Martin v. First National Bank in St. Louis

219 S.W.2d 312, 358 Mo. 1199, 8 A.L.R. 2d 435, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 576
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 11, 1949
DocketNo. 40858.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 219 S.W.2d 312 (Martin v. First National Bank in St. Louis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. First National Bank in St. Louis, 219 S.W.2d 312, 358 Mo. 1199, 8 A.L.R. 2d 435, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 576 (Mo. 1949).

Opinions

Action to recover the amounts evidenced by three checks drawn on and payable to defendant bank. It is charged that the checks were paid and charged against plaintiffs' account and the proceeds thereof disposed of without plaintiffs' authority or consent. Verdict and judgment were for plaintiffs for $8084.88 (including interest) and defendant has appealed. Error is assigned on the giving and refusal of instructions and the exclusion of evidence.

Plaintiffs are co-trustees of an express trust and, since March 31, 1932, have constituted the Bondholders' Protective Committee representing the holders of bonds issued or assumed by the St. Louis Joint Stock Land Bank of St. Louis. These bonds were deposited with the Committee and certificates of deposit were issued therefor. On April 1, 1932, the Committee appointed and employed William H. Humphrey as secretary, and his employment included the services and facilities of Humphrey, Jacques and Company, a corporation (hereinafter referred to as the corporation), whose business consisted of handling accounts, including the bank accounts of some fifty bondholders protective committees. At that time the corporation had in its employment a bookkeeper named Robert H. Torrence and his duty was "to work on" the books and records of the committees whose accounts the corporation was handling, including the books, records and accounts of plaintiffs. Humphrey was a stockholder *Page 1204 and employee of the corporation and the immediate superior of Torrence. As secretary, a regular salary was paid to Humphrey from 1933 until January 1940, but at his direction all checks for secretarial fees and expenses were made payable directly to the corporation. Torrence worked for the corporation from March 1930 until the latter part of 1939, when the corporation ceased doing business. Thereafter, until about July 24, 1942, Torrence continued to keep the books and records of the plaintiffs at the direction and on behalf of Humphrey.

Plaintiffs had two checking accounts with defendant bank and Torrence handled the making of all deposits in these accounts, kept a record of all the committee's receipts and disbursements, prepared the data for some five dividend distributions and drafted the check forms therefor to some 3000 holders of deposit certificates for stock. He not only transacted all the business of the committee with defendant bank but, throughout the entire period from 1932 to July 1942, he received the monthly statements and cancelled checks of the committee from the defendant bank, examined them and checked the cancelled checks against the monthly statements. No one else gave these matters any attention whatsoever and there were no inquiries, audits, or investigations. During this period Torrence appropriated some $17,000 of plaintiffs' funds to his own use.

Other facts appear from plaintiffs' instruction 1, as follows: ". . . it is admitted that plaintiffs opened and maintained a checking account in defendant bank, which was denominated as a dividend account, subject to be paid out only on checks drawn in the name of Bondholders' Protective Committee . . . signed by William R. Humphrey as Secretary, and countersigned by either William W. Martin or Davis Biggs, then members of said Committee; that it is admitted that on or about February 1, 1941, August 14, 1941, and April 15, 1942, respectively, one R.H. Torrence presented to defendant bank checks, plaintiffs' Exhibit `E', `J' and `H', drawn on said dividend account, bearing the genuine signatures of W.W. Martin and Wm. R. Humphrey on behalf of said Bondholders' Protective Committee as drawers thereof, payable to defendant bank; that it is admitted that defendant bank issued and delivered to said Torrence, cashier's checks equal in amount to the checks so presented to it, payable either to the said Torrence or to the Mutual Bank Trust Company, and charged against plaintiffs' said dividend account the total amount of said checks; that it is admitted the said Torrence thereafter wrongfully appropriated the proceeds thereof to his own use; that it is admitted that on October 22, 1942, plaintiffs made demand upon defendant bank for the payment [315] of the amounts specified in each of said checks . . . that it is admitted that the plaintiffs were not at the times herein mentioned, and are not now, indebted to defendant bank and unless you find from theevidence *Page 1205 that defendant bank had authority emanating from plaintiffs toissue and deliver the aforementioned cashier's checks to the saidTorrence for the said checks presented to defendant bank by thesaid Torrence, your verdict will be for the plaintiff on CountsThree, Four and Five of the Petition; . . ." (Italics ours).

It is admitted that Torrence had no actual authority from the committee to obtain the cashier's checks or to receive the funds evidenced by the checks presented. Plaintiffs owed Torrence nothing and did not authorized the checks to be made payable to the bank, nor otherwise authorized the bank to issue the cashier's checks. Torrence was never an employee of the committee, although on September 6, 1940, the committee paid him for services rendered to Humphrey. Defendant contends only that Torrence did work for the committee, not that he was a regular employee.

The committee had no office and no telephone was listed in its name. The signature cards furnished defendant showed only the address in the Railway Exchange Building where the corporation maintained an office. The books, records and papers of the committee were kept in the corporation office. After the corporation went out of business, Torrence rented the same office and the books, papers and records of the committee remained therein.

No stubs were kept of checks issued on the dividend account, but a record was kept on columnar paper. On account of prior sales and transfers of stock evidenced by the certificates of deposit of stock, it was not unusual for new dividend checks to be required in lieu of some checks issued. Defendant's evidence tended to show that a supply of checks signed in blank by the Chairman of the Committee (Martin) were kept on hand at all times and that Humphrey also signed checks in blank. On one occasion, before leaving for Colorado, Martin had signed some fifteen or twenty such checks in blank and left them with Humphrey. They were placed in the corporation safe, accessible to the employees and in the room where Torrence worked.

No further inquiry was made by Martin as to the disposition of these checks. All checks in question here were signed in blank by both Martin and Humphrey. Torrence filled in three of these checks, made them payable to himself, cashed them at defendant's bank and appropriated the money, as follows: August 3, 1939, $150.00; September 19, 1939, $5,115.00; and November 16, 1940, $4,500.00. At the end of the respective months, Torrence "picked up" the cancelled checks and the statements showing these checks charged against plaintiffs' account, returned them to the corporation office, examined them for Mr. Humphrey and placed them with the other records and papers of the committee. Each of the monthly statements of credits and disbursements to plaintiffs' account showed the following: "Please examine at once. If no error is reported within ten days, the account *Page 1206 will be considered correct. Please report any difference in this statement to the auditor." No complaints or objections were made.

Thereafter, Torrence filled in the blanks on the three checks involved in this suit, as follows: February 1, 1941, $2,318.73; August 14, 1941, $1,611.48; and April 15, 1942, $2,287.42. Each of these checks were made payable to the defendant bank.

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Bluebook (online)
219 S.W.2d 312, 358 Mo. 1199, 8 A.L.R. 2d 435, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-first-national-bank-in-st-louis-mo-1949.