Leo G. Wetherill v. Putnam Investments

122 F.3d 554
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 8, 1997
Docket96-2781
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 122 F.3d 554 (Leo G. Wetherill v. Putnam Investments) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leo G. Wetherill v. Putnam Investments, 122 F.3d 554 (8th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.

Leo G. Wetherill and LGW Energy Resources, Inc., appeal from the district court’s 2 order granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissing the complaint. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm.

I.

In August, 1985, Mr. Wetherill (LGW’s president, vice-president, and sole shareholder) opened a corporate cash trust account for LGW with defendant Putnam Investments, Inc. Defendant State Street Bank and Trust *556 Company contracted with Putnam to be the account’s custodian. Mr. Wetherill and LGW authorized State Street to redeem Putnam account shares upon the receipt of a signed check drawn on the Putnam account, and designated Mr. Wetherill as the only person who was allowed to write checks. They also designated P.O. Box 8651 in Kansas City, Missouri (“the Missouri Box”), as the address of record for the account.

LGW subsequently appointed Gary Leitner to the position of corporate secretary. Mr. Leitner prepared tax returns and corporate documents, kept the corporate books, and managed LGW’s various accounts in accordance with Mr. Wetherill’s instructions, much as a corporate treasurer would. Mr. Wetherill instructed Mr. Leitner to deposit LGW’s corporate profits in the Putnam account, but he was not authorized to remove funds from the account; as already indicated, that privilege belonged to Mr. Wetherill alone.

When Mr. Leitner became secretary, Mr. Wetherill gave him all of LGW’s financial records. He also instructed Mr. Leitner to change the corporate address of record for the state of Kansas to Mr. Leitner’s home address in Olathe, Kansas, where Mr. Leitner would be LGW’s registered agent. Sometime between April and December, 1986, the address of record for the Putnam account was changed to P.O. Box 4000 in Olathe, Kansas (“the Kansas Box”). The record strongly indicates that Mr. Leitner made this change and that he did so without Mr. Wetherill’s knowledge. Mr. Wetherill, however, was aware of the existence of the box and of the fact that some corporate mail was received there. The defendants did not notify Mr. Wetherill of the address change and did not confirm with Mr. Wetherill that this change was authorized.

From December, 1986, through January, 1989, State Street cashed checks that Mr. Leitner had fraudulently signed and endorsed in an amount between $275,000 and $300,000. Mr. Leitner signed Mr. Wetherill’s name on the checks and several times added his own name to Mr. Wetherill’s, along with the notation “treasurer.” The defendants neither verified that the signatures were indeed Mr. Wetherill’s nor notified Mr. Wetherill of the withdrawals. Putnam did send LGW monthly and annual account statements that contained this information, as well as statements following each transaction. Putnam also sent monthly, annual, and transactional statements to LGWs broker.

Mr. Wetherill and LGW became suspicious of Mr. Leitner’s activities late in 1992 or early in 1993 and confirmed the nature of those activities in May, 1993. In a letter dated May 11, 1993, Mr. Wetherill’s and LGW’s broker asked Putnam to provide them with any account-related documents in its possession and stated that Mr. Wetherill’s “business has been subjected to embezzlement by a former business associate.” It was not until a subsequent letter, dated November 1, 1994, that Mr. Wetherill and LGW identified the checks at issue, stated that “[t]hese checks were signed and/or endorsed by an unauthorized person,” and asked the defendants to make good on the losses to the Putnam account. When the defendants refused to do so, Mr. Wetherill and LGW sued them, seeking recovery on theories of fraud, negligence, conversion, breach of fiduciary duty, failure to adhere to commercially reasonable standards, and bad faith.

II.

We agree with the district court that Massachusetts law governs this dispute. The Massachusetts version of U.C.C. § 4-406(4) requires a bank customer to report an unauthorized signature on his or her checks to the relevant bank within one year from the time that a bank statement is “made available” to that customer, or the customer “is precluded from asserting against the bank ... [his] unauthorized signature.” A statement is “made available” when a bank “sends” its customer an account statement, U.C.C. § 4-406(1), and under U.C.C. § 1-201(38), one “sends” a statement when one deposits it “in the mail ... properly addressed.” Mr. Wetherill and LGW maintain that the statements here were not “properly addressed” because they were mailed to an address other than the one that Mr. Wetherill agreed to for their receipt. As the court below correctly held, however, “[t]he receipt *557 of any writing or notice within the time at which it would have arrived if properly sent has the effect of a proper sending.” U.C.C. § 1-201(38).

We believe that the record does not reveal any likelihood that the statements would have arrived at and been received at the Missouri Box any sooner than they would have at the Kansas Box, at least not significantly so, partly because they would have been sent by mail in any case and partly because Mr. Leitner lived in Kansas. We thus believe that the district court correctly concluded that “the account statements were actually received by LGW within the time” that they would have been received at the Missouri Box. The statements were therefore properly sent.

Mr. Wetherill and LGW further contend that even if the statements were “properly sent” within the meaning of the statute, the time for giving notice did not begin to run until they discovered or should have discovered Mr. Leitner’s activity. But the time limit in the statute is “not a statute of limitations which might not start to run until the [appellants] knew or should have known of [their employee’s] treachery”; rather, it fixes the time within which the appellants must give notice to the defendants. Jensen v. Essexbank, 396 Mass. 65, 483 N.E.2d 821, 822 (1985). U.C.C. § 4-406(4) establishes a statute of repose under which the time for bringing suit expires one year following the availability of the relevant account statements. See 7 Ronald A. Anderson, Anderson on the Uniform Commercial Code § 4-406:1, Official Code Comment, ¶ 5, at 451, § 4-406:11 at 458 (3d ed.1995).

We believe, moreover, that Mr. Wetherill and LGW would not prevail even if the statute begins to run when a customer should have discovered the forgeries. Mr. Leitner’s illegal activities lasted from December, 1986, through January, 1989. Mr. Wetherill did not discover Mr. Leitner’s fraud until 1992 or 1993. During this entire period, Mr. Wetherill never sought to review the account statements in Mr. Leitner’s possession, never sought to review the statements in his broker’s possession, and never contacted the defendants to ensure that all was as it should be. We think it likely that other records in Mr. Leitner’s possession, such as the corporate tax returns, would also have revealed the fraud had Mr. Wetherill reviewed them even once. The fact that Mr. Leitner did not volunteer the information did not render the information unavailable to Mr. Wetherill and LGW. Rather, their own tardiness in reviewing their financial status rendered the information unavailable. Had Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wetherill v. Putnam Investments
122 F.3d 554 (Eighth Circuit, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 F.3d 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leo-g-wetherill-v-putnam-investments-ca8-1997.