Corporation Audit Co. v. Cafritz

156 F.2d 839, 81 U.S. App. D.C. 196, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3863
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 1946
DocketNo. 9156
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 156 F.2d 839 (Corporation Audit Co. v. Cafritz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corporation Audit Co. v. Cafritz, 156 F.2d 839, 81 U.S. App. D.C. 196, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3863 (D.C. Cir. 1946).

Opinion

PRETTYMAN, Associate Justice.

Appellee Cafritz was plaintiff in a civil action. He is engaged in several business enterprises in the District of Columbia, in which enterprises he is sole or majority stockholder in a number of corporations. Prior to and during 1941, he employed the Corporation Audit Company as the accountant and auditor for himself and some of his corporations. The general manager, and apparently the sole operator of this Audit Company, was one Barney Robins. Robins had possession of the Cafritz books of account, including the checkbooks. The banks sent the monthly statements, together with the cancelled checks, to the Audit Company. Robins had no authority to sign checks drawn upon the accounts.

In early 1941 Cafritz prepared to leave Washington for an extended vacation. At the trial in the present case, he testified that he signed and left with Robins five checks drawn on a Cafritz bank account and payable to corporations which were among the Cafritz enterprises. His purpose was to make available to the corporations funds necessary for their operations during his absence. These checks totaled $36,134.75.

The checks were paid by the bank, four of them in February, 1941, and the fifth in October, 1941.

Some two years later, agents of the Bureau of Internal Revenue called on Cafritz for information about an item in his 1941 return, represented by one of the five checks. Cafritz called for information from Robins, who shortly thereafter left the city and later, in November, 1943, died. The record contains no explanation of the transactions by Robins, and Cafritz testified that he made none.

Examination of the books of the Cafritz corporations by other accountants failed to reveal any entries indicating the receipt of any of the amounts represented by the five checks. The cancelled checks' were sent by the bank to Robins, and the only record in respect to them kept by the bank was the ledger sheet showing payment of five checks in the several amounts of the five checks involved. Witnesses for Robins’ estate testified that no monthly bank statements of the Cafritz accounts and no can-celled checks on those accounts were found by them among Robins’ papers.

Cafritz brought civil action for $36,134.75 against the Corporation Audit Company, Mrs. Rose Robins as the Administratrix of the Estate of Barney Robins and also in her individual capacity as sole possessor of the assets of the liquidated Audit Company, and for $8,400 against the Corporation Finance Company. The District Court, the judge sitting without a jury, entered judgment for Cafritz. The defendants below appealed.

The trial court, over objection, permitted ’Cafritz to testify against Robins’ estate as to his transactions with Robins. The court held that Robins and the Audit Company occupied a fiduciary relationship to Cafritz; that having possession of duly-executed checks drawn upon the Cafritz account, and those checks having been paid by the bank, they were under obligation to account to Cafritz either for the checks or for the receipts therefrom; and that having failed so to account to Cafritz, they were liable.

The first questions presented by the appeal are: (1) Was Cafritz’s testimony as to his transactions with Robins admissible as against Robins’ estate? (2) Was the relationship of Robins and the Audit Company to Cafritz of a fiduciary nature such as to require that, having been in possession of the checks, they were liable for the amount thereof upon failure to account for them? (3) Was the evidence sufficient to [841]*841support judgment for Cafritz? Further points in the case, somewhat aside from the main issues, relate to the Corporation Finance Company, and to Rose Robins individually; we shall discuss those items separately.

Obviously, Cafritz’s whole claim rests upon his own testimony that he executed the five checks and left them with Robins. Counsel for the defendants objected to such testimony each time it was offered, as being inadmissible against Robins’ estate. The ground of the objection is the surviving-witness rule embodied in the District Code.1 The evidence was admitted under the exception contained in Section 14 — 304 of the Code. It was conceded by appellee and held by the court that the evidence would be inadmissible but for the exception. Section 14 — 304 reads: “Where any of the original parties to a contract or transaction which is the subject of investigation are partners or other joint contractors, or jointly entitled or liable, and some of them have died or otherwise become incapable of testifying, any others with whom the contract or transaction was personally made or had, or in whose presence or with whose privity it was made or had, or admissions in relation to the same were made, shall not, nor shall the adverse party, he incompetent to testify because some of the parties or joint contractors, or those jointly entitled or liable, have died or otherwise become incapable of testifying.”

The District Court held that Robins and the Audit Company were jointly-liable parties to the transaction and that the survivorship of the corporation brought Ca-fritz’s testimony within the terms of the exception. We think that this was error.

It is settled2 that the statutory surviving-witness rule3 in the District of Columbia does not apply where transactions are between an individual and a corporation. The reasons are that a corporation itself is incapable of testifying and an agent of the corporation is not a “party” to the transaction. Since the descriptive language of the exception to the rule (Sec. 14 — 304) is the same as that of the rule itself, it necessarily follows that neither a corporation nor its agent can be a surviving “party” to a transaction, within the meaning of the exception. In the case at bar, therefore, the surviving-witness rule does not exclude Cafritz’s testimony against the Audit Company on account of Robins’ death; neither does the exception permit his testimony against Robins’ estate by reason of the survivorship of the corporation. For the purposes of neither the rule nor the exception was the corporation, a “party” which could “become incapable” of testifying.

We are not here concerned with the wisdom or inherent justice of the surviving-witness rule. It has been vigorously attacked by eminent authorities.4 It is, however, as we have said, incorporated in the District of Columbia Code, and the sole function of the court is to apply it as it there appears.

Since the claim against Robins’ estate rests upon Cafritz’s testimony as to his transaction with Robins, the judgment as against the estate must be reversed.

The judgment against the Audit Company rested upon its duty to account for the checks left in the possession of its agent, Robins. We agree with the view of [842]*842the District Court. Modern business has become so complicated, and its affairs so dependent upon proper accounting, that business men and government authorities must necessarily rely upon the character and skill of the accountants and auditors who record transactions and draw the conclusions in figures from the recordings. The evidence in the present case depicts a greater trust than that imposed upon one who only keeps accounts or audits them. The Audit Company kept physical possession of the books in its own office, in a building away from the Cafritz offices. It received and kept the monthly bank statements.

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Bluebook (online)
156 F.2d 839, 81 U.S. App. D.C. 196, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corporation-audit-co-v-cafritz-cadc-1946.