Fine v. Harney County National Bank

182 P.2d 379, 170 P.2d 365, 181 Or. 411
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 182 P.2d 379 (Fine v. Harney County National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fine v. Harney County National Bank, 182 P.2d 379, 170 P.2d 365, 181 Or. 411 (Or. 1945).

Opinions

*416 LUSK, J.

The defendants assign as error the rulings of the court below denying their motions for directed verdicts and for judgments notwithstanding the verdicts. We will direct our attention to these assignments first as they apply to the Bank.

There is evidence of the following facts: In February, 1941, Edward N. Brown was the vice president and assistant cashier of the Harney County National Bank. The plaintiffs J. B. Fine and Ethel Fine are husband and wife, and for a number of years had maintained a joint commercial account with the Bank in which they carried substantial balances. In 1941 J. B. Fine and Brown were engaged in a joint enterprise— a personal, not a bank, transaction — involving the purchase, pasturing and sale of cattle. On February 11 they met at the Bank for the purpose of determining the balance of accounts between them and of effecting a settlement. After some discussion they agreed that the business should be settled by the payment by Brown to Fine of the sum of $7,650.00. Accordingly, Brown drew his personal check in that amount on his account at the bank payable to Fine, and delivered it to the latter, who immediately endorsed it and handed it back to Brown. Brown thereupon made out original and duplicate deposit tickets showing the deposit of the *417 endorsed check in the bank, gave the duplicate to Fine, and pushed the original under one of the cashier’s windows.

This occurred after banking hours about four-thirty in the afternoon, but no point is sought to be made of that circumstance.

Brown was an embezzler of the Bank’s funds, and the check he gave was worthless. There is no evidence, however, that Fine knew of his misconduct or of any fact which should excite his suspicion about Brown’s check. On August 6, 1942, after the arrival of a national bank examiner at the Bank to examine into its affairs, Brown committed suicide. The Corporation thereafter, as will more fully appear below, purchased certain assets of the Bank and undertook the liquidation of its affairs.

Sometime in March, 1941, Fine called at the Bank for a statement of his account and received what purported to be such a statement from Brown. This document, which is in evidence, is dated February 17, 1941. The first entry in the balance column shows a balance in the account of $28,573.35 as of January 13. A deposit entry is shown as of February 11 of $7,650.00, and the balance as of February 17 is $37,655.52. The uncontradicted evidence is that the deposit in controversy was never credited to the plaintiff’s account on the books of the Bank; that Brown at no time in 1941 had sufficient funds on deposit in the Bank to cover the check; that it was never charged against his account; and that the false statement was prepared by Brown to deceive Fine.

On the ledger sheet of the Fine account kept by the Bank there appears a deposit entry as of February 28,1941, in the amount of $7,000.00. There is in evidence *418 a deposit slip in the name of J. B. Fine and purporting to show a deposit of $7,000.00 on February 28, 1941, apparently through the medium of a draft in that amount drawn on the First National Bank of Baker. There is no evidence, unless the writing on the deposit slip be considered such, that any such draft was ever issued or paid. It appears in that connection that on February 27 the balance standing to the Fine account on the books of the bank was $3,666.38, and that on February 28 a check for $10,000.00 drawn on the account by Fine, was presented to the bank for payment and was paid. It is a reasonable inference — perhaps the only reasonable one — -that Brown made the false deposit entry of $7,000.00 on the Bank’s ledger in order to prevent the creation of a large overdraft in the Fine account which would lead to the discovery of his manipulation of the books and his embezzlements.

A like fictitious deposit entry on May 3, 1941, in the amount of $749.98 appears on the ledger sheet. Immediately prior to this entry the balance in the account had fallen to $9.25, and on May 5 a check for $700.00, drawn on the account, was paid.

There is also in evidence another purported statement of the Fine account received by Fine from Brown and covering the period from February 21, 1941, to April 14, 1941. On the former date the balance shown by this statement is $30,015.54, and on the latter, $19,305.62. As has been seen, the statement delivered to Fine in March disclosed a balance on February 17 of $37,655.52; the two statements, considered together, thus indicating a reduction in the account between February 17 and February 21 of nearly $7,650.00. As to this Fine testified that he did not withdraw that amount nor any appreciable part of it during that period, and *419 that he did not detect the shortage when looking over his statements. His testimony reveals implicit confidence in the integrity of the Bank and of Brown in particular, and that he paid scant attention to his bank statements and accompanying vouchers. He did not discover the irregularities in the account until after Brown’s death.

It is shown by the testimony of John A. Rummel, the national bank examiner who examined the affairs of the institution, that the manipulation of the Fine account had commenced in 1938, and that it was necessary to go back to a time in that year in order to establish a starting point where the ledger sheets of the Bank and the statements issued to Fine were in balance. Rummel went over the account with Fine, and, as a result, “his statement on the bank’s ledger was credited with something like $23,000.00 or $24,000.00 and settled satisfactorily between Mr. Fine and myself, and I believe to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, with the exception of this $7,650.00.” The witness testified that the corrections in the Fine account were all verified by duplicate deposit tickets which Fine had in his possession with the exception of a deposit ticket for the $7,650.00 item. Upon this point Fine testified that Brown was accustomed to making out his income tax returns for him. For this purpose he would furnish Brown with his bank statements, vouchers and deposit slips; these were found in the Bank by Rummel and returned to him, except the deposit slip for $7,650.00. Nor was Brown’s cheek to Fine for that amount ever discovered.

We deem it unnecessary to determine whether the Bank is concluded by the fictitious deposit entries of $7,000.00 and $749.98 and subsequent withdrawals *420 referred to in the foregoing statement. Under Williams v. Dorrier, 135 Pa. 445, 10 Atl. 1024, which involves similar facts, it wonld seem that the Bank wonld be held estopped to deny want of authority in Brown to place those credits to the depositor’s account. We prefer, however, to place our decision upon another ground.

The general rule applicable to a banking transaction such as that with which we are here concerned is thus stated in 2 Morse on Banks and Banking (6th ed.) 1216, §569:

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Bluebook (online)
182 P.2d 379, 170 P.2d 365, 181 Or. 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fine-v-harney-county-national-bank-or-1945.