Florida National Bank at St. Petersburg v. Geer

96 So. 2d 409
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 10, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 96 So. 2d 409 (Florida National Bank at St. Petersburg v. Geer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Florida National Bank at St. Petersburg v. Geer, 96 So. 2d 409 (Fla. 1957).

Opinion

96 So.2d 409 (1957)

The FLORIDA NATIONAL BANK AT ST. PETERSBURG (Florida), a National Banking Corporation, Appellant,
v.
L.J. GEER, Appellee.

Supreme Court of Florida.

July 10, 1957.

Ed W. Harris and Harris & Wing, St. Petersburg, for appellant.

Merle E. Rudy, St. Petersburg, for appellee.

O'CONNELL, Justice.

The appellant, The Florida National Bank at St. Petersburg, hereinafter referred to as the bank, was defendant below and the appellee, L.J. Geer, hereinafter referred to as Geer, was the plaintiff.

After a portion of the bank's answer was stricken by the court a summary final decree was awarded Geer requiring the bank to restore to the account of Geer with the bank the sum of $1,000. That sum had previously *410 been removed from Geer's account by the honoring of a check which was not endorsed by the payee named therein. The bank appeals the order striking a portion of its answer and the summary final decree.

The record shows that Geer made a check in the amount of $1,000 payable to the order of N.C. Baughman drawn on the bank. The check was endorsed, not by the payee N.C. Baughman, but by C.N. Baughman, son of N.C. Baughman. C.N. Baughman cashed the check at the Union Trust Company in St. Petersburg and that bank presented the check for payment to the defendant bank. The bank paid the Union Trust Company, removing $1,000 from Geer's account.

Geer filed a complaint in chancery charging the bank with wrongfully and unlawfully removing the sum from his account in that the defendant paid without proper endorsement a check drawn on his account. Geer also alleged that N.C. Baughman and C.N. Baughman are father and son; that in his business as a general contractor Geer had done business for years with the Baughmans who were plastering contractors doing business under the name of "N.C. Baughman & Son"; and that when the son, C.N. Baughman, obtained the proceeds of the check he diverted them to his own use and failed to pay for plastering materials "used under his subcontract with the plaintiff" for which materials Geer was subsequently compelled to pay, in the sum of $1,010.65. He alleged that C.N. Baughman was insolvent.

The bank filed its answer, motion to dismiss, and cross-claim. In its answer it admitted it had cashed the check without the endorsement of the named payee but denied that Geer suffered any damages. It alleged it was informed and believed that the particular work for which payment was received by C.N. Baughman was work subcontracted for by Geer with C.N. Baughman individually; that Geer erroneously and through his own fault made the check payable to N.C. Baughman; and that the check actually belonged to C.N. Baughman and that he was authorized to get the proceeds thereof. The bank then alleged that if the check had been made payable to C.N. Baughman the proceeds thereof would have been used just as they had been used and that therefore Geer suffered no damage by the check having been improperly drawn and endorsed by C.N. Baughman.

The bank moved that Geer's action be dismissed for the reason, among others, that the complaint showed that if there were any irregularity in the endorsement it was due to the fault of Geer, who made the check payable to the wrong party, and that the right party received the money to which he was entitled.

The bank filed a cross-claim against the Union Trust Company, N.C. Baughman and C.N. Baughman. N.C. Baughman filed an answer thereto, stating that he had no interest in the litigation or in the $1,000 check or the proceeds thereof and that he had sold his interest in the business to his son who was the rightful owner of the check.

Geer moved to strike from the answer of the bank the portion thereof which set up the defense that the proceeds of the check actually belonged to C.N. Baughman, the person who endorsed and received the proceeds of the check, that the check had been erroneously made to N.C. Baughman, and that Geer had suffered no damage by the bank having cashed the check without the endorsement of N.C. Baughman.

After hearing argument, the court entered its order denying the bank's motion to dismiss Geer's complaint and granting the motion to strike the above mentioned portion of the bank's answer.

Geer moved for summary decree without supporting affidavits and the court entered a summary final decree wherein the bank was ordered to restore to the account of Geer the sum of $1,000, "which sum had previously been removed from said account *411 by honoring a check which was not endorsed by the payee named therein."

The bank contends that it incurs no liability for payment of a depositor's check, whether improperly endorsed or not endorsed at all, if it can be shown that the proceeds of the check reached the intended payee. It argues that the test in such case is whether the endorsement is made by the person whom the drawer intended to be the payee.

Geer's response to this contention is that it was manifest from the pleadings that he intended N.C. Baughman to receive the proceeds of the check. Geer's complaint does not allege that N.C. Baughman was the one to whom the proceeds of the check were due, in fact he alleges that:

"* * * he (C.N. Baughman) diverted and converted said funds to his own use, and failed to pay for plastering materials used under his (C.N. Baughman's) sub-contract with the plaintiff to an extent greater in amount than the sum thus wrongfully withdrawn, for which materials the plaintiff (Geer) was subsequently compelled to pay. * * *" (Matter in parenthesis supplied by us.)

Geer explains that he made the check payable to the father rather than to the son because he had reason to mistrust the son and doubted his financial stability.

Geer argues also that the bank, at the time it cashed the check in question, had no knowledge of the allegations stricken from its answer by the court, and therefore should not be entitled to prove same to excuse itself from liability.

The bank cites Sec. 674.11(3), F.S.A., which is Sec. 9, The Negotiable Instruments Law, as controlling this case:

"The instrument is payable to bearer:
* * * * * *
"(3) When it is payable to the order of a fictitious or non-existing person, and such fact was known to the person making it so payable * * *."

The application of the above cited statute is dependent upon the definition of the term "Fictitious person" or fictitious payee.

In the case of Johnston v. Exchange Nat. Bank of Tampa, 1942, 152 Fla. 228, 9 So.2d 810, 811, this Court, speaking through Mr. Justice Thomas, approved the definition of the term as found in Soekland v. Storch, 123 Ark. 253, 185 S.W. 262, Ann.Cas. 1918A, 668 as follows:

"`Whenever the name is inserted as payee without any intention that payment shall be made only in conformity therewith, the payee then becomes a fictitious person. In other words, under the rule a "fictitious payee" means a fictitious person, who, though named as payee in the note, has no right to it, or the proceeds of it, because it was not so intended when the note was executed.

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Bluebook (online)
96 So. 2d 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florida-national-bank-at-st-petersburg-v-geer-fla-1957.