House-Evans Co. v. Mattoon Transfer and Storage Co.

1954 OK 271, 275 P.2d 268, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 639
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 12, 1954
Docket36169
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1954 OK 271 (House-Evans Co. v. Mattoon Transfer and Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
House-Evans Co. v. Mattoon Transfer and Storage Co., 1954 OK 271, 275 P.2d 268, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 639 (Okla. 1954).

Opinion

*269 WELCH, Justice.

House-Evans Company sued Mattoon Transfer and Storage Company and the First National Bank and Trust Company for the amount of the proceeds of a certain draft collected by the said First National Bank from the drawee bank and credited to the account of the Mattoon Company. Upon motion of the defendant , Mattoon Company it was ordered that Delores Gray-son, Luther Grayson and Bankers Investment Company be made additional parties defendant. The defendant Mattoon Company, by answer, made denial of the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition and averred that plaintiff’s action and claim is barred by laches. By way of cross-petition the said defendant prayed recoupment against Delores Grayson, Luther Grayson and Bankers Investment Company in event any judgment is rendered against the said Mattoon Company. The defendant, First National Bank and Trust Company, in its answer denied certain of the allegations made in the plaintiff’s petition, and averred that plaintiff is guilty of laches. The defendant Bank and Trust Company by way of cross-petition prayed judgment against the Mattoon Company in event of a judgment for plaintiff against said defendant, Bank and Trust Company. No service was obtained upon Delores Grayson and Luther Grayson, and neither made an appearance in the case. The Bankers Investment Company appeared at the trial of the case.

At trial it was shown that the plaintiff repaired a wrecked automobile at the instance of Luther Grayson and that plaintiff awaited an insurance check for payment for its service.

A certain insurance company issued a draft for $283.23 payable through a certain named bank of Wichita, Kansas, and payable to the order of Luther Grayson, Delores Grayson, Bankers Investment Company, and the plaintiff. The face of the draft contains the words “Claim Auto,” and in substance the draft recites that the amount thereof is tendered in payment for loss and damages.

Delores Grayson tendered the said draft, which-then purported to bear the endorse-■ ments of all payees, to the defendant Mat-toon Company. Unknown to the plaintiff payee its ■ name had been endorsed by forgery on the back of the draft. The Graysons were indebted to the said Mat-toon Company for storage of household goods in the amount of $65.13. ..The said Mattoon Company received the draft and paid Delores Grayson the sum of $218.12. Subsequently the dr aft. bearing the stamped-endorsement of the. Mattoon Company and the First National Bank & Trust Company of Tulsa, was paid through the drawee bank, and credited to the account of the, Mattoon Company, in the First National Bank & Trust -Company.

Several months thereafter the plaintiff first learned of the transaction whereby the Mattoon Company had received the draft and collected the proceeds thereof as aforesaid, and several months thereafter the plaintiff filed its suit against the Mattoon Company and the Tulsa, Bank.

The trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiff and against the Mattoon Company, but only for the sum of $65.13.

The plaintiff appeals, and contends the. judgment as rendered is erroneous in that under the evidence the plaintiff was shown entitled to joint judgment against the. defendants, the Mattoon Company and the Tulsa Bank, and for the full amount of the. draft ($283.23). The plaintiff also suggests the defendant Tulsa Bank in turn is entitled to a judgment against the Mattoon Company, as a prior endorser, for the amount of the plaintiff’s judgment as against said defendant bank.

The evidence is not in dispute. The insurance company’s draft, in which Luther Grayson, Delores Grayson, Bankers Investment Company, and the plaintiff, House-Evans Company, are named payees, was received by the Bankers Investment Company, who owned no interest in the draft or the proceeds thereof. The Bankers Investment Company endorsed it and delivered it to the Graysons, other payees, who endorsed it and delivered it to the defendant Mattoon Company. The said company, through the defendant Tulsa -Bank, collected the proceeds; of the draft.-

*270 We think the evidence reasonably establishes the fact that the draft was is-’ sued by the insurance company in payment for services by the- plaintiff im.repair of damages to the Grayson’s automobile, and, accordingly, ¡that the plaintiff was the owner of the draft, and was to have and receive it and the proceeds thereof, and that the payéé plaintiff’s endorsement of the draft was unauthorized and forged.

It is asserted by the defendant Mattoon Company that the plaintiff is without right to a- recovery in that there was no delivery of the draft. _

The draft was delivered by the insurance company upon, delivery to the Bankers Investment Company, a payee named therein. This said payee was entitled to receive-it and hold it for himself and the other. payees, including the plaintiff. See, Hoffman v. First National Bank , of Chicago, 299 Ill.App. 290, 20 N.E.2d 121. The fact that the draft did not reach the hands of the plaintiff payee is immaterial. See, 7 Am.Jur. Banks, § 597, infra.

The. defendant Mattoon Company contends the plaintiff’s cláim against it is barred by laches.

The record reflects that several months elapséd from the date of the draft, which was issued payable to the plaintiff and ' other payees, before the plaintiff learned that it had been So issued and that it had been received by the other payees and that the proceeds of the draft had been collected. Several months elapsed thereafter before this suit was instituted.

“The question of whether a claim is barred by laches must be determined by the facts and circumstances in each case and according to right and justice. Laches’ legal significance is not mere delay but a delay that works a disadvantage to another.” Kirkpatrick v. Baker, 135 Okla. 142, 276 P. 193.

We find no evidence herein that the defendant Mattoon Company suffered any detriment through mere delay of the plaintiff in pressing its claim to the proceeds of the draft.

In 7 Am.Jur. Banks, ■§ 597, it is stated:

■ “Although there are a few scattered cases to the contrary,- the general rule established by nearly all courts is that a bank or other corporation which, or an individual who, has obtained possession óf a check upon an unauthorized or forged indorsement of the payee’s signature, and has collected the amount of the check from the drawee, is liable for the proceeds thereof to the payee or other owner, notwithstanding they have been paid to the person from whom the check ■ was obtained. The theory underlying this rule has been expressed in various ways, all of which may be summed up in the statement that the possession of the check on the forged or unauthorized indorsement is wrongful, and when the money has been collected on the' check, the bank, or other person Or corporation, can be held as for moneys had and received. Generally, the fact that the check in question did not reach the hands of the payee has been held to be immaterial.”"

In Bell-Wayland Co. v. Bank of Sugden, 95 Okl. 67, 218 P. 705, and in May v. City National Bank & Trust Co., Okl., 258 P.2d 945, 947, the rule in this state is stated.as follows:

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1954 OK 271, 275 P.2d 268, 1954 Okla. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/house-evans-co-v-mattoon-transfer-and-storage-co-okla-1954.