First Nat. Bank of Fort Worth v. Blewett

89 S.W.2d 487
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 1935
DocketNo. 13265.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 89 S.W.2d 487 (First Nat. Bank of Fort Worth v. Blewett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank of Fort Worth v. Blewett, 89 S.W.2d 487 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

MARTIN, Justice.

The statement of the nature and result of this suit as contained in the brief of appellant, not being controverted, in any respect by appellees, is here adopted as a correct statement of the case by this court:

G. E. Blewett and H. G. Stinnett, Jr., alleging that they were copartners doing business in Fort Worth, Tex., under the name of Blewett-Stinnett Grain Company, filed this suit in the Ninety-sixth district court of Tarrant county, Tex., on the 23d day of June, 1934, against the First National Bank of Fort Worth, Tex., Inez S. Jordan, and the Central Surety & Insurance Company, seeking judgment against the defendant Jordan in the sum of $6,-378.86, alleged to have been obtained by the defendant Jordan either on forged checks which were paid through the First National Bank of Fort Worth, Tex., or by embezzlement, and seeking judgment against the First National Bank of Fort Worth, Tex., in the sum of $5,978.86, and likewise seeking judgment against the Central Surety & Insurance Company in the sum of $4,353.86.

In order that the court may understand these various amounts, it should be pointed out here that $6,378.86 was the total sum sued for by plaintiffs, and that the sum of $5,978.86 is the total liability asserted by plaintiffs against the First National Bank; this sum being the total sum sued for less $400 which was not asserted against the First National Bank because the $400 represented two checks of $200 each admittedly indorsed by the plaintiffs but cashed by the defendant Jordan, who kept that sum of money, and is alleged to have embezzled the same. The First National Bank is not intérested in the $400, and no judgment was rendered in the trial court against appellant, First National Bank, for such sum.

All of the forgeries and embezzlements took place between the 1st of May, 1933, and the 20th of November, 1933, and the amounts involved logically fall into two separate divisions of time, or from May 13th to and including August 5, 1933, during which time Inez S. Jordan, although in the employ of plaintiffs, was not covered by a fidelity bond, and during which time she is alleged to have forged checks amounting to $2,025. The second period of time is from August 7 to November 20, 1933, during which time the defendant, Inez S. Jordan, worked for the plaintiffs, appellees herein, under a fidelity bond issued by the Central Surety & Insurance Company, and during which time she is alleged to have forged or embezzled moneys to the extent of $4,353.86, in which sum is included the $400 mentioned herein-'above.

The plaintiffs therefore, while suing only for the total sum of $6,378.86, contended only for the joint liability as against Inez S. Jordan and Central Surety & Insurance Company as to the $400, claimed under joint liability against Jordan and the First National Bank for the defalcations from May 13th to and including August 5th, amounting to $2,025, and claimed the joint and several liability against the First National Bank, Central Surety & Insurance Company, and Inez S. Jordan for $3,953.86 covering the alleged forgeries for the second period of timé from August 7 to November 20, 1933.

Plaintiffs alleged that they opened a bank account with the defendant First National Bank some time prior to 1932, and that each of the partners was authorized to sign checks for the purpose of withdrawing the funds from the account, and that the •relation of bank and depositor continued to exist until about the 20th of November, 1933.

Inez S. Jordan was a bookkeeper, acting in the capacity of both cashier and bookkeeper for the plaintiffs, having begun her employment in 1932 and continued as such until on or about the 20th of November, 1933, and during that time Inez *489 S. Jordan, as the employee of the plaintiffs, had charge of the hooks, records, accounts, made all deposits for the partnership at the bank, generally handling the bank account, and monthly receiving from the bank a bank statement and the returned canceled checks.

The defendant Jordan, although acting in this confidential capacity, was under no bond'to the plaintiffs until August 7, 1933, when the plaintiffs secured a bond with the Central Surety & Insurance Company, and on'the same day authorized the First National Bank of Fort Worth, Tex., to honor her signature on the firm’s checks, although, of course, not authorizing her to sign the partners’ names to the checks.

The plaintiffs allege that the defendant Jordan had falsely and fraudulently represented to the defendant First National Bank that checks in the total sums herein-above pointed out had been signed with the genuine signatures of one of the partners, that the defendant bank had paid .such checks, and that the defendant Jordan had converted the same to her own use and benefit; and by supplemental petition plaintiffs alleged that the officers, agents, and employees of the defendant First National Bank were negligent in paying said checks, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the loss.

Plaintiffs allege that demand was made upon the bank for the sums above mentioned on January 30, 1934, nowhere alleging, however, neither is it anywhere disputed, that they ever made any protest nor outcry against any sums being improperly charged to their bank account, and .never at any time nor in any manner denounced any item charged against plaintiffs’ bank account with defendant prior to January 30, 1934, or at least prior to November 20, 1933.

The defendant First National Bank, appellant herein, joined issue with the plaintiffs on the grounds, and specially pleaded, that on or before the 1st- day of each and every month during the period from the fall of 1932 until November 20, 1933, the defendant bank had delivered to the plaintiffs, or their authorized agent, Inez S. Jordan, at their request and upon the said Jordan’s calling at the bank for such statements, an itemized statement of plaintiffs’ account with the First National Bank showing all charges made against the account and all credits to the account, and all paid checks on each and every month, that, although the forgeries are alleged by the plaintiffs to have commenced on May 13, 1933, and to have continued through each and every month up to and including November 20, 1933, a period of almost seven months, the plaintiffs never at any time made any complaint nor protest as to the items charged against their account, and never at any time denounced any item charged against the account as a forgery when it was the duty of plaintiffs, if there were such forgeries, to have so denounced same, and defendant First National Bank defended therefore upon the theory of negligence of the plaintiffs such as to bar the plaintiffs’ right of recovery, or, in any event, such contributory negligence, which was the direct and proximate cause of the loss, as to bar the plaintiffs’ right of recovery upon the theory of accounts stated, and upon the theory of equitable estoppel; the facts with reference to all of such theories having been fully and specifically pleaded by the defendant First National Bank in its first amended original answer.

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89 S.W.2d 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-fort-worth-v-blewett-texapp-1935.