Gorshe v. Watersmeet Township School District

106 Mich. App. 290
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 11, 1981
DocketDocket Nos. 45694, 45695
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 106 Mich. App. 290 (Gorshe v. Watersmeet Township School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gorshe v. Watersmeet Township School District, 106 Mich. App. 290 (Mich. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

V. J. Brennan, J.

Defendant appeals as of right from a judgment finding it liable to plaintiffs for damages based upon a breach of fiduciary duty and negligence.

This action was initially brought by two former customers of Computer Payroll and Accounting Systems, Inc. (hereinafter CPAS) against defendant bank. CPAS had previously arranged with plaintiffs, all employers, to perform designated payroll services. CPAS, on behalf of the employers, would calculate and pay the employees’ federal, state, and local withholding taxes, calculate the employees’ net pay, and prepare the net payroll checks. Plaintiffs would then issue checks made payable to CPAS in the amount of the payroll and CPAS’s service fee. Plaintiffs and CPAS would then simultaneously exchange these checks. CPAS maintained its primary general account at defendant bank. The employees’ payroll checks were drawn on this account, and plaintiffs’ corresponding covering checks were likewise deposited in this account. The checks delivered to CPAS from plaintiffs were usually deposited on the same day they were given. Because of the time element, defendant began to encounter some difficulties with the account in the summer of 1975. One problem involved uncollected funds, where a check representing sufficient funding had been deposited but the bank on which it was drawn had not yet paid. Another problem was overdrafting, where the cov[293]*293ering check had not even been deposited but the payroll checks had been issued and were being cashed.

Thereafter began a series of meetings and telephone conversations between defendant bank and CPAS in an effort to resolve the funding of this account.

Subsequently, on December 17, 1975, the national bank examiners instructed the defendant bank that the primary account must be closed. The next day the account was closed, and defendant returned all payroll checks presented from December 17, 1975, forward. In January, 1976, CPAS was forced into involuntary bankruptcy. Soon thereafter, plaintiffs filed the instant complaints alleging defendant bank’s liability predicated on breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, negligence, and fraud and conversion. CPAS, because of the involuntary bankruptcy, was never made a party defendant. The lower court found in favor of plaintiffs as to liability for breach of fiduciary duty and negligence. The defendant appeals as of right from this judgment.

Essentially, only, two issues are before this Court. The first is whether the trial court erred in its finding that defendant bank owed a fiduciary duty to the customers of its depositor, CPAS. The trial court acknowledged that traditional banking laws would protect defendant from such liability. However, it found that the circumstances of the case took it outside of traditional banking laws. Rather, it concluded that the bank had a fiduciary duty toward the plaintiffs. The trial court reasoned that the account was in the nature of a trust and held the defendant bank to a "fiduciary duty”. It opined that the fiduciary duty flowed from such facts as that CPAS was in a new type of business, [294]*294that CPAS’s business necessitated the use of banking channels, that the sole purpose of the account was to furnish a payroll service, and that defendant knew or should have known that numerous separate employees were indirectly putting money into the account via CPAS.

While neither the industry of Counsel nor our own research has resulted in finding any case which deals with the precise issue we are called upon to decide, we are unpersuaded that any of the above facts, either individually or collectively, are sufficient to take the instant case out of the realm of traditional banking laws so as to create a fiduciary duty in favor of CPAS’s customers.

A fiduciary duty arises where there is a fiduciary relationship between the parties. Familiar examples are: trustees to beneficiaries, guardians to wards, attorney to clients, and doctors to patients. The duty arises out of the relation subsisting between two persons of such a character that each must repose trust and confidence in the other and must exercise a corresponding degree of fairness and good faith. Black's Law Dictionary (4th ed), pp 753-754.

In the instant case, there was no relationship whatsoever between the plaintiffs and defendant bank. Defendant bank did not even know the identity of the plaintiffs nor that they were customers of CPAS. While it is true that the defendant bank could have learned the identity of the customers of CPAS, such an investigation would neither have been proper nor required. It is generally no business of a bank to pry into the affairs of depository customers to determine who the customers of the depositor are or to act on behalf of such persons. In the instant case, we find no privity between plaintiffs and defendant bank on which to base a fiduciary relationship.

[295]*295Also, the nature of CPAS’s business and its need for use of banking services does not automatically create a fiduciary duty on the part of defendant bank. Other businesses, such as check cashing companies, savings and loan associations, credit unions, escrow agents, and money order companies, are not so dissimilar as to their nature and need. Yet the courts have not imposed fiduciary duties upon their depository banks.

Nor do any of the facts surrounding this case lead us to conclude that CPAS’s general account with defendant bank possessed any special "trust” qualities. The fact that the money deposited in the account was intended to be used for a specific purpose by CPAS does not make it a trust fund on behalf of defendant bank. The money deposited becomes a trust fund only if it had been deposited with defendant bank on the understanding that it should be set apart for a particular purpose and not commingled with other money of the bank. A trust cannot be implied unless the understanding was that the money deposited for a specific purpose was not to be mingled. Reichert v American State Savings Bank, 264 Mich 366, 368-369; 249 NW 876 (1933), Goodenough v Union Guardian Trust Co, 275 Mich 698, 704; 267 NW 772 (1936). On the evidence in record, there is no showing of either an agreement or an intention of defendant bank or its depositor, CPAS, to set the account up as a trust account. Under Michigan law, the mere fact that some of the checks had "payroll account” printed on them is clearly insufficient to convert the account into a "trust-type” account and to create special duties on the part of defendant bank. Borgess Hospital v Union Industrial Trust & Savings Bank, 265 Mich 156; 251 NW 363 (1933).

While we have found no Michigan cases pre[296]*296cisely on point, Columbia Land Co v Empson, 305 Mich 220; 9 NW2d 452 (1943), is instructive. In Columbia, the Michigan Supreme Court refused to recognize liability on the part of the defendant bank running in favor of plaintiff corporation based upon the malfeasance of the depositor. The Court noted that the bank had no duty toward third parties absent a showing of special tenuating circumstances, viz: fraud, bad faith, connivance, personal benefit or collusion. The Court noted that the bare fact that the depositor itself was a fiduciary did not create any special obligations on the part of the bank for the protection of third parties. The Court cited approvingly the following applicable rule of law:

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Bluebook (online)
106 Mich. App. 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorshe-v-watersmeet-township-school-district-michctapp-1981.