Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. First National Bank & Trust Co.

1 N.W.2d 401, 71 N.D. 415, 1941 N.D. LEXIS 182
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1941
DocketFile 6771
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 N.W.2d 401 (Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. First National Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. First National Bank & Trust Co., 1 N.W.2d 401, 71 N.D. 415, 1941 N.D. LEXIS 182 (N.D. 1941).

Opinion

*419 Morris, J.

The complaint in this case sets out ten causes of action each of which is on a check issued by the Investment Corporation' of Fargo payable to the Gulbro Implement & Hardware Company. Six of the checks were drawn upon the Merchants National Bank & Trust Company. Four of them were drawn upon the Dakota National Bank. Both are banking institutions located in the city of Fargo. ' These checks were issued at various times from September 15, 1938 to July 20, 1939. All were cashed by the McVille State Bank within a few days after issuance. The McVille State Bank indorsed each check-in the usual course' of banking practice and forwarded it to the First National Bank, its correspondent in Fargo. The First National Bank indorsed each check and transmitted it for payment through the Fargo Clearing House to the bank upon which it was drawn, being the Dakota National Bank or Merchants National Bank & Trust Company as the case might be. The drawee banks paid the First National for each check which thereupon credited the McVille State Bank with the payment thus received. • "

The Gulbro Implement & Hardware Company was a trade name of A. L. Gulbro. On August 17, 1939, the Investment Corporation, having received a letter from A. L. Gulbro stating that the transactions which resulted in the issuance of the checks were fraudulent and fictitious, made demand upon the drawee banks for a restoration of credit and returned the checks to the banks upon which they were drawn. The drawee banks denied liability but made demand upon the First National Bank as indorser.

The plaintiff, the Fidelity & Casualty Company of New York, had insured the Investment Corporation against certain losses and because of its contract of insurance paid the amounts of these checks less certain salvage. The amount paid to the Merchants National Bank & Trust Company was $1,108.43. The payment to the Dakota National Bank was $937.54. The accounts of the Investment Corporation were credited *420 with these respective amounts. Assignments were taken by the plaintiff from these banks and from the Investment Corporation. In its complaint, the plaintiff asks judgment against the First National . Bank & Trust Company of Fargo for the total amount that was paid to the drawee banks. The McVille State Bank having cashed the checks in the first instance and being a prior indorser intervened in the .-action. Both the defendant and the intervener entered general denials and affirmatively set out that the loss was caused or contributed to by the negligence of the Investment Corporation, assignor of the plaintiff. This suit in substance narroAvs down to an action against the .McVille State Bank, the bank that, cashed and indorsed the checks.

The case AA'as tried to the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment for dismissal of the action. Further facts pertinent to the decision of this controversy are these. During the time involved in this case, A. L. Gulbro was a sole trader who operated chiefly as The Gulbro Implement & Hardware Company although at times he also used the name Gulbro Motor Company. He dealt in hardware, farm implements and automobiles. This business was located in the town of Pekin. This town consisted of about three hundred people and had no bank. For a time, A. L. Gulbro also operated an unincorporated concern known as the Pekin Exchange at which checks could be cashed for the convenience of local residents. The Investment Corporation was a financing company operating through the medium of conditional sales contracts. It started handling contracts for Gulbro in 1937 and continued to do so until the present difficulty came to light. A. L. Gulbro maintained a checking account with the Farmers & Merchants State Bank located at Tolna, North Dakota, about seven miles west of Pekin. He maintained no checking account with the bank at McVille located about nine miles east of Pekin.

A. L. Gulbro employed his son, Elroy, in connection with the operation of his business enterprises in Pekin. On August 30, 1938, the son, Elroy Gulbro, filled out a blank conditional sales contract with wholly fictitious entries describing an oil heater, an oil range and a washing machine as having been purchased from the Gulbro Implement & Plardware Company by one Perry Emauss. He forged the name of the purchaser and the names of witnesses to the contract. He also forged *421 the name of his father to an assignment of this contract to the Investment Corporation. He mailed the contract to the Investment Corporation which issued a check to the Gulbro Implement & Hardware Company on September 15, 1938, and mailed it to that company at Pekin. Elroy Gulbro had access to his father’s mail box at the post office. He intercepted the letter, extracted the check and presented it for payment at the McVille State Bank where he indorsed the check.

“'Gulbro Impl. & Iidwe Company A. L. Gulbro, Owner By: E. O. Gulbro”

He received $270, the amount of the check in cash. The other nine checks involved in this lawsuit were issued by the Investment Corporation upon other fictitious contracts of a similar nature prepared and sent in by Elroy Gulbro. In each instance, he intercepted the checks and cashed them himself or caused them to be cashed for him by innocent parties. He obtained cash on all checks except one. Eor the proceeds of one check he received a draft.

A. L. Gulbro did not discover his son’s fraudulent manipulations until about August 11, 1939, when he immediately advised the Investment Corporation by letter. The relationship of Elroy Gulbro to the various business enterprises of his father is the basis of any de-’ termination of liability of the McVille State Bank. All of the checks bear an indorsement by the son similar to one set out above. Sometimes his name is followed by “mgr.” Both the father and son testified as witnesses for the plaintiff. According to the father, he knew nothing of the transactions in question and, of course, never authorized his son to make the indorsements that appear on the checks. On direct examination he stated that no one inquired about the son’s authority to cash these checks. A. 1. Gulbro’s bookkeeper corroborated most of his testimony. The father testified at considerable length concerning the connection of Elroy with his business. Elroy started working when he was quite small and in later years became active in assisting his father in operating the business. The son made collections and sales. He was an active, intelligent boy and as he became more experienced he was intrusted with more details and authority. The bookkeeper had general charge of all money coming in, the writing of *422 checks and generally making the disbursements necessary in the course-of business. In some instances, Elroy Gulbro was permitted to indorse checks with the name of the Gulbro Implement & Hardware Company by himself and deposit these checks. For a short time he was permitted to draw checks on the bank account in connection with the automobile business.

A. L. Gulbro operated a currency exchange during 1934, 1935 and 1936. . For about a year, Elroy was manager of this exchange. At other times, the bookkeeper acted as manager. The son usually signed and indorsed checks “Pekin Exchange — By: E. O.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 N.W.2d 401, 71 N.D. 415, 1941 N.D. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-casualty-co-v-first-national-bank-trust-co-nd-1941.