawee bank for payment were in such form as to give notice of possible diversion and, therefore, possible loss to the drawer in pursuing its claim, if any, against the Kelly Rubber Company.

As pointed out earlier, if the payee’s indorsement was forged or the indorsement was made wholly without authority of the payee, then, under section 42 of the Negotiable Instruments Law, the indorsement is ineffective to pass title. A drawee bank which pays on such an instrument bearing such an indorsement is liable to the drawer. (Shipman v. Bank of State of N. Y., 126 N. Y. 318.) But, in the instant case, there is no question of a forged or unauthorized indorsement. W. F. Kelly clearly had authority to indorse the payee corporation’s name to the checks in the form in which he did. Nor is it disputed by the parties that W. F. Kelly had such authority. But, although W. F. Kelly, as president, had sufficient authority to pass title to the instrument, he did not, in absence of evidence to that effect, have authority to appropriate the check or its proceeds for his own purposes. (Wagner Trading Co. v. Battery Park Nat. Bank, 228 N. Y. 37; Campbell Trucking Corp. v. Public Nat. Bank & Trust Co., 201 Misc. 745.) Accordingly, a bank which accepts a check payable to a corporation indorsed by the president of the corporation, in the corporate name, and deposited in his personal account, is on notice of a possible misappropriation of the proceeds. (Wagner Trading Co. v. Battery Park Nat. Bank, supra.)

Thus, the drawee bank, the Trade Bank and Trust Company in New York, under the circumstances of this case, had notice of a possible diversion. This notice arose from two facts. The first was that the corporate indorsement was immediately followed by an individual indorsement.

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Bluebook (online)
286 A.D. 722, 146 N.Y.S.2d 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-trading-co-v-trade-bank-trust-co-nyappdiv-1955.