Kansas Bankers Surety Co. v. Ford County State Bank

338 P.2d 309, 184 Kan. 529, 75 A.L.R. 2d 600, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 333
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 11, 1959
Docket41,282
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 338 P.2d 309 (Kansas Bankers Surety Co. v. Ford County State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas Bankers Surety Co. v. Ford County State Bank, 338 P.2d 309, 184 Kan. 529, 75 A.L.R. 2d 600, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 333 (kan 1959).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroeder, J.:

This is an action in contract to recover payment made by a drawee bank on a raised (altered) check, otherwise genuine, to the defendant bank, an endorsee holder in due course.

The sole question presented is whether the drawee bank is liable on its payment to the endorsee bank according to the tenor of the instrument as originally drawn or according to the tenor of the instrument as of the time of its payment.

Appeal has been duly taken to this court from a ruling of the trial court sustaining a demurrer to the petition.

The check was in the words and figures as follows:

“Garden City, Kansas Dec. 9 1955 No.......
The Garden National Bank 83-180
1011
Pay to the Order of Clarence Windle $14,000/00
Fourteen Thousand & no/00................. Dollars Loan
D. W. Burnett”

Endorsed on the back of the check:

“ ‘Clarence Windle’
“Pay any Bank or Banker or order Ford County State Bank
All prior indorsement guaranteed
Dec. 9-1955
83-529 Spearvill, Kansas 83-529
J. A. Feist cashier”

The facts alleged in the petition disclose that plaintiff is a bonding company. It paid a loss for which it was liable to the Garden National Bank of Garden City, Kansas, and brings this action as subrogee of that bank. The plaintiff alleges that on or about the 20th day of November, 1955, D. W. Burnett, a depositor in the drawee bank (Garden National Bank) issued his check drawn on said bank in the amount of $90.20 payable to the order of Clarence Windle, and that Windle wrongfully altered that check by *531 changing the date to December 9, 1955, and the amount to $14,000; that this altered check was endorsed by Clarence Windle and presented by him to the defendant, The Ford County State Bank and by it accepted. It was further alleged that the defendant bank “executed its unqualified endorsement on the back of said check and sent it through usual banking channels” where it reached the drawee bank on December 14, 1955. A copy of said check, together with all endorsements thereon, was attached to the petition and made a part thereof.

The plaintiff further alleged that the drawee bank, relying on the endorsements on said check charged the account of D. W. Burnett with the altered amount of $14,000, and paid that amount to the defendant. The plaintiff further alleged that Burnett immediately after receiving his regular monthly statements notified the drawee bank on January 2, 1956, that the check was defective, and on January 3, 1956, the Garden National Bank notified the defendant by telephone that said check was a forgery or had been wrongfully altered; that an examination of said check by the Federal Bureau of Investigation established that said check had been altered, and on May 28, 1956, the plaintiff notified the defendant of that fact; that the defendant “by its endorsement on said check, warranted said instrument to be genuine, when and as it was a spurious instrument and of no validity.”

The plaintiff further alleges that on the 5th day of February, 1956, the Garden National Bank was compelled to reimburse said D. W. Burnett in the sum of $13,909.80 and by reason of the terms of its bond plaintiff was compelled to pay said amount to the Garden National Bank and took from the bank its subrogation receipt which was attached to the petition as an exhibit.

It is conceded by the parties that the plaintiff (appellant) stands before this court in the shoes of the Garden National Bank.

It must be noted at the outset that the plaintiff at no point alleges any facts indicating any legal basis for liability except under the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Act which was enacted into law in Kansas in 1905, and now found in Chapter 52 of the General Statutes.

The Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law (hereafter N. I. L.) was designed to harmonize decisions of courts of last resort in respect to commercial paper, and to give to negotiable instruments a degree of certainty that would be universal in its application in the states enacting it. It is fundamental that the court of no state *532 in which the law is enacted is bound by the construction of the statute by the courts of other states; but courts, with full knowledge of the history of this legislation, and knowing that its chief purpose is as above stated, should upon all questions of construction, where the rule adopted by other states is not plainly erroneous, be disposed to follow the construction given to the act by the courts of the state in which the act has heretofore been adopted and construed. (Cherokee Nat. Bank v. Union Trust Co., 33 Okla. 342, 346, 125 Pac. 464.)

Most courts considering the question concerning the Uniform N. I. L. are in accord that it is a complete codification of the law of commercial instruments governing all transactions it purports to cover. It must therefore be treated as a complete body of law on that subject and controlling in all cases to which it is applicable. (Bank of Italy etc. Assn. v. Symmes, 118 Cal. App. 716, 5 P. 2d 956; Columbian Banking Co. v. Bowen, 134 Wis. 218, 114 N. W. 451; Vander Ploeg v. Van Zuuk, 135 Iowa 350, 112 N. W. 807, 124 Am. St. Rep. 275.)

Parties to a negotiable instrument are presumed to understand that their contractual rights and liabilities will be determined by provisions of the N. I. L. (Citizens Nat. Bank v. Custis, 153 Md. 235, 138 A. 261; and Commercial Credit Co. v. Blanks Motor Co., 174 Ark. 274, 294 S. W. 999.)

It is conceded by the parties that our court has not passed directly upon the question herein presented within the meaning of the N. I. L. It is therefore a case of first impression in this jurisdiction.

An early Kansas case, Bank v. Robbins, 71 Kan. 748, 81 Pac. 487, uses broad language in the syllabus which tends to indicate that the guarantee of an endorser on a check runs in favor of a drawee bank. This case is not in point since it arose prior to the adoption of the N. I. L. in this jurisdiction and for the further reason that it involved a forged endorsement which is clearly covered by the N. I. L.

Section 62 of the N. I. L. (G. S. 1949, 52-603) provides:

“The acceptor, by accepting the instrument, engages that he will pay it according to the tenor of his acceptance, and admits: (1) The existence of the drawer, the genuineness of his signature, and his capacity and authority to draw the instrument; and (2) the existence of the payee and his then capacity to endorse.”

Dean James Ear Ames, in an article in 14 Harv. L. Rev. 241 [1900], commenting upon the effect of the different provisions of the N.

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Bluebook (online)
338 P.2d 309, 184 Kan. 529, 75 A.L.R. 2d 600, 1959 Kan. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-bankers-surety-co-v-ford-county-state-bank-kan-1959.