Daphne Smith v. City Bank & Trust Company

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 1, 2019
DocketCA-0018-0664
StatusUnknown

This text of Daphne Smith v. City Bank & Trust Company (Daphne Smith v. City Bank & Trust Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daphne Smith v. City Bank & Trust Company, (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

18-664

DAPHNE SMITH

VERSUS

CITY BANK & TRUST COMPANY

************ APPEAL FROM THE TENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF NATCHITOCHES, NO. 88,767 HONORABLE W. PEYTON CUNNINGHAM, JR., DISTRICT JUDGE AD-HOC

************ SYLVIA R. COOKS JUDGE ************

Court composed of Sylvia R. Cooks, Billy H. Ezell and Candyce G. Perret, Judges.

REVERSED; REMANDED.

Nelson W. Cameron 675 Jordan Street Shreveport, LA (318) 226-0111 Attorney for Appellant, Daphne Smith

Adams and Reese, LLP Elizabeth A. Roussel L. Cole Callihan 701 Poydras Street, Suite 4500 New Orleans, LA 70139 (504) 586-7931 Attorneys for Appellee, City Bank & Trust Company COOKS, Judge.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Daphne Smith (Smith) was employed as a tenured senior teller at City Bank

& Trust Company (City Bank) in Natchitoches, Louisiana in December of 2013. At

that time, she had worked for City Bank for over eleven years without incident.

Smith was scheduled to leave for vacation on December 13, 2013. At the close of

business on that day City Bank employees performed a routine dual audit in

accordance with its policies affecting tellers leaving for vacation. The dual audit of

Smith’s drawer balanced showing cash and transactions totaling $7,026.64. On the

following Monday, City Bank’s balancer audited Smith’s tickets and found Smith’s

drawer was $4,000.00 out of balance. According to the balancer’s report the tickets

in this audit indicated Smith’s drawer should have a balance of $9,026.64 but the

system showed a cash balance of only $5,026.64.

City Bank’s balancer informed Smith’s University Branch Manager, JoAnna

Washington (Washington), of the discrepancies. Washington and the head teller,

Mary Quayhagen (Quayhagen), performed a re-count of the cash in Smith’s drawer

and physically reviewed Smith’s tickets attempting to resolve the discrepancies.

According to the excerpt of Washington’s deposition testimony, she and Quayhagen

found a “transaction that reduced the outage from $4,000 to $2,000” which she says

Smith apparently “failed to account for.” Washington and Quayhagen entered that

transaction back into the system which left the audit $2,000 short. City Bank alleges

this shortfall is the result of a buy-cash transaction reflected on the computer for

which there is no corresponding ticket. City Bank maintains that the absence of this

ticket creates an inference that the money is missing and unaccounted for. It further

alleges that Smith is seen on video using her computer after the dual audit and that

during her time at the computer she deleted a transaction done earlier that day for

which there is a verifiable ticket. Smith asserts this was an honest mistake. City Bank implies that this was done as an attempt to balance Smith’s drawer. City Bank

maintains it is breach of bank protocol for Smith to re-enter the computer system

after the audit and it is a breach of bank protocol for Smith to have a transaction for

which there is no ticket to establish a verifiable trail of the transaction. City Bank

admits there is no evidence that cash is actually missing from the bank but, because

it is unaccounted for, it is presumed missing. Additionally, because Smith, as a

teller, listed a cash transaction for which no ticket was found to verify the transaction

the bank presumed or suspected Smith, through computer fraud, was responsible for

the missing money. Based on these notions City Bank informed local authorities

that it believed Smith was guilty of theft of $2,000 by computer fraud just before

leaving the bank for vacation.

City Bank’s Chief Operating Officer, Brandon McKee (McKee), contacted

the Natchitoches Parish Sheriff’s Office (NPSO) informing them, according to

Detective Carey R. Etheredge’s (Etheredge) deposition testimony, “that he had a

teller that has some money that’s missing. And that she’s gone on vacation. And he

was asking us if we could look into that to see, you know, if we felt the same thing

they felt and that the money was taken fraudulently.” When asked “So he was

asking you to confirm what he was telling you?” Etheredge responded “Right. . . .

Basically he says they felt like [Smith] stole the money.”

Etheredge and his partner were assigned to investigate the complaint. Within

a few days Etheredge agreed that charges should be brought against Smith. He

presented an affidavit to a local judge and obtained an arrest warrant. The District

Attorney’s office was not informed of the investigation and did not participate in the

procuring of the arrest warrant. According to Etheredge’s deposition testimony this

was normal protocol for initiating prosecutions. Following Smith’s arrest, the matter

was turned over to the District Attorney.

2 On the date set for a probable cause hearing the District Attorney dismissed

all charges against Smith. Subsequently, Smith filed suit seeking damages for

malicious prosecution. City Bank filed a motion for summary judgment asserting it

is entitled to summary judgment: “1 Because the NPSO performed an independent

investigation, City Bank did not legally cause [Ms. Smith’s] prosecution; 2 City

Bank did not act with any malice toward [Ms. Smith]; and 3 City Bank had probable

cause to believe that [Ms. Smith] was guilty of wrongdoing.” Additionally, City

Bank asserted in the alternative that Smith lacked evidence of damages. The trial

court granted summary judgment in favor of City Bank, dismissing Smith’s claims

with prejudice. In its ruling from the bench the trial court stated:

In order to sustain a motion for summary judgment the Court is faced with the question of whether or not there is a genuine issue of material fact. I have read all of the exhibits attached to both the motion for summary judgment and the opposition to the motion for summary judgment. They are very well made, they are easy to understand and I find that the City Bank and Trust Company bore no, absolutely no ill will in the investigation and the subsequent filing of criminal charges by the District Attorney towards Daphne Smith. Having read all of the exhibits and having listened to argument this morning I find that the trick word here is the word genuine. I find no genuine issue of material fact.

Smith appeals the granting of summary judgment dismissing her case.

Legal Analysis

Smith asserts three assignments of error:

1) The trial court erred by finding no “ill will” when malicious prosecution does not require such a finding and where presumptions in Plaintiff’s favor placed the burden upon City Bank to show it was free of malice and where Plaintiff produced proof of reckless disregard for Plaintiff’s rights.

2) The trial court did not rule whether there existed probable cause. In the event this court reviews this issue, the summary judgment presumption and evidence show a reasonable inference existed that there was no probable cause to arrest or prosecute Plaintiff Daphne Smith for theft or computer fraud.

3) The trial court did not rule whether there existed summary judgment evidence of causation. In the event this court reviews this issue, Plaintiff shows that City Bank caused the

3 criminal prosecution of Ms. Daphne Smith. City Bank did not merely report suspicious behavior but asserted Ms. Smith committed a crime before any law enforcement investigation began.

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