Faulkner v. Bank of Italy

231 P. 380, 69 Cal. App. 370, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 111
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 23, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 2772.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 231 P. 380 (Faulkner v. Bank of Italy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faulkner v. Bank of Italy, 231 P. 380, 69 Cal. App. 370, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 111 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

Action by plaintiffs for money had and received by the defendant in its savings department and credited to the account of the plaintiffs in the sum of $624.25. The plaintiffs had judgment and from this judgment and also the order of the court denying defendant’s motion to vacate and set aside the same the defendant appeals.

Before signing and filing findings in the above^entitled cause the learned trial court summarized the questions involved in a very clear and succinct statement, from which we quote the following:

“Plaintiffs are husband and wife. November 9th, 1920, they opened a joint savings account with defendant bank. From time to time they deposited their earnings in this account until it aggregated the total sum of $624.25, including interest due. Faulkner for some time was an employee at the Sonoma State Home. In May, 1922, one E. C. Reilly also became an employee of that institution. Faulkner barely knew Reilly. About May 22, 1922, Reilly approached Faulkner saying he had a check he wished to cash at Santa Rosa, and asked Faulkner to take him to Santa Rosa and introduce him to the bank. Faulkner arranged to bring him to Santa Rosa, and presented him to the Bank of Italy, where Faulkner was well known as a customer. On the way driving from Eldridge, Reilly told Faulkner that his check was for 800-odd dollars signed by Wm. B. Boiatano; that he, Reilly, was not acquainted at any bank in this vicinity; that he intended to open up an account in the bank; that he was going away on a vacation trip, that he might be going about from place to place; that he might have other checks to deposit to his account in the joint names of Reilly and Faulkner, so that Faulkner could accommodate him by depositing any future checks which might be sent him.
*373 “Faulkner appeared to be entirely innocent of any fraud upon the bank. There is no evidence that he ever knew Reilly, or his reputation, except as he had known him to be an employee at Eldridge. They went together to the bank. They were waited on by the cashier, Hr. Reeves. Faulkner merely introduced his associate to the bank in the customary way as Mr. Reilly. Reilly did most of the talking. Then Reilly endorsed his check for $872.90 and presented it to the bank, requesting them to open an account for that amount in the joint names of Faulkner and Reilly. This the bank did, presenting the passbook to Reilly. The identification card was signed by both Reilly and Faulkner. Then Reilly filled out a cheek for $650 and presented it to the bank. The check was not taken in the formal way ‘for collection only/ but was cashed and charged against the joint account. Faulkner did not endorse the check with which the account was opened; nor did he have anything to do with drawing or cashing the $650' check. He obtained no cash whatever from this joint account, or from the $650 check cashed. The $872.90 check, with which the account was opened, was forwarded to the Anglo California Trust Co. at San Francisco, upon which it was drawn, for collection, and payment was refused for lack of funds. The check was undoubtedly a fictitious check. Reilly pocketed his $650 and disappeared. ’ ’

The defendant bank thereupon applied the $624.25 standing on its books to the credit of the plaintiffs to payment of the overdraft on the open account of E. C. Reilly and W. J. Faulkner, and plaintiffs prosecuted this action to recover that amount of money from the bank as having been wrongfully and unlawfully applied to recoup the bank for its losses incurred in cashing Reilly’s check for $650. The card referred to by the learned trial court in its opinion above quoted is in words and figures as follows:

“Faulkner W. V. or Reilly E. C. Date May 31, 1922. 1-43.
“All deposits now or hereafter to be made by us or either of us, with the Bank of Italy to the credit of the above account, are and shall be deposited by us and received by said bank upon the agreement that the same be paid to either, *374 or the survivor of us, and that such deposits and any additions thereto made by either of us, after the making thereof , shall become our property as joint tenants, and that the same, together with all dividends thereon, shall be held for the exclusive use of us, and may be paid to either of us during the lifetime of both or to the survivor after the death of one of us, and such payment, and the receipt or acquittance of the one of us to whom such payment is made shall be a valid and sufficient release and discharge of said bank.
“W. J. Faulkner
“Signature
“Eldridge, Cal., References.
“E. C. Reilly
“Signature “References, same.”

The theory upon which the bank acted in transferring the savings deposit of the Faulkners to the Reilly account appears to have been on the assumption that the relationship of debtor and creditor existed between W. J. Faulkner and the bank; that Faulkner was responsible for Reilly’s actions and, in some manner, was guilty of fraud and misrepresentation in introducing Reilly to the 'bank and accepting the position of a joint tenant in and to the Reilly-Faulkner account.

It will be noted that the agreement signed by Faulkner and Reilly and left with the bank authorized either one of the parties named to withdraw from the bank the entire sum 'represented by the account as completely and fully as though I the other party had no interest therein. Nor is there anything in the agreement which authorized either one of the parties to draw any sum of money other than as the same were or should be deposited to the credit of said account. There is nothing in the agreement which authorizes either party to overdraw the account represented by the deposit or which authorized the bank to permit either party to overdraw- the account and charge such overdraft to the other party. There is nothing in the agreement by which either party guaranteed to pay any overdraft to the bank or repay the bank any sum of money whatsoever on account of moneys withdrawn therefrom not represented by deposits previously *375 made. Thus the principle of law applicable to joint tenancy, as stated in 33 C. J. 913, would seem to apply: “As a general rule, an act or contract by one joint tenant respecting the joint property without the authority, or consent of his cotenants cannot bind or prejudicially affect the latter.”

The appellant in this case relies for reversal upon two sentences appearing in the case Popp v. Exchange Bank, 189 Cal. 296, at page 300 [208 Pac. 113, 115], where the court appears to have been considering an overdraft in connection with an account opened in the names of Lenora S. Popp and J. Popp, her husband. “The account was in the names of the plaintiff, Lenora S. Popp, and J. Popp, and was opened with money belonging to plaintiff, by the deposit of checks payable to her. She thinks she never drew any checks against the account, and in any event, not more than one or two; nevertheless, the overdraft was in law as much her indebtedness as that of her husband.” The overdraft was occasioned by checks drawn by the husband.

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Bluebook (online)
231 P. 380, 69 Cal. App. 370, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faulkner-v-bank-of-italy-calctapp-1924.