Graham v. Southington Bank & Trust Co.

121 A. 812, 99 Conn. 494, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 118
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 27, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 121 A. 812 (Graham v. Southington Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Southington Bank & Trust Co., 121 A. 812, 99 Conn. 494, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 118 (Colo. 1923).

Opinions

Curtis, J.

The plaintiff is a receiver of a manufacturing corporation which was doing business in Southington, Connecticut. He was appointed in April, *501 1920, and under order of court was continuing the business in Southington. He conducted the business principally through a managing agent, one Warren D. Chase, to whom he gave authority to sign .checks upon the deposit accounts of the receiver in the Merchants National Bank of New Haven, and the defendant bank of Southington. The defendant in May, 1920, was notified of such appointment of Chase and of such authorization as to signing checks.

The plaintiff employed one Herman W. Eyring in the business as auditor and as the head of the accounting department, and notified the defendant bank that Eyring was not authorized to sign checks upon his deposit account.

On July 20th, 1920, the plaintiff, by himself or Chase, drew a check for $50 on the Merchants National Bank, payable to the order of the defendant bank, with intent to deposit it in the plaintiff’s account in the defendant bank, and thereby transfer funds from the custody of the Merchants National Bank to his account in the custody of the defendant bank. He gave the check to Eyring to deposit in the defendant bank, and gave Eyring no other authority as to the check. Eyring did not prepare a deposit slip and deliver the check for deposit to the account of the plaintiff, but intending to defraud, personally indorsed the check and presented it to the defendant bank and represented that the plaintiff had directed him to get cash for the check for pay-roll use. The defendant accepted Eyring’s statement as true, and made no investigation to discover whether Eyring’s representation as to his authority was true in fact, although the business conducted by the plaintiff was in the same .town as the bank and readily accessible. The defendant thereupon gave to Eyring the money represented by the check, and he converted it to his own use.

*502 Subsequently fifty-five other checks dated respectively, from August 1st, 1921, at various .dates in each month until February 3d, 1922, were in like manner drawn-by the plaintiff for deposit in the defendant bank, and given to Eyring to deposit. Eyring by the use of the same fraudulent representation induced the defendant bank to give him cash for these checks, which he converted to his own use. The sum thus secured by Eyring totaled $6,395. The defendant duly presented these checks to the Merchants National Bank and they were paid to the defendant. The plaintiff has demanded the sum so received by the defendant, but the defendant has refused to pay it to the plaintiff.

As far as the legal relations between the parties are concerned, it is immaterial that the defendant paid the money to Eyring before it collected it from the Merchants National Bank. If the bank was legally j ustified in paying the money to Eyring, it could do it by what is called “cashing the checks” at once or by first collecting the money from the Merchants National Bank and then paying it to Eyring. If the plaintiff gave Eyring, either directly or by implication, authority to get cash from the defendant by use of these cheeks for pay-roll or any other purpose, the bank was justified in paying Eyring the money as it did. If, however, the plaintiff did not give Eyring such authority, either expressly or by implication, then the bank, having collected the amount represented by the checks from the Merchants National Bank, is accountable to the plaintiff for it, unless by ratification or estoppel the plaintiff is barred from recovering it.

Eyring had no direct authority to get cash from the bank on the checks in question. It is not claimed that he was a general- agent of the plaintiff, but it is claimed that by the conduct of the plaintiff he had given him apparent authority to get cash of the defendant upon *503 these checks, and further, that the plaintiff had knowledge actual nr imputed that Eyring was securing cash from the bank upon these checks, and because he failed to convey this knowledge to the bank he is equitably estopped to deny Eyring’s authority or the validity of the bank’s payments to Eyring on these checks.

It is claimed that the placing by the plaintiff of these checks, drawn payable to the defendant, in Eyring’s hands, gave him apparent authority to secure cash from the defendant upon them. The question of what authority the mere possession of such checks gives an agent of the drawer in relation to a bank payee, has been treated fully and authoritatively in a case presenting the identical situation. In Sims v. United States Trust Co., 103 N. Y. 472, 9 N. E. 605, the court speaks as follows as to what is legally imported between the drawer and the payee bank when such a check is presented by an agent of the drawer to the bank: “The check upon its face imported the ownership of the moneys represented in it” by the drawer, “and his desire that its custody should be transferred from” the bank holding it to the payee bank. “This did not warrant” the payee bank “in supposing that” the drawer “thereby intended to pay” the face of the check to the agent, or “place him, for any purpose in possession of the fund. If he had so intended, the check would have been made payable” to the order of the agent, “and there would have been no need of the agency” of the payee bank “in the transaction. The use of the bank” as payee of the check indicated the drawer’s intention to lodge the moneys in its custody and place them under its control, and nothing further than this was inferable from the language of the check. The check, by its terms, authorized the payee bank “to withdraw from the” drawee bank “a certain sum for a purpose not disclosed” by the terms of the check, *504 “but fairly inferable from, the nature of the” payee bank’s business, particularly if the drawer was already a depositor of the payee bank. The payee bank “could have refused to receive the deposit, or act as” the drawer’s “agent in transferring the funds from one custodian to another; but having accepted the office of so doing, it was bound to keep” the drawer’s “moneys, until it received his direction to pay them out. The language of the check making the funds payable only upon the order of the” payee bank “imposed upon it the duty of seeing that they [the funds] were not, through its agency, improperly disbursed after it had received them. They could not safely pay out such funds except under the direction of” the drawer of the check, “their lawful owner.” In Bristol Knife Co. v. First Nat. Bank, 41 Conn. 421, 425, in an analogous situation, we have in substance laid down the same legal principles.

It thus appears that checks drawn as the fifty-six checks in question were drawn, are not of the same import as checks drawn to “Bearer” or to “Cash,” nor do such checks clothe the holder or bearer of them with apparent authority to convert them into cash and take the cash into his own custody. Therefore, Eyring in securing money from the defendant bank by asking it, without authority, to pay him the face of these checks, was in effect securing money by mere request.

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Bluebook (online)
121 A. 812, 99 Conn. 494, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-southington-bank-trust-co-conn-1923.