Dziurak v. Chase Manhattan Bank

88 Misc. 2d 641, 388 N.Y.S.2d 496, 20 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 427, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2716
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 Misc. 2d 641 (Dziurak v. Chase Manhattan Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dziurak v. Chase Manhattan Bank, 88 Misc. 2d 641, 388 N.Y.S.2d 496, 20 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 427, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2716 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Salvatore T. DeMatteo, J.

Despite the court’s exhaustive search and the commendable co-operation of counsel, the court, surprisingly, is unable to find a New York reported case like the one at bar.

Plaintiff seeks to recover the sum of $17,000 by reason of defendant’s refusal to honor a "stop payment” order on its cashier’s check.

The parties have waived trial by jury and their right to submit requests for finding of facts which the court finds as follows (CPLR 4213):

Irving A. Cook, Esq., plaintiff’s attorney, and Frank Monaco, defendant bank’s branch manager, testified for the respective parties. (Plaintiff was unable to appear at the trial due to a disabling illness which confined him at the Woodhull Care Center.) Except for the date the "stop order” was given, the evidence does not appear to be in dispute, with much of it in documentary form.

Prior to June 15, 1973, plaintiff (Dziurak), without his own attorney, orally agreed with one Mario Staveris (Staveris) that for $22,000 Dziurak would receive original-issue stock equivalent to a one-third interest in a corporate restaurant of which Staveris was president. The entire proceeds were to be deposited in the corporate account to be used solely for corporate purposes.

[642]*642After having paid Staveris $5,000, Dziurak, on (Friday) June 15, 1973, requested defendant’s branch to remove $17,000 from his savings account of $18,000 therein and to issue an official bank check in said amount to Staveris. Following a conversation with the branch manager relating to the above agreement, Dziurak heeded the manager’s advice to have the bank check payable to Dziurak’s order rather than to Staveris’ order. The check was drawn by the defendant on itself. Dziurak then signed the check in blank and delivered it to Staveris.

Dziurak learned that Staveris violated their agreement by depositing the check to Staveris’ individual savings account in the Green Point Savings Bank. Immediately, and during the afternoon banking hours of June 21, 1973, Dziurak and then Irving Cook, the attorney Dziurak had summoned for help, stated to the branch manager that Staveris had swindled Dziurak and they ordered him to stop payment on the check. The manager conceded the bank check had been received in the morning delivery and as yet had not been paid, but under advice of bank counsel, and expressly for lack of a court order, rejected plaintiffs stop-payment request.

The check shows that it was deposited by Staveris in the Green Point Savings Bank on June 18, 1973, was then forwarded to Chemical Bank for collection, and was received by defendant’s main office official check processing unit from Chemical via the New York Clearing House Exchanges on June 20, 1973. The check was then forwarded to Chase’s branch office, the drawer of the check, which received and paid it to Staveris on June 21, 1973.

Dziurak then sued Staveris and others in this court, alleging fraud. After a plenary trial Dziurak, on November 12, 1973, recovered a judgment against Staveris in the amount of $22,955. No appeal has been taken therefrom and execution thereon was returned wholly unsatisfied on December 24, 1973, after which plaintiff commenced this action.

Against this factual background the issue appears to be: Was the order to defendant by Dziurak to stop payment on its cashier’s check valid?

Defendant contends that the answer to this is in the negative. It relies, inter alia, upon a host of citations wherein judicial discourse is engaged in to create an aura of eternal precedent concerning the nature of a cashier’s check. The instrument in question is continually referred to as the equiv[643]*643alent of cash. It assumes the mere issuance of a check by the drawee bank gives rise to an executed sale of credit, not subject to rescission or countermand (see, e.g., International Firearms Co. v Kingston Trust Co., 6 NY2d 406; Rose Check Cash Serv. v Chemical Bank N. Y. Trust Co., 43 MisC 2d 679; Foreman v Martin, 6 Ill App 3d 599). In Rosenbaum v First Nat. City Bank of N. Y. (13 AD2d 100, 102), a precode case,1 the instrument was defended in the following terms: "The requirements of stability in commerce and banking dictate that the obligations of a bank on its cashier’s checks be not lightly avoided.”

Within that class of citations, the payee is a bona fide retailer, and the check is drawn to his order as a third party. Malphrus v Home Sav. Bank of City of Albany (44 Misc 2d 705) is a case unduly applied by defendant to the one at bar. There, the purchaser gave to the plaintiff, as payee, a teller’s check, drawn by defendant, her savings bank, in part payment for a secondhand automobile. At the purchaser’s request the bank stopped payment.2 Although the bank asserted that, as a "customer”, it had a right to stop payment under section 4-403 of the Uniform Commercial Code, the court granted summary judgment to the payee. Under section 3-802 (subd [1], par [a]) of the Uniform Commercial Code the buyer’s underlying obligation to the plaintiff seller is pro tanto discharged whenever a bank is "drawer, maker or acceptor” of the instrument given in payment without reservation of recourse against the buyer. Therefore, to permit the bank to withhold payment under section 4-403, would leave the seller with no enforceable rights against the underlying obligor (the actual consumer) or anyone else. Since the code is promulgated to protect a genuine transaction involving a quid pro quo between the remitter and payee, the premise of the Malphrus decision that section [644]*6443-802 discharges the remitter, is sound (see, also, Ruskin v Central Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. of Nassau County, 3 UCC Reporting Serv 150 [NY Sup Ct, 1966]).

Defendant then argues that Kaufman v Chase Manhattan Bank (370 F Supp 276) decidedly represents the rule of law in its favor. Kaufman obviously enlarges upon the traits of a cashier’s check into a sweeping generic rule of public policy. It rehashes the timeworn maxim of labeling the cashier’s check as a primary obligation of a bank, equivalent to cash, its issuance constituting acceptance by the issuer. Kaufman reiterates verbatim the maxim of law asserted in National Newark & Essex Bank v Giordano (111 NJ Super 347, 352): "To allow the bank to stop payment on such an instrument would be inconsistent with the representation it makes in issuing the check. Such a rule would undermine the public confidence in the bank and its checks and thereby deprive the cashier’s check of the essential incident which makes it useful. People would no longer be willing to accept it as a substitute for cash if they could not be sure that there would be no difficulty in converting it into cash.”

The defendant adopts the intransigent position that unless Dziurak obtained injunctive relief, he was doomed the moment he gave the check to Staveris, even though Staveris gave no value.

There are some who would not be so inflexible when the holder is not a holder in due course.3

Whereas, the dictum in TPO Inc. v Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. (487 F2d 131, 135) represents a much more valid ap[645]*645proach in characterizing the cashier’s check as one of limited value in the emporium.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Misc. 2d 641, 388 N.Y.S.2d 496, 20 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 427, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dziurak-v-chase-manhattan-bank-nysupct-1976.