Halsey v. Merrill, No. Cv90 0307979s (Jan. 31, 1994)

1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 1006
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1994
DocketNo. CV90 0307979S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 1006 (Halsey v. Merrill, No. Cv90 0307979s (Jan. 31, 1994)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halsey v. Merrill, No. Cv90 0307979s (Jan. 31, 1994), 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 1006 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION In his eleven count complaint the plaintiff seeks the recovery of money damages to compensate him for non-payment of a check for $26,250.00 which was payable to the plaintiff. The plaintiff deposited the check to his cash management account with the defendant Merrill, Lynch, Pierce, Fenner Smith, Inc. ("Merrill Lynch"). Merrill Lynch in turn deposited the check to Merrill Lynch's account at the defendant Connecticut National Bank ("CNB"). The check was returned to the plaintiff without it being paid and the drawer was found insolvent before the plaintiff was able to obtain payment of the check. The plaintiff contends that his loss resulted from the negligence of the defendants and their breach of various provisions of the CT Page 1007 Uniform Commercial Code.

Most of the facts are not in dispute. In 1987 the plaintiff, a business executive, resided in Brussels, Belgium, where he worked as treasurer of a corporate affiliate of the Exxon Corporation. In November the plaintiff sold 875 shares of stock in a corporation owned by the Halsey family known as Essex Engineering Company located in Essex, Connecticut. The sale price was $26,250.00 and a check in that amount was forwarded to the plaintiff's father, who lived in New Haven. The plaintiff's father handled the sale on behalf of various members of the Halsey family. After speaking with the plaintiff about how to process the check, the plaintiff's father mailed it to the plaintiff in Brussels.

The uncertified check, which was dated November 4, 1987, was drawn on Barclays Bank in the United Kingdom. The drawer was Fernplan Limited, a corporation with offices in London. The plaintiff did not recall exactly when the check arrived in Brussels, but the check was in his possession on November 23, when he prepared a deposit slip and endorsed the check "For Deposit Only." The plaintiff wanted the check deposited to his cash management account at Merrill Lynch in New Haven. (A Merrill Lynch cash management account is similar to a checking account, but has certain additional features.)

The plaintiff did not recall exactly how he mailed the check to Merrill Lynch. There is no dispute, however, that the check was received at Merrill Lynch in New Haven on Monday, November 30 and deposited on that same day together with other checks to Merrill Lynch's account at Connecticut National Bank. The plaintiff received a receipt for the deposit from Merrill Lynch.

One fact which is very much in dispute is when CNB returned the check to Merrill Lynch. Because the check was drawn on a foreign bank although made out for U.S. currency, the check could not be deposited to Merrill Lynch's account in the same manner as a cash item and it had to be returned. CNB contends that it returned the check to Merrill Lynch on December 3. However, the next Merrill Lynch record concerning the check is dated December 16, when Merrill Lynch debited the plaintiff's account because of the return of the check. Merrill Lynch then mailed the check back to the plaintiff in Brussels together with a form noting that it was being returned because it was drawn on CT Page 1008 a foreign bank.

The plaintiff was away from Brussels on vacation from January 1 to January 10, 1988. The plaintiff testified that when he returned on January 10 or during the week thereafter, he received the check and the return notice from Merrill Lynch. He also received a letter dated January 5 and addressed to him care of his father in New Haven. The letter was from K.R. Gamwells, Secretary of U.K. Video in England, apparently a related company to Fernplan, and informed Halsey that because the check for $26,250.00 was issued two months earlier and had not been cashed, a stop payment order had been placed against the check. The plaintiff then unsuccessfully made attempts to obtain a wire transfer for the funds. Ultimately he hired an attorney to pursue the matter. However, after making some effort at collection, the attorney informed the plaintiff that Fernplan Limited had gone out of business and was insolvent.

In an effort to make the complex commercial and international factual background of this case fit some cognizable cause of action, the plaintiff sets forth his claim against Merrill Lynch and CNB in an eleven count complaint. Many of the claims were not sustained by the evidence at trial; for example, plaintiff's claim that Merrill Lynch had a practice of having a customer's account representative telephone the customer with regard to significant changes in the customer's cash management account, such as the debit to the plaintiff's account after the Fernplan check was returned unpaid by CNB. Other claims of the plaintiff were apparently abandoned; for example, plaintiff's claim that both Merrill Lynch and CNB breached their duty of good faith to the plaintiff. This claim was not briefed by the plaintiff in his extensive post-trial memorandum nor was it supported by any evidence at trial. With respect to Merrill Lynch, however, the plaintiff did sustain the allegations of the First Count of the complaint.

In this count the plaintiff alleges that Merrill Lynch is a collecting bank within the meaning of the Uniform Commercial Code and that it breached its duty of ordinary care under Section 4-202 (1) of the Code in various respects. Merrill Lynch disputes that it was acting as a collecting bank in this transaction and further denies any failure to use ordinary care.

There is little question that Merrill Lynch is a "bank" within the meaning of Conn. Gen. Stat. 42a-1-201. Merrill CT Page 1009 Lynch has been found in other cases to be a bank in accord with the UCC definition. Asian International, Ltd. v. Merrill, Lynch, Pierce, Fenner Smith, Inc., 435 So.2d 1058 (La.App. 1983). Other stock brokerage firms which accept deposits and allow withdrawals in the regular cause of business have also been found to be banks within the meaning of the UCC. Lichtenstein v. Kidder, Peabody and Co., Inc., 727 F. Sup. 975 (W.D.Pa. 1989). The court finds that Merrill Lynch acted as a "collecting bank" in the incident in question because it was "handling an item for collection" and it was not the payor bank. Conn. Gen. Stat. 42a-4-105 (5).

The plaintiff contends that Merrill Lynch failed to use ordinary care in the following respects: (a) it accepted the plaintiff's check and credited his account when it knew or should have known that CNB would not process the check; (b) it failed to return the check to the plaintiff immediately after receiving it, (c) it failed to send notice of dishonor by the midnight deadline set forth in Conn. Gen. Stat. 42a-4-202 (2); (d) it failed to notify the plaintiff that CNB had returned the check until January, 1988; (e) it failed to present the check to Barclays Bank of New York N.A.; and (f) it failed to present the check to a bank other than CNB. The evidence sustained the first of these allegations: that when it accepted the plaintiff's check and credited his account, Merrill Lynch knew or should have known that CNB would not process the check in the manner in which it was deposited.

On November 30, 1987 Merrill Lynch deposited the plaintiff's check at CNB's office in New Haven as part of a bulk deposit, a deposit of twenty-two different items. Merrill Lynch's account at CNB was a simple deposit account and all items to be deposited are supposed to be cash items. The Fernplan check, like all items drawn on a bank outside the United States, was not a cash item.

The Merrill Lynch cashier who prepared the check for deposit recognized that it was drawn on a foreign bank.

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Bluebook (online)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halsey-v-merrill-no-cv90-0307979s-jan-31-1994-connsuperct-1994.