Knobley Mountain Orchard Co. v. Peoples Bank of Keyser

129 S.E. 474, 99 W. Va. 438, 48 A.L.R. 459, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 166
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 8, 1925
Docket5145
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 474 (Knobley Mountain Orchard Co. v. Peoples Bank of Keyser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knobley Mountain Orchard Co. v. Peoples Bank of Keyser, 129 S.E. 474, 99 W. Va. 438, 48 A.L.R. 459, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 166 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Hatcher, Judge:

For several years, T. D. Leps was treasurer of tbe plaintiff and at the same time cashier of the defendant. During the year 1919, to offset shortages amounting to $2,300.00 in his own and his brother’s accounts with the bank, he charged the account to the plaintiff on the ledger of the Bank with that amount in items of $1,000.00, $1,000.00, and $300.00 respectively. He posted the passbook of the plaintiff both in that year and in 1920, but did not enter thereon these three charges ¿gainst it. Sometime in 1920, Leps, without depositing any money, entered credits on the account of the plaintiff on the ledger, which offset the charges aforesaid.

In January of 1921, the plaintiff’s passbook, as made up by Leps, showed to its credit on deposit in the Bank, the sum of $2,554.56. About that time, the defendant made an investigation of Leps, in which it discovered among his private papers in a private bos under lock and key, three checks in his handwriting drawn in the name of the plaintiff, one for $300.00 payable to cash, one for $1,009.00 payable to the Bank, and one for $1,000.00 payable to J. E. Leps, who was the brother of T. D. Leps. These checks were stamped “Paid,” but bore no endorsement, except that on the back of the one to J. E. Leps was “Cr. A-e J. E. Leps” in the handwriting of T. D. Leps. Thereupon, the Bank re-entered upon its ledger charges against the plaintiff for the several sums expressed by these cheeks, and refused payment to the plaintiff of the $2,300.00 which they aggregate.

In 1923, the plaintiff gave notice of motion for judgment against the defendant for $3,133.51. This amount was predicated on the $2,554.56 shown to be due plaintiff by its passbook in 1922, and on the result of some intermediate transactions between then and the date of the suit. The plaintiff admitted that the Bank had given it credit for $633.51 in another transaction, so the real amount in controversy in this, action is $2,500.00. The case was tried by the circuit court of' *440 Mineral County in lieu of a jury, and a judgment found for the defendant. The case is here on error.

Two items are included in the $2,500.00 claimed by the plaintiff. One of $2,300.00 is involved in the Leps defalcation. The other, of $200.00 is presumably a balance claimed on the deposits of the plaintiff made prior to 1922.

The position of the plaintiff in regard to the $2,300.00 is that this amount was stolen from the defendant by its cashier, that “under the facts and circumstances of this case, knowledge of the cashier was the knowledge of the Bank — and the Bank is responsible to this plaintiff for the misappropriation of the funds of the bank, represented by the three checks.” The plaintiff admits that there is a conflict in the decisions upon the question of notice where a corporation official occupies a dual capacity, such as Leps did. It cites Lowndes v. Bank, 82 Conn 8, 72 Atl. 150, as a leading case,favoring its contention.

The claim of the defendant is that the $2,300.00 was stolen from the plamtiff by its treasiwer. Its brief states:

“The three checks making up this $2,300 were issued by Leps, who as treasurer, admittedly had the authority to issue them back in the year 1919; the Bank paid them when presented for payment, just as it paid other checks issued by Leps both before and after that time. '* * * After they were paid, the Bank evidently delivered them to Leps as plaintiff’s treasurer. * * * These checks were regularly charged against plaintiff on the Bank’s books, and no one in any way connected with the Bank other than Leps is shown to have had any knowledge that they had been issued for any improper purpose. ’ ’

The defendant relies on the rule that a corporation is not ordinarily chargeable with the information of an officer, which it was to his interest to conceal from the corporation, and refers among other authorities to Bank v. Aler, 92 W. Va. 313, School District v. DeWeese, 100 Fed. 507, Hilliard v. Lyons, 180 Fed. 685, and Brookhouse v. Publishing Co., 73 N. H. 368, 2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 994.

*441 A concise statement of the rule favoring the contention of the Bank is expressed in paragraph 675, Pomeroy’s Eq. Juris. In a note, however, Mr. Pomeroy questions the application of this rule to the case of a corporation acting through a single official. The doubt he raises is confirmed by the decisions collected in an annotation to Brookhouse v. Publishing Co., supra.

“There is, however, good authority, if not the weight of authority, in favor of a qualification of .the foregoing exception so as to exclude therefrom, and therefore to bring within the general rule which charges the principal with knowledge possessed by the agent, cases where the officer, though he acts for himself or for a third person, is the sole representative of the corporation in the transaction in question. None of the cases above cited expressly denies, and few of them are necessarily inconsistent with, the exception of such qualification to the exception; and some of them e. g., English-American Loan, & T. Co. v. Hiers, National Bank v. Feeney, and Commercial Bank v. Burgwyn —expressly admit the qualification. By reason of such qualification the application of the exception was denied in Brobston v. Penniman, 97 Ga. 527, 25 S. E. 350, holding that a bank was chargeable with knowledge of its president and cashier, that the proceeds of the note of a firm, of which they were members, were to be used for their private purposes, and not for the purposes of the firm, they having represented the bank in making 'the loan and taking the note. So, in Morris v. Georgia Loan Sav. & Bkg. Co. 109 Ga. 12 46 L. R. A. 506, 34 S. E. 378, where the cashier of a bank, as an idividual, had an interest in a promissory note which he knew was given without consideration, and, as cashier, discounted the note without reference to, or consultation with, any other officer of the bank, it was held that the bank was not a bona fide purchaser of the note, without notice. The case of English-American Loan & T. Co. v. Hiers, supra, was distinguished from the last two eases upon the ground that the person whose knowledge was sought to be charged to the bank was merely a director, and had no active partiei- *442 pation in the management of the bank’s affairs. In Black Hills Nat. Bank v. Kellogg, 4 S. D. 312, 56 N. W. 1071, it was held that the knowledge of the cashier of a bank as to defenses against a promissory note made to him in his individual capacity, and by him transferred to the bank, was chargeable to the bank, it appearing that he transacted the business in behalf of the bank. The case of National Bank v. Feeney, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 474, 99 W. Va. 438, 48 A.L.R. 459, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knobley-mountain-orchard-co-v-peoples-bank-of-keyser-wva-1925.