Edgecombe Bonded Warehouse Co. v. Security National Bank

4 S.E.2d 863, 216 N.C. 246, 1939 N.C. LEXIS 139
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 11, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 4 S.E.2d 863 (Edgecombe Bonded Warehouse Co. v. Security National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edgecombe Bonded Warehouse Co. v. Security National Bank, 4 S.E.2d 863, 216 N.C. 246, 1939 N.C. LEXIS 139 (N.C. 1939).

Opinion

Barnhill, J.

The court below, as evidenced by its charge, held, as .a matter of law, that the defendant had offered no evidence of any probative force which challenged or put at issue plaintiff’s right of xecovery. In ascertaining the correctness of this conclusion the evidence must be considered in the light most favorable to defendant and it is •entitled to every reasonable intendment thereon and every reasonable inference therefrom, for it is the province of the jury to determine the weight and credibility of the testimony.

On this question the plaintiff contends that the form of the endorsement on the checks was of such nature as to prevent the further negotiation of the checks by anyone other than a bank, banker or trust company, and that the payment by the defendant to a third party not coming within that class renders the bank liable to the plaintiff. On the other hand, the defendant contends that it has offered evidence sufficient to be submitted to the jury tending to show that those who presented 'the cheeks were employees of the plaintiff, impliedly authorized to present them to and obtain cash therefor from the defendant bank; and that the negligent conduct of the plaintiff in the manner in which it handled the checks after the endorsement was such as to place any resulting loss upon it and not upon the defendant.

If there were but one check involved, or if the uncontradicted evidence tended to show that all of the checks were paid to third parties not connected with the plaintiff, nothing else appearing, we would readily concur in the view of the plaintiff.

Our statute provides that an endorsement may be either in blank or special, and it may also be either restricted, or qualified or conditional. C. S., 3014. A special endorsement specifies the person to whom, or to whose order, the instrument.is to be payable; and the endorsement of such endorsee is necessary to the further negotiation of the instrument. C. S., 3015. If payable to the bearer, it is negotiated by delivery; if payable to order, it is negotiated by the endorsement of the holder and completed by delivery. C. S., 3010. For convenience, endorsements might well be put into two general classes: unqualified — in blank; and qualified — all endorsements not in blank.

The requirement that an endorsement shall specify the person to whom, or to whose order, the instrument is payable is necessary to make it a special endorsement is fully met when a particular class is desig *250 nated. Thus, an endorsement to “any bank, banker or trust company” is a sufficient designation of a person to make the endorsement special and to require the endorsement of one witbin tbat class as a prerequisite to the further negotiation of the instrument. State Planters & Trust Co. v. Fifth Third Union Trust Co., 56 Ohio App., 309, 10 N. E. (2nd Ed.), 935; First Nat’l Bank v. Brunke, 289 S. W., 372; Cario Nat’l Bank v. Blanton, 287 S. W., 839; Sands v. Clark, 284 S. W., 902; Behringer v. City Nat’l Bank, 296 S. W., 674. Nothing else appearing, a check endorsed in the manner adopted by the plaintiff in the bands of someone who bad found it upon the street or by a person other than the plaintiff or its agent wo.uld not be negotiable in the bands of such person and be could not pass title thereto. Anyone accepting the same would do so at bis own risk unprotected by the Negotiable Instrument Law. Under these circumstances, by reason of the limitations of the endorsement, neither the person cashing the check nor the bank receiving it could have or acquire any title to the same.

Tbe case here presented is not so simple. Tbe transactions involved extended over a period of eighteen months. Tbat the original endorsement was authorized is admitted. There is evidence tbat checks so endorsed were presented, to the knowledge of the plaintiff, by employees of tbe plaintiff to tbe defendant for discount or payment over tbe counter. Tbe chief clerk, who acted as assistant to tbe secretary-treasurer, during the time these checks were received by tbe plaintiff and long prior thereto, testified tbat she took checks endorsed as here to tbe defendant bank and procured the cash therefor to the end that she might divide tbe proceeds thereof between tbe plaintiff and tbe Bass Bonded Trucks, Inc., which bad a part interest therein, and there is evidence tbat she presented and obtained cash for many of tbe checks in controversy. She testified: “I did not cash any of tbe checks and put the money in my pocket. When I cashed these cheeks at tbe bank I would see Mr. Martin, Mr. Oarstarpben or Mr. Haven (tellers of the defendant bank) and I would tell them why I was cashing tbe checks. To tbe best of my recollection we have also sent tbe colored man (plaintiff’s janitor) there to cash checks. I think Mr. Bass went down and cashed them; I couldn’t say positively. I don’t recall seeing Mr. Bass use but one endorsement stamp when tbe check was owned by both corporations.” J. M. Oarstarpben testified: “Tbe reason I did not require tbe endorsement of tbe person who got tbe money was tbat it bad been tbe custom of tbe warehouse company to bring pay roll checks to the bank and they have also brought these checks along about tbe same time, these checks tbat were cashed.” He identified three of the checks in controversy as having been cashed over tbe counter by him. R. B. Havens, Jr., testified that be bad cashed thirty-two of tbe checks in controversy. He *251 further stated: “I can’t recall each individual check but I do recall on several occasions waiting on Mrs. Fullwood (chief clerk and assistant to Bass) and one check I remember the amount because it was rather odd. One check for $50.00 I cashed for Jaf Gray (the janitor). This was the same colored man spoken of by other witnesses. On several occasions I waited on Miss Whitley (Mrs. Fullwood) and as well as I can remember these checks were drawn on Peoria. I divided these checks so a division could be made between the truck and warehouse, gave her the cash in a form so the division could be made. Miss Whitley asked for it in that manner. She put it up there and asked me to cash it so as to make a division between the two. I can’t recall each item but I recall handling it several times in that way. I can pick out the $50.00 check. I can also pick out, when I waited on Miss Whitley, a check some over $300. After this matter arose I had several conversations with Mr. Bass and he said that he knew that some of the checks had heen cashed for a division and that cashiers’ checks had been issued prior to this in payment of the two accounts for a split check. I have never seen any checks payable to the warehouse company endorsed in any other way than with the endorsement which appears on these checks. The funds of the bank were paid out for each of the thirty-two checks hearing my teller’s number. I remember issuing a cashier’s cheek to Mr. Walston (secretary of the plaintiff who usually made the deposit) on one occasion in order to divide up a check payable to the plaintiff.” Eandolph Martin testified: “I cashed eight of the checks in this action. I remember the circumstances under which one of these checks was cashed, the $268.55 check of Old Mr. Boston drawn on Boston, by Ben Burk, it is a liquor check, it is payable to the warehouse company.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.E.2d 863, 216 N.C. 246, 1939 N.C. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edgecombe-bonded-warehouse-co-v-security-national-bank-nc-1939.