Couvillon v. Whitney Nat. Bank of New Orleans

51 So. 2d 798, 218 La. 1096, 1951 La. LEXIS 843
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 19, 1951
Docket39747
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 51 So. 2d 798 (Couvillon v. Whitney Nat. Bank of New Orleans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Couvillon v. Whitney Nat. Bank of New Orleans, 51 So. 2d 798, 218 La. 1096, 1951 La. LEXIS 843 (La. 1951).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Justice.

In this suit plaintiff seeks a judgment against the defendant bank in the sum of $3,600 on the facts alleged in his petition, the pertinent of which are as follows:

That he is the sole owner of a real estate business which he operated under the name of “Mid-City Realty”, and that at all times he maintained a checking account in that name with the Carrollton Branch of the defendant, Whitney National Bank of New Orleans, which account always had deposits greater in amount than certain checks later referred to and which, form the basis of his demand.

*1102 That at all times since the opening of the said checking account he was the sole and exclusive person authorized to draw checks against the same and that for the purpose of identification, protection and limitation of authority, as is usual in such relationships, he executed and delivered to the said bank his specimen and true signature on a signature card which was at all times on file with the bank.

That during the period from June 30 through July 19, 1947, there were six checks in varying amounts and totalling $3-,600 without his signature, authority or knowledge, charged by the bank against the said checking account and paid from his funds then on deposit; that each of the said checks bears the signature “Gus J. Couvillon” as drawer but that none of them were written or signed by him and, as far as he is concerned, they are each and all forgeries.

That on or .about July 21, 1947, he called at the office of the Carrollton Branch of the defendant bank at which time the officers called his attention to certain irregularities in his checking account and exhibited to him each of the said six checks which were in their possession, whereupon he denied and protested the signatures thereon and knowledge thereof, all of them having already been honored and paid and charged to his account, ;and that he then timely protested said payment by affidavit as requested by the officers of said bank. That said checks were paid by defendant at its peril and through its own negligence in not timely detecting the forgeries and! notifying him.

In its answer the defendant bank admits those allegations of plaintiff’s petition relative to the checking account he maintained in its Carrollton Branch and the manner in which checks were to be drawn against it but denies all 'allegations regarding the six checks claimed to be forgeries. In the alternative and in the event it should be held that it wrongfully charged plaintiff’s account with checks bearing forged signatures, defendant pleads the following facts in defense:

That on or about April 22, 1947, one Carlo A. Venezia entered into an agreement with Mid-City Realty, through its authorized agent, Walter H. Trahant, Sr., to buy certain property in connection with which he made a deposit of $1,150 and, similarly, on or about May 17, 1947, one Calvin Sensebe entered into an agreement under which he deposited $1,050, both of said deposits having been accepted by the said Trahant and amounted in legal effect, to an acceptance by Gus J. Couvillon the plaintiff, himself. That neither of said sales were ever consummated and it became necessary for Couvillon to refund the deposits. Accordingly, on June 30, 1947 a check in the sum «f $1,150 made payable to Carlo A. Venezia was delivered to him in repayment of his deposit; that said check was cashed by Venezia and the proceeds thereof were therefore applied to the law *1104 ful obligation of the plaintiff. That on July 7, 1947, a check made payable to Calvin Sensebe in the sum of $1,050 was delivered to him, was cashed and in like manner the proceeds were applied to the lawful obligation of Couvillon.

That plaintiff otherwise received the sum of $1,500 from Walter H. Trahant in payment on any loss he may have suffered as a result of the cashing of the checks he claims were forged by the said Trahant and that the restitution thus made is more than ample to cover any additional loss.

In the further alternative defendant pleads with regard to the check in the sum of $1,050 dated July 7, 1947 and made payable to Calvin Sensebe, that the same was paid at plaintiff’s instructions after it had been discovered that payment would overdraw the account, which fact was communicated to him and he is therefore estopped from claiming the amount thereof.

After trial in the Court below there was judgment in favor of plaintiff for the full amount of his demand whereupon defendant appealed.

It is now conceded that the checks were forged and, under the general rule relating to such matters, it would seem that in the absence of any estoppel arising out of the negligence of the plaintiff or of some form of ratification on his part, the bank would be liable. The rule is stated as follows in 9 C.J.S., Banks and Banking, § 356, p. 730: “A bank is liable to its depositor for charging his account with a forged check unless the depositor was con-, tributorily negligent, or is estopped or has ratified the payment”.' In the same section, in commenting further on how far a bank may justify its payments on these grounds, it is stated: “While no degree of care on the part of the bank will excuse it from liability, it may justify the payment of a forged check or order on principles of estoppel, or on the basis of negligent or misleading conduct of the depositor which directly or proximately caused the bank to pay. However, the bank must show due diligence before it can assert the negligence or estoppel of the depositor, and the bank will not be excused by the depositor’s negligence unless it is the proximate cause of the bank’s payment and of the resultant injury to it.”

Applying these principles in the present case we can hardly see how the defendant bank can hope to exonerate itself in view of the facts as they appear.

Despite the fact that the forgeries covered a period of almost three weeks, during which time there were six forged checks presented for payment, none of the forgeries were ever detected until it appeared that plaintiff’s account would be overdrawn and his attention was called to that fact. During that period these checks were in possession of the bank and at no time did the plaintiff see any of them.

It definitely appears that Couvillon did not know of an irregularity in his account until he was informed, in a telephone *1106 conversation with the manager of the bank, that a check in the sum of $1,050 was being presented and that its payment would produce an overdraft of the account. From then on the testimony about dates on which conversations and conferences concerning this check and the overdraft took place is very conflicting and confusing and the bank’s ledger sheets intorduced in connection therewith do not help to clarify the matter in any way. In order to maintain the estoppel urged and by which it claims to have been misled by plaintiff in paying this particular check, the bank had to show that its payment had been authorized by him at a time when he had knowledge or had reason to suspect that it had been forged, and this we do not think it has done. At any rate, that issue involved a question of fact .which the trial judge, by reason of the judgment he rendered, must necessarily have resolved against the defendant and we cannot say that he manifestly erred in doing so.

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Bluebook (online)
51 So. 2d 798, 218 La. 1096, 1951 La. LEXIS 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/couvillon-v-whitney-nat-bank-of-new-orleans-la-1951.