Marine Midland Bank, N.A. v. Price, Miller, Evans & Flowers

441 N.E.2d 1083, 57 N.Y.2d 220, 455 N.Y.S.2d 565, 34 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1207, 1982 N.Y. LEXIS 3698
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 14, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 441 N.E.2d 1083 (Marine Midland Bank, N.A. v. Price, Miller, Evans & Flowers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marine Midland Bank, N.A. v. Price, Miller, Evans & Flowers, 441 N.E.2d 1083, 57 N.Y.2d 220, 455 N.Y.S.2d 565, 34 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1207, 1982 N.Y. LEXIS 3698 (N.Y. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Wachtler, J.

The question on this appeal is whether the plaintiff, Marine Midland Bank can claim the status of a holder in due course of a check which it cashed without indorsement and stamped “credited to the áccount of the payee herein named”, although the payee, who had presented the check, had no account at the bank. By a divided court the Appellate Division held that the bank had properly supplied the missing indorsement pursuant to subdivision (1) of section 4-205 of the Uniform Commercial Code and was otherwise a holder in due course. The defendant appeals on the basis of the dissent claiming primarily that the bank could not supply the missing indorsement because the payee was not a customer of the bank within the meaning of the statute; that if the bank could supply the indorsement it did not supply a proper indorsement, and if the indorsement was effective the bank did not give value because it did not pay consistent with the indorsement.

The facts are not disputed.1 The defendant is a Jamestown law firm which in 1978 and 1979 represented clients in connection with construction contracts to be performed by Leo Proctor Construction Company, Inc., a Texas corporation. Pursuant to the contracts Proctor was to construct four Pizza Hut restaurants in New York, and was to receive progress payments for completed work.

On January 3, 1979 the defendant made a progress payment on behalf of its clients by drawing and delivering two checks totaling $36,906.54. The checks were made [223]*223payable to Proctor as the named payee and had been drawn by the defendant on a trust account it maintained for disbursement of client’s funds at the First National Bank of Jamestown.

On January 4, 1979 a Proctor employee brought these two checks to one of the plaintiff’s branch offices at Jamestown and presented them to the manager with a request that the funds represented by the checks be wire transferred to an account maintained by Proctor at the First National Bank of Bethany in Oklahoma. The checks were not indorsed by Proctor. However, an employee of the plaintiff bank stamped the reverse side of the checks “credited to the account of the payee herein named/Marine Midland Chautauqua National Bank” and then wire transferred the funds to Proctor’s account at the Oklahoma bank. Proctor has never maintained an account with the plaintiff bank.

After the defendant law firm delivered the checks to Proctor it was informed by one of its clients that Proctor was in default on the construction contracts and, at the client’s request, stopped payment on the checks. Thus when the checks reached First National they were stamped “Payment stopped” and were returned to the Oklahoma bank which returned them to the plaintiff.

The plaintiff made a timely demand for payment of the checks by Proctor but was informed that Proctor had filed a petition in bankruptcy. The plaintiff then made a timely demand for payment by the defendant, but the defendant refused to honor the checks. It is conceded that the plaintiff had no knowledge of Proctor’s default on the construction contracts at the time it took the checks.

It is also noted in the agreed statement of facts that the defendant had previously made six progress payments to Proctor commencing in August, 1978. These checks had been accepted by the plaintiff and, at Proctor’s request, the funds were wire transferred to one of Proctor’s accounts in another bank in Oklahoma or Texas. On five occasions the checks were indorsed by Proctor. In the other case the plaintiff had stamped the check as having been credited to Proctor’s account. Every one of these checks had been honored by the defendant.

[224]*224It also appears that the plaintiff had been cashing some of Proctor’s payroll checks at this particular branch in Jamestown. These checks had been drawn on Proctor’s account in either the Oklahoma or the Texas bank, and were presented to the plaintiff by Leo Proctor and Proctor employees. On the first occasion in May of 1978 the plaintiff’s branch manager had called the Texas bank and determined that Proctor’s credit was good. Each check presented by Leo Proctor in person was cashed only after the plaintiff had confirmed that there were sufficient funds in the account at the drawee bank. In one instance plaintiff refused to cash the check after learning that the funds were insufficient. On another occasion, in the summer of 1978, a check presented by a Proctor employee had been returned for insufficient funds after the employee had been permitted to withdraw against the uncollected funds. This check was being held by the plaintiff’s manager on January 3, 1979.

The parties agree that the defendant has a valid defense against Proctor for lack of consideration and thus against the plaintiff, as Proctor’s transferee, unless the plaintiff can qualify as a holder in due course.

Under the Uniform Commercial Code five requirements must be met before a party can obtain the special protections of a holder in due course. The party must be (1) a holder (2) of a negotiable instrument (3) who took it for value (4) in good faith (5) without notice that it is overdue, has been dishonored, or is subject to a defense or claim on the part of another person (Uniform Commercial Code, § 3-302, subd [1]; see, also, White & Summers, Uniform Commercial Code [2d ed], pp 551-552). Although at common law a depositary bank generally could not achieve that status, the Uniform Commercial Code permits it to qualify provided it meets the five general requirements (Hawkland, Depositary Banks as Holders in Due Course, 76 Commercial LJ 124; Marine Midland Bank-New York v Graybar Elec. Co., 41 NY2d 703; Long Is. Nat. Bank v Zawada, 34 AD2d 1016; Uniform Commercial Code, § 3-206, subd [3]).

With respect to the first requirement the code provides that a holder is “a person who is in possession of * * * an [225]*225instrument * * * issued or indorsed to him or to his order or to bearer or in blank” (Uniform Commercial Code, § 1-201, subd [20]). In this case it is conceded that the bank is in possession of the check but also conceded that the bank accepted the check without indorsement. This would generally preclude a person from being a holder, and thus a holder in due course.

However, the bank contends, and a majority of the Appellate Division agreed, that subdivision (1) of section 4-205 of the Uniform Commercial Code excuses its failure to obtain Proctor’s indorsement. The statute provides: “A depositary bank which has taken an item for collection may supply any indorsement of the customer which is necessary to title unless the item contains the words ‘payee’s indorsement required’ or the like”. The stated purpose of the section is “to speed up collections by eliminating any necessity to return to a non-bank depositor any items he may have failed to indorse” (Uniform Commercial Code, § 4-205, Comment 1). The defendant contends that this section is inapplicable here because Proctor has no account at the bank and thus could not qualify as a depositor.

It appears that this section was designed to facilitate the collection process in the relatively common situation where a person having an account at the bank deposits a check without indorsement (see, e.g., Clark, Bank Deposits, Collections and Credit Cards, § 4.3, p 4-26). By its terms, however, the statute is not limited to that situation.

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Bluebook (online)
441 N.E.2d 1083, 57 N.Y.2d 220, 455 N.Y.S.2d 565, 34 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 1207, 1982 N.Y. LEXIS 3698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marine-midland-bank-na-v-price-miller-evans-flowers-ny-1982.