Los Angeles Investment Co. v. Home Savings Bank of Los Angeles

182 P. 293, 180 Cal. 601, 5 A.L.R. 1193, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 529
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1919
DocketL. A. No. 4898.
StatusPublished
Cited by103 cases

This text of 182 P. 293 (Los Angeles Investment Co. v. Home Savings Bank of Los Angeles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Los Angeles Investment Co. v. Home Savings Bank of Los Angeles, 182 P. 293, 180 Cal. 601, 5 A.L.R. 1193, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 529 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

OLNEY, J.

This is an action to recover $16,009.20, the aggregate of certain checks drawn by the plaintiff upon its deposit account with the defendant bank and paid by the latter on forged indorsements. The defendant had judgment in the court below and the plaintiff appeals.

The material facts are not in dispute, and are these:

The plaintiff is a large concern in Los Angeles, engaged in many lines of the real estate business. Among other activities it acted as a solicitor and broker, of fire insurance, and had a separate department for attending to this class of business. The manager of this department was one F. R. Emory. As might be supposed, the-business of the department required the constant making of disbursements, which were made by check. Emory had no authority to sign checks, and the method of obtaining them was for the insurance department to prepare a demand or requisition for the payment, showing what it was for and to whom it was to be made. This requisition was then transmitted to the accounting department, where it was examined and, if found correct, approved and entered on the plaintiff’s books. A check in accordance with the demand was then prepared and presented with the approved demand to the officers authorized to sign checks. Upon being signed, it was returned to the insurance department for delivery to the party to whom payment was to be made. So far as appears, there would seem to be no substantial difference between the system adopted by the plaintiff for the signing of checks and making of disbursements and those followed by most large concerns.

Beginning with February 17, 1914, and ending September 11,1915, Emory prepared a series of some twenty demands on behalf of his department for checks in payment of ostensible claims against the company which did not in fact exist. Several of the demands gave a purely fictitious name as the name of the party to be paid. In the other cases the name of a person known to Emory was used, but such person had nothing whatever to do with the matter, was utterly ignorant of it, and Emory had no intention of making any payment to him. The demands in some cases appeared to be for return *604 of premiums. In the other and the majority of cases they appeared to be in settlement with an agent for premiums collected by the company.

Checks were signed by the officers of the company in accordance with these demands and returned to Emory for delivery to the ostensible payees. Upon their receipt, Emory indorsed them in the name of the ostensible payees, then indorsed his own name, and secured their payment, in most cases by direct presentation to the defendant, and in other cases through other banks.

In addition to the twenty checks so signed upon false demands, there was one check signed upon a bona fide demand and in favor of a genuine payee, which Emory, instead of delivering, realized upon in similar fashion by forging the payee’s indorsement.

During the period between the first and the last of these checks, the bank sent the usual bank statement with canceled cheeks to the plaintiff every half month, the statement specifying that claims or exceptions must be made within ten days or the account would be considered correct.

[1] The general rule must be conceded that the undertaking of a bank is to pay out the depositor’s money only on the order of the depositor and in accordance with that order. If it pays out money on a check drawn to order, as were the checks in this case, upon a forged indorsement of the payee’s name, it has not paid in accordance with the depositor’s order, and, in the absence of anything further, has no right to charge such payment against the depositor’s account.

To escape from the operation of this elementary rule, the bank advances five defenses:

First, that it was not negligent in paying on the forged indorsements.
■ Second, that the checks were drawn to fictitious payees and were, therefore, in effect, payable to bearer, with the result that the payments to Emory, who was the bearer, were in accord with the terms of the depositor’s order.
Third, that the depositor was guilty of negligence which induced or contributed to the payments and therefore was es-topped from insisting on the responsibility of the bank.
Fourth, that the rendition of the half-monthly statements to the plaintiff and the latter’s failure to object thereto con *605 stituted a stated account between the parties which could not be gone behind.
Fifth, that the plaintiff had not offered to return the checks in question, and this was a condition precedent to its right of recovery.

[2] In regard to the first defense, want of negligence on the part of the bank, it is evident on very slight consideration that it is wholly immaterial whether the bank was negligent or not in paying on the forged indorsements. The obligation of the bank is not merely to use reasonable care to pay on the depositor’s order and in accordance therewith. Its undertaking and obligation are absolute that it will pay only in that manner. If we have the simple case of a payment on a forged indorsement without anything further, it makes no difference how careful the bank was in making payment or how impossible of detection the forgery was. That is a risk which the bank and not the depositor assumes. (3 R. C. L., p. 542; 1 Morse on Banks & Banking, sec. 474; Otis Elevator Co. v. First Nat. Bank, 163 Cal. 31. 38, [41 L. R. A. (N. S.) 529, 124 Pac. 704].)

[3] As to the second defense, it is true that paper drawn to the order of a fictitious payee is payable to bearer, and if the checks here are of that character, the bank was justified in paying them. But it is also true that paper is not considered as drawn to a fictitious payee where the maker did not knoAV it to be so drawn but believed the payee designated to be an existing person. (8 Corpus Juris, 179; Hatton v. Holmes, 97 Cal. 208, [31 Pac. 1131].)

It is also true that the payee named in several of the checks had no existence in the mind of Emory, and that the payees named in all of the others with one exception—that prepared on a bona fide demand—were persons to whom Emory did not intend the checks to come. As to Emory, the payees, with the single exception noted, were all fictitious. The question is, Were they fictitious as to the plaintiff company?

The answer to this question obviously depends upon whether Emory’s intention that the checks be made payable to persons who were not to receive the paper, who were nonexistent so far as the checks were concerned, is attributable to the company. The bank’s counsel in their brief say: “But appellant did intend something when it issued the checks. What was it? It intended that the money be paid to the per *606 son to whom Emory intended it to be paid—and the money was so paid.”

This is the very crux of the matter. But is it true? [4] Plainly it is not.

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Bluebook (online)
182 P. 293, 180 Cal. 601, 5 A.L.R. 1193, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/los-angeles-investment-co-v-home-savings-bank-of-los-angeles-cal-1919.