Ellis Weaving Mills, Inc. v. Citizens & Southern Nat. Bank

91 F. Supp. 943, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2859
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 6, 1950
DocketCiv. 993
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 91 F. Supp. 943 (Ellis Weaving Mills, Inc. v. Citizens & Southern Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis Weaving Mills, Inc. v. Citizens & Southern Nat. Bank, 91 F. Supp. 943, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2859 (southcarolinawd 1950).

Opinion

TIMMERMAN, District Judge.

The Court has for consideration defendant’s motion “for summary judgment in its favor, on the ground that there' is no genuine issue as to any material facts”. The motion is made upon the record, including the pleadings (complaint and answer), request for admissions and the responses thereto, and a certified copy of the complaint and answer in a certain previously instituted action pending in this court between Emily W. Ellis and Ellis Weaving Mills, Inc., as plaintiffs, and Catherine Culbertson, et al., as defendants.

The instant action is brought to recover the sum of $4,129.28 alleged to have been erroneously paid out of funds on deposit in defendant bank to plaintiff’s credit.

The plaintiff is a corporation existing under the laws of the State of New York and is qualified to do business in South Carolina. It was organized in 1946 under the name of Kaye Weaving Mills, Inc., but its name was changed by amendment to its charter on . February IS, 1949 to Ellis Weaving Mills, Inc. The defendant is a national banking corporation engaged in banking business at Spartanburg, South Carolina. The plaintiff, for several years preceding this action, was a depositor with defendant, having its funds on checking account. The defendant paid out of the account of plaintiff the aggregate sum of $4,-129.28 on certain checks listed and described in paragraph 6 of the complaint, which plaintiff claims should not have been honored by the defendant because of forged endorsement.

The checks were drawn on the defendant bank by Catherine Culbertson, who, at the times these checks were issued and cashed, was the President and General Manager of plaintiff and its sole authorized agent to sign checks in plaintiff’s behalf, and had been since its incorporation. The checks were made payable to various existing persons, principally to employees of plaintiff, to whom they were never intended to be delivered, and to whom they were not delivered. Instead Mrs. Culbertson, plaintiff’s chief executive officer, endorsed the names of the ostensible payees on the backs of the checks and either cashed them or caused them to be cashed at the defendant bank or at some convenient mercantile establishment. The funds so received on said checks, as it is claimed by plaintiff, were privately retained by Mrs. Culbertson, its President and General Manager, or otherwise disposed of by her.

The plaintiff was incorporated with an authorized capital stock of 20,0 shares of non par value, 99 shares of which were issued' to Catherine Culbertson, plaintiff’s *945 President and General Manager, and 101 shares to Emily W. Ellis, its Treasurer. After the alleged fraudulent withdrawals, Mrs. Culbertson assigned her stock to Emily W. Ellis, and thereafter plaintiff’s name was changed. The plaintiff and Emily W. Ellis then brought the action referred to in the first paragraph hereof, and afterwards this action was brought.

The question fo'r determination is whether or not there is any material issue of fact which should be submitted to a jury. The plaintiff contends that there is; its contention being that there is a question as to the manner in which the checks were presented to the defendant for payment and cashed by it. Plaintiff argues that the checks were not presented by Catherine Culbertson in person to the defendant but by a third party to a bookkeeper of defendant, one James Culbertson, a kinsman of Catherine Culbertson, who was not “an officer, cashier or teller of said defendant bank, but merely employed in the bookkeeping department of said Bank”.

The answer to this argument is plaintiff’s admission, for the purposes of this motion, that the “Purported payroll checks payable to various named employees [the same checks which form the basis of this action] were drawn by defendant, Catherine Culbertson, who forged the names of the payees, endorsing the checks, and collecting them through cashing them at various mercantile houses or presenting them to the Bank * * The foregoing is taken from the complaint in the case of Emily W. Ellis and Ellis Weaving Mills, Inc., v. Catherine Culbertson, et al., 1 which was duly verified, and which is the same case referred to in the opening paragraph hereof.

The general rule as to liability of banks for erroneously or negligently cashing checks with forged endorsements is found in American Jurisprudence, Volume 7, Section 590, at page 427, as follows: “As between the drawer of a check and the bank upon which it is drawn, the latter is bound at its peril to determine the genuineness of the indorsements upon which it is paid, it cannot, if the drawer is free from negligence or conduct warranting his estoppel, charge against the drawer’s account a check payable to a named payee or his order and paid upon a forged indorsement. * * *” (Emphasis added)

Here the plaintiff bases its right of recovery upon several alleged wrongful acts of its President and General Manager, which, as is claimed by plaintiff, combined and concurred with an alleged wrongful act of one of defendant’s employees acting without the scope of his employment. Obviously, if plaintiff’s President and General 1 Manager had not issued the checks, as she was authorized by plaintiff to do, and if this authorized agent of plaintiff had not endorsed the names of the ostensible payees of such checks on the backs thereof, and if this same authorized agent of plaintiff had not presented, or caused to be presented, the checks so endorsed to an allegedly unauthorized employee of the defendant bank for payment, the losses claimed by plaintiff would not have occurred. The mere fact that plaintiff’s authorized agent elected to, and did deal with an unauthorized employee of the defendant bank doesn’t change that result. In this situation the plaintiff is estopped to claim anything against the defendant bank by reason of the alleged conduct of its President and General Manager acting, as it appears, in the apparent scope of her authority, if not in the actual scope thereof. Moreover it was not the fact that the funds were withdrawn ' from the bank by plaintiff’s chief executive officer that occasioned loss to plaintiff. The loss occurred, if it did occur, after the withdrawals had been made and by reason of their misapplication or misappropriation by plaintiff’s President and General Manager. The plaintiff could act only through agents in the transaction of its business and in this instance it acted through its chief executive officer who had authority to bind it in its ordinary business dealings with the defendant and others. See Bourne v. Maryland Casualty Co., 185 S.C. 1, 192 S.E. 605, 118 A.L.R. 1.

Suppose the drawer of the checks had been an individual and that what is claimed *946 to have happened in the instant case had happened with him and the bank, Could he have then maintained an action against the bank to recover the amounts paid out by the bank on his own checks bearing endorsements he had placed thereon? Most certainly he could not. And does a corporation doing exactly the same thing, acting as only it can act, through an authorized agent, stand in any better position ? I think not. Certainly the bank was not an insurer of the faithfulness of the authorized agent of the plaintiff.

The case of Glens Falls Indemnity Co. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 F. Supp. 943, 1950 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-weaving-mills-inc-v-citizens-southern-nat-bank-southcarolinawd-1950.