Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Citizens & Peoples National Bank

74 Fla. 385
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedNovember 28, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 74 Fla. 385 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Citizens & Peoples National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Citizens & Peoples National Bank, 74 Fla. 385 (Fla. 1917).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

The plaintiff in error sued the defendant in error in the Circuit Court for Escambia County.

The declaration contained two counts. The first count alleged in substance that a freight agent of the plaintiff at Pensacola named W. W. Weekly received from the agent of the Atlantic Compress Company a check on the defendant’s bank for the sum of nine hundred and five dollars payable to the order of the plaintiff, which check had been drawn by Virgin & Carter to pay a debt due [386]*386to the plaintiff by them; that Weekly, now deceased, endorsed the check by writing the initials of the plaintiff and his own name as agent upon the. check and pre-sented the same to the defendant bank for payment; that the bank paid the amount of the check to Weekly and charged the same to the account of Virgin & Carter and returned the check to them; that Weekly was not authorized by the plaintiff to endorse or collect the check and did not pay over to plaintiff the money so collected, nor has the plaintiff received the. same from any other source.

The second count was for money had and received.

The bank demurred to the declaration upon the following grounds:

“1. That the said declaration states no cause of action against this defendant.

“2. That the said declaration sets up no sufficient facts to show any liability upon the part of the defendant.

“3. That the said declaration does not allege that the said W. W. Weekly had no authority to collect the said money.

“á. That the said first count of the declaration does not allege that the said W. W. Weekly had no authority to endorse and, or collect the said checks.

“5. That the said declaration does not allege that the said W. W. Weekly, had no authority to receive money owing to the plaintiff.

“6. That the said count of the declaration alleges nothing more than that the said Weekly received the money and embezzled the same, without denying the authority of Weekly to receive.

“7. There is nothing alleged in the declaration sufficient to show that the transaction in the said first count of the declaration referred to created any privity between [387]*387the plaintiff and this defendant, or created any liability on the part of this defendant to the plaintiff, nor. does it show any such contractual relation between the plaintiff and the defendant as to authorize the plaintiff to maintain an action against the defendant for or on account of the several matters and things in the said first count of the declaration set up.

“8. -That it does not appear from the allegations of the said first count of the declaration but that the said Weekly expended the alleged money for the benefit of the plaintiff.

“9. That the fact, if it be a fact, that the said Weekly did not pay over to the plaintiff the said money in the said first count of the declaration mentioned, does not create any liability on the part of the defendant to the plaintiff.”

The demurrer was sustained, and the plaintiff withdrawing the second count and electing to stand on the first count, a judgment for the defendant was entered, and the plaintiff took a writ of error. The errors assigned are that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer and in entering judgment for the defendant.

The first count of the declaration may be considered as one in trover for the conversion of a check. The check was the property of the plaintiff; it was in the plaintiff’s possession, for Weekly’s possession was the plaintiff’s possession; it was taken by the defendant upon whom it was drawn, and the proceeds paid to a person who had no authority from the plaintiff to receive it; the account of the drawer was charged with the amount paid and the check was returned to the drawer. It was unnecessary to allege a demand by the plaintiff and a refusal by the defendant to return the check, because the allegations of the declaration show a conversion. 1 Archbold’s Nisi [388]*388Prius, 519-553; Robinson v. Hartridge, 13 Fla. 501; Anderson v. Agnew, 38 Fla. 30, 20 South. Rep. 766.

The transaction as set forth in the declaration would support a count for money had and received. The check was the bank’s authority for paying to the plaintiff from the account of Virgin & Carter the amount of money named in the check. The drawer of the check had the necessary funds on deposit, and the bank was solvent. Therefore when the bank took from the funds on hand, or from the funds of Virgin & Carter on deposit, the amount stated in the check, it had in its possession for that instant of time money which it should have paid to the plaintiff; but the bank took the responsibility of saying that a payment to Weekly was a payment to the plaintiff. To hold that the drawer of the check is charged with the responsibility of seeing that the bank pays the check to an authorized agent of the payee after the drawer has delivered the check to the payee is to unsettle all transactions in which checks -are used to pay debts, and introduce confusion worse confounded into the mercantile and business world.

Virgin & Carter according.to the allegations of the declaration paid their debt to the plaintiff. They gave a check to the plaintiff on a solvent bank in which they had ample funds. That the bank was willing to honor the check when presented is shown by the fact that it did pay when presented. Under these circumstances the debt of Virgin & Carter was paid. If shortly after the bank paid the check it had failed, would the loss fall upon Virgin & Carter?

The declaration considered from a common law standpoint is somewhat incomplete or informal, and although it does not contain the rvords of the statutory form, it contains the substance without prolixity. The defend[389]*389ant took up the check and returned it to the drawer without authority from the owner to do so. This was an interference with plaintiff’s property and constitutes a conversion, because when the bank undertook to return the check to the maker it exercised ownership over it. The returned check was used as a voucher or receipt or acquittance of the defendant’s obligation to the drawer. This unauthorized act of ownership deprived the plaintiff of the use and possession of the check.

Lord Ellenborough, C. J., said: “It might be a hardship upon the defendant, but that by law a person is guilty of a conversion who intermeddles with my property and disposes of it; and it is no answer that he acted under authority of another who himself had no authority to dispose of it.” Stephens v. Elwell, 4 M. & S. 259. Trover lies for all personal chattels, bank notes, bills of exchange and other negotiable instruments. 1 Archbold’s Nisi Prius, p. 551.

The question presented by the declaration seems to us to be similar in all respects to that presented in Bristol Knife Co. v. First National Bank of Hartford, 41 Conn. 421, and would even answer the objections raised by the dissenting opinion in that case. The facts were as follows: The Bristol Knife Co. was a corporation; one of its customers named Myers sent to the company a check drawn by Hopper on the Security Bank in payment of a debt. The Bristol Knife Co. endorsed the check to the First National Bank and sent it by a messenger, the brother of the president of the Knife Company, to the First National Bank at Hartford for deposit.

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Bluebook (online)
74 Fla. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-citizens-peoples-national-bank-fla-1917.