Maryland Casualty Company v. Bank of Charlotte

340 F.2d 550, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 6974
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 5, 1965
Docket9475_1
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 340 F.2d 550 (Maryland Casualty Company v. Bank of Charlotte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Casualty Company v. Bank of Charlotte, 340 F.2d 550, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 6974 (4th Cir. 1965).

Opinion

SOBELOFF, Chief Judge:

An employee of the Southern Investment Co. of Charlotte, North Carolina, swindled her employer out of approximately $18,000.00 and the Maryland Casualty Co., having issued an employee fidelity bond to Southern, reimbursed its assured for this loss. The Surety then sought, as subrogee of Southern, to recover from the Bank of Charlotte on the theory that the Bank’s conduct had made the swindle possible. From a judgment of the District Court denying recovery the Surety appeals.

Jurisdiction is founded upon diversity of citizenship, 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332, and the law of North Carolina is controlling.

In 1955 the Board of Directors of Southern adopted a resolution authorizing any two of its three named officers to engage in certain banking transactions with the defendant Bank. Section 2 of that resolution absolved the Bank from any duty of inquiry that would otherwise arise from the transactions therein described.

In 1958 Southern hired a new corporate secretary, a Miss Ewing. She promptly obtained a blank form like the 1955 resolution and asked Southern’s president and principal stockholder whether she should fill it out and substitute her name for that of her predecessor. Permission was granted. Miss Ewing then added her name as one of the three authorized officers, but instead of providing that any two of the three could initiate the specified transactions, she filled in the form to read that any one of the three could do so. She then signed the resolution as Secretary, reciting that it had been adopted by the Board of Directors on the same date in 1955 that the original resolution was passed. This document was then presented by her to the defendant Bank.

On October 1, 1959, Miss Ewing began to sign and submit to Southern’s president checks drawn on Southern’s accounts in banks other than the defendant Bank but payable to it. Vouchers attached to the checks described their purpose as the transfer of funds or the payment of corporate debts due the defendant. After Southern’s president signed these checks and returned them to Miss Ewing, she removed the vouchers. The defendant payee Bank then honored her several oral requests, made from time to time from October, 1959, to June, 1962, to cash the cheeks, or credit them to her personal account, or apply them to personal loans she had outstanding with that Bank. Nineteen checks totaling $18,- *552 113.75 wére submitted to the Bank in this manner. Of this amount, $5,264.40, in eleven checks beginning with the second in the entire series of 19, was applied by the defendant to personal debts owed it by Miss Ewing.

During the period in which these misappropriations were occurring a Certified Public Accountant made annual reviews of Southern’s books and the defendant submitted to Southern monthly statements of its current loan and deposit balances. In January, 1960, Southern’s president received an anonymous letter informing him that someone in his organization was using corporate funds to satisfy personal needs. The president held this letter for five months before directing the corporate bookkeeper to investigate. The resulting inquiry, however, revealed no irregularities.

After the discovery of the loss and the reimbursement of Southern by the Maryland Casualty Co., suit was brought by the Surety as subrogee against the defendant to recoup its loss.

The District Court agreed that the Surety was subrogated to any cause of action Southern might have had against the defendant Bank arising out of Miss Ewing’s misappropriations but held that no such cause of action existed since Southern had, in section 2 of the resolution above mentioned, absolved the Bank from liability. We must therefore first determine whether there is a liability on the defendant Bank to Southern which could pass by subrogation.

In 1923 North Carolina adopted the Uniform Fiduciaries Act. The authors of this law undertook to define the potential liabilities of third parties dealing with fiduciaries. 9B U.L.A. 10 (1957). Section 5 of that Act codifies the common law rule that a fiduciary’s creditor is liable to the fiduciary’s principal if it applies to the personal debt of the fiduciary a check of the principal designating the creditor as payee. 1 The facts clearly show, and the District Judge so found, that this is exactly what happened in this case. Checks amounting to $5,264.40, beginning, as above noted, with the second check in the series, were permitted by the defendant Bank to be used in reducing Miss Ewing’s personal debts. The Bank is liable for this amount under the very language of the statute, 2 unless it is determined that the exculpatory resolution was an effective waiver. This question will be considered below.

As to the remainder of the 19 checks, totaling $12,849.35, all of which likewise designated the defendant Bank as payee, it received some for deposit in Miss Ewing’s personal account and the others it cashed for her. The Uniform Fiduciaries Act imposes liability on a payee if it “takes the instrument with actual knowledge” of a breach of the fiduciary’s obligation or “with knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the in *553 strument amounts to bad faith. Gen.Stat. § 32-6 (1950). ” N.C.

A short review of the history of this Act will be of assistance in determining its applicability. At common law a payee was often held liable to the principal if it negligently assisted a fiduciary in misappropriating the principal’s funds. Some courts imposed a duty on the payee to investigate the use to which the fiduciary was putting the funds. See Note, 81 U.Pa.L.Rev. 863 (1933). The Uniform Fiduciaries Act did away with the payee’s liability for negligence and substituted a new test. For the payee to become liable under this Act it must be found either that it had actual knowledge of the misappropriation or that it acted in bad faith. Colby v. Riggs National Bank, 67 App.D.C. 259, 92 F.2d 183, 114 A.L.R. 1065 (1937). “Actual knowledge” means express factual information that trust funds are being used for private purposes. We think the record shows “actual knowledge,” but “actual knowledge” does not exhaust the occasions of liability; another ground is “bad faith.” We shall examine the two separately.

In limiting the liability of payees to cases of “actual knowledge” or “bad faith” the draftsmen, as we have seen, cited one specific transaction as clearly establishing liability, i.e., acquiescence by the payee in the fiduciary’s use of a check, drawn on its principal’s account, to pay a debt owing by the fiduciary to the payee. The history of this provision indicates that it was intended to illustrate the general rule of liability rather than to create an exception to it. 3 The crediting of these checks to Miss Ewing’s private debts thus constituted either “actual knowledge” or “bad faith.” If it is the former, the creditor is liable because from the circumstances it would necessarily have “actual knowledge” that the fiduciary was misappropriating his principal’s funds.

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Bluebook (online)
340 F.2d 550, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 6974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-company-v-bank-of-charlotte-ca4-1965.