Katz v. Pacific Bank

212 A.D. 601, 209 N.Y.S. 497, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9515
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 1, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 212 A.D. 601 (Katz v. Pacific Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Katz v. Pacific Bank, 212 A.D. 601, 209 N.Y.S. 497, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9515 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Dowling, J.:

This action was brought by the plaintiff, a depositor in the defendant bank, to recover the sum of $10,000 damages claimed by the plaintiff by reason of the return of a check for $750, dated May 7, 1920, drawn by the plaintiff on the defendant and returned by the defendant unpaid, the plaintiff claiming that, at the time when said check was presented at the defendant bank, said plaintiff had sufficient funds on deposit with the defendant to meet said check.

No special damages are alleged or proved.

The amended answer is a general denial of all the allegations of the complaint except the incorporation of the defendant and that the plaintiff was a depositor in the defendant bank at the time in question.

The answer also further sets up in substance that when the said check dated May 7, 1920, for $750, drawn by the plaintiff to the order of Francis & Co., was presented to the defendant for payment, the check was properly refused payment, because there was not sufficient in the account of the plaintiff to justify its payment; that when the check for $750, mentioned in the complaint, drawn by the plaintiff was again presented to the defendant for payment, through inadvertence of the defendant’s clerks, certain checks amounting to $82.64 had been erroneously charged against the plaintiff’s account, so that it appeared that the balance to the credit of the plaintiff at the time of the presentation of this check on the tenth day of May, was only $698.03. The check, therefore, being for $750, was returned marked “ Not sufficient funds,” with the honest belief that there was not sufficiént to the plaintiff’s [603]*603credit in the defendant bank to justify the payment of same. The return of said check was due to inadvertence and mistake on the part of the defendant; that as soon as the error was' discovered, the matter was called to the defendant’s attention and the defendant forthwith rectified same.

Upon the trial it developed that a mistake had occurred twice, as the result of which two of plaintiff’s checks were dishonored. This happened because of a confusion between checks drawn by plaintiff and others drawn by another depositor of the same name. The latter was doing business as the Illinois Radiator Company, though his checks were signed in his individual name. Two of these checks were thus accidentally charged against plaintiff’s account, one for twenty-two dollars and sixty-four cents on April twenty-ninth, the other for sixty dollars on May sixth or seventh. It is claimed by defendant that the error was discovered the latter part of September or the early part of October, 1920, and that plaintiff was then notified that the amount of eighty-two dollars and sixty-four cents represented by these checks had been placed to his credit.

The defendant endeavored to raise an issue as to whether plaintiff had a sufficient sum on deposit to meet the $750 check, even if credited with the two checks. Plaintiff also testified that after the first instance of dishonor (on May 4, 1920) he called at the bank and advised them that he was issuing another check for $750 and it was important for him that this check should go through without trouble and he was advised by the bank official that he had a balance of $772, and referred to a check of $60, the drawing of which plaintiff denied, and it was recognized as a mistake, the amount being chargeable to the other Samuel Katz of the Illinois Radiator Company. This is denied by the bank official. But both issues must be deemed to be settled in favor of plaintiff by the verdict.

We have here a case of a check of plaintiff’s dishonored through a mistake upon the part of the bank, due to the identity of the names of two of its depositors. The learned trial court charged the jury as follows:

It is an obligation resting upon the bank to honor those checks, but, as I say, if it occurs through a mere excusable mistake or accident or error of some kind, then the law says, ‘ Well, the depositor may be injured, but unless he proves specifically how far he has been injured, he may recover only nominal damages,’ six cents, we will say.
This plaintiff assumes the burden of proving more than a mere excusable mistake. He undertakes to prove that this was a [604]*604persistent, obdurate, willful neglect of the bank to honor the check after they had knowledge of an error in the plaintiff’s account by reason of their charging to that account checks drawn by another person of the same name, in the bank.
' Now, we come to what counsel have alluded to as the malice necessary to be shown. As has been correctly stated to you by one of counsel, it is not required that actual malice be shown, that the bank refused to honor the check because of some active purpose to injure the' depositor, because of ill will toward him; that is not what we mean by malice in a case of this kind. •
“ If after notice the bank persistently, obdurately, willfully disregarded the rights of the depositor to have his check honored, then you may find malice sufficient to support a recovery in this case. I repeat, persistent, obdurate, willful disregard of the rights of the plaintiff. That is what he must prove in order to recover substantial damages and he is claiming substantial damages.”

And when the jury returned, after a message that they found for the plaintiff, but could not agree on the amount of damages, the learned court again charged them: “ If it is an excusable mistake, then it is nominal damage. If it is more than that, if it is an obvious, willful disregard of the plaintiff’s rights; I will explain to you what duty a bank owes a depositor. If this thing was brought to the bank’s attention, it was their duty to use all due diligence and due speed in rectifying the error. A depositor has a right to assume, if he has money in the bank, that his check will be honored, and dishonoring checks is something that honest and honorable men don’t like to have happen to them. If you give a check you want it to be as good as cash. If you give your check and it proves to be a bad check, as we would say, because of insufficiency of funds or no funds, it is something that is .of some consequence, and if a bank when you have money there refuses to honor your check it is a wrong for which the bank should be held accountable. Novz what the damage is is entirely for you. Nominal damage applies when it is a mere accidental, excusable mistake or accident. If it was the dereliction of duty that I have mentioned in my main charge, then you get substantial damage, and that means compensatory .damages, damages to compensate the plaintiff for the injury done.”

To this charge there was no exception, and it is, therefore, the law of the case for the purposes of this appeal. But I am unable to find any warrant in the evidence for the contention that this was a repeated, persistent, obdurate, willful neglect of the plaintiff’s rights upon the part of the bank, nor can I find any facts upon which malice can be imputed to it as a matter of law. The implied finding [605]*605of the jury to that effect should be reversed, as without adequate evidence to support it, and the dishonor should be found to be the result of excusable mistake. In such a case nominal damages only are recoverable. The rule as to liability was thus laid down by Judge Cakdozo in Wildenberger v. Ridgewood National Bank (230 N. Y. 425, 427): “ The dishonor of the checks was admittedly a wrong (Citizens’ Nat.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 A.D. 601, 209 N.Y.S. 497, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katz-v-pacific-bank-nyappdiv-1925.