Marston Enterprises, Inc. v. Seattle-First National Bank

789 P.2d 784, 57 Wash. App. 662, 1990 Wash. App. LEXIS 151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 23, 1990
DocketNo. 23914-7-I
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 789 P.2d 784 (Marston Enterprises, Inc. v. Seattle-First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marston Enterprises, Inc. v. Seattle-First National Bank, 789 P.2d 784, 57 Wash. App. 662, 1990 Wash. App. LEXIS 151 (Wash. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Scholfield, J.

Marston Enterprises, Inc. (hereinafter Marston), appeals from a partial summary judgment entered in favor of Seattle-First National Bank (Sea-First). Marston contends that Sea-First unlawfully paid three checks on unauthorized endorsements, that it breached its [663]*663warranty of good title, and that Sea-First is collaterally estopped from relitigating its liability for the three checks. We disagree and affirm the summary judgment.

Facts

Clifford Marston is president of Marston Enterprises, Inc., which is in the business of operating service stations. James Liddell was president of JHL & Associates, Inc., which was in the business of investment counseling. Mar-ston met Liddell when Liddell purchased gasoline at one of his service stations and when Liddell and Marston attended a Kiwanis luncheon.

In March 1987, Liddell persuaded Marston and his wife to invest in Fidelity, a company that Liddell said he represented. The Marstons issued a check for $15,000 dated March 14, 1987, which was payable to Sea-First. The check was drawn on the Marston account at the Sea-First Houghton branch. Liddell had told Marston that the check needed to be exchanged for cashier's checks which would be sent to Fidelity. Marston accompanied Liddell to the downtown Bellevue branch of Sea-First. The teller asked for identification from Marston and Liddell. By deposition Marston later testified that he did not really see the need for his presence. At some point, Liddell went to another counter to give information about the cashier's checks, but Marston did not go with him. Instead, Marston walked around the bank and talked to people he knew. Marston understood that Liddell was going to purchase two cashier's checks for $7,500 each to be sent to Fidelity. Liddell gave the teller instructions for the cashier's checks. Three cashier's checks were made to the order of "JHL & Associates, Trust." Marston returned to the counter briefly because the cashier requested a service fee for preparing the checks. The checks were put in an envelope. Marston then accompanied Liddell to a Federal Express office, where Liddell was supposed to mail the checks. Marston did not see the name of the addressee, nor did he ask to see the checks.

[664]*664Liddell endorsed the checks to different individuals as part of a fraudulent Ponzi1 scheme and did not invest the proceeds with Fidelity as the Marstons intended. Sea-First paid all three checks. One of the three checks was endorsed "JHL & Associates-Pay to the order of David Erickson". The second check had the endorsement "JHL & Associates-Pay to the order of Louise Erickson". The third check was endorsed "JHL & Associates, Trust for further credit to 15-502-693". Liddell pleaded guilty to first degree theft of the proceeds of the three cashier's checks.

Marston filed a complaint for money damages against Sea-First. It alleged five causes of action: (1) that Sea-First breached its obligation of due care and good faith in handling, the cashier's checks; (2) that Sea-First's refusal to reimburse Marston was an unfair, deceptive business practice; (3) that by paying the cashier's checks on a forged endorsement, Sea-First is liable for conversion; (4) that Sea-First breached the warranties set forth in RCW 62A.3-417 and RCW 62A.4-207; (5) that Sea-First breached its duty to plaintiff to act in a commercially reasonable manner by paying cashier's checks which were endorsed by individuals rather than the payee, JHL & Associates, Trust. Sea-First's answer asserts that it acted in a commercially reasonable manner, that Sea-First is exempt from the Consumer Protection Act, and that Marston's loss was caused by its own negligence.

Marston moved for summary judgment on the issue of Sea-First's liability for paying the three cashier's checks. It contended that Sea-First was collaterally estopped to litigate its liability because of a superior court judgment and that Sea-First wrongfully paid the cashier's checks. Mar-ston claimed Liddell had no authority to endorse checks on behalf of the trust since the trust was nonexistent; [665]*665therefore, Sea-First was liable to its customer on breach of duty and breach of warranty grounds. Sea-First made a cross motion for summary judgment on the basis that Clifford Marston had designated Liddell as his agent in preparing the cashier's checks and that Sea-First exercised due care in paying the checks. Sea-First also disputed application of collateral estoppel.

Application of Collateral Estoppel

Marston contends that Sea-First's liability for paying the three cashier's checks has already been determined in a previous superior court case. Haberlach v. Seattle-First National Bank, King County cause 87-2-11821-5 (Nov. 13, 1987). Although the injured party in both cases was an unwilling participant in Liddell's Ponzi scheme, we find the factual differences in the two cases prevent application of the doctrine of collateral estoppel.

The major factual difference concerns the level of participation by the investor. In Haberlach, the investor issued a check for $15,000 drawn on Sea-First and made payable to JHL & Associates Trust. Liddell took the check to Sea-First, endorsed it with JHL & Associates and his own name, and received two cashier's checks to be made payable to two third parties. Because of irregularities on the face of the check and because the bank violated its own rules by issuing the cashier's checks rather than putting the personal check through for collection, the arbitrator found lack of care by Sea-First and awarded $15,000 to the investor which, by stipulation, was reduced to judgment. In the instant case, thé investor accompanied Liddell to the bank for the express purpose of purchasing cashier's checks and allowed Liddell to name the amounts and the payees of these checks. Also, the record does not contain a showing of Sea-First's failure to follow its own rules. The issue of Sea-First's liability for paying the three cashier's checks involved in this case was not decided in Haberlach, and Marston is not entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.

[666]*666Were the Endorsements by Liddell Unauthorized?

Marston contends that Sea-First is liable because it paid the cashier's checks on unauthorized endorsements. It contends that the endorsements were unauthorized because the payee, JHL & Associates, Trust, was nonexistent. Sea-First claims that the use of the comma and the word "Trust" on the cashier's checks amounted to a description and did not convert the payee on the checks from JHL & Associates to a nonexistent entity.

As a general rule, an unauthorized endorsement is wholly inoperative to pass title or to authorize payment of a check.

[A] drawee bank may not debit its customer's account when it pays a check over a forged indorsement. This is because the underlying relationship between a bank and its depositor is the contractual one of debtor and creditor, implicit in which is the understanding that the bank will pay out its customer's funds only in accordance with the latter's instructions.

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789 P.2d 784, 57 Wash. App. 662, 1990 Wash. App. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marston-enterprises-inc-v-seattle-first-national-bank-washctapp-1990.