McDowell v. Dallas Teachers Credit Union

772 S.W.2d 183, 1989 WL 73890
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 28, 1989
Docket05-88-00652-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 772 S.W.2d 183 (McDowell v. Dallas Teachers Credit Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDowell v. Dallas Teachers Credit Union, 772 S.W.2d 183, 1989 WL 73890 (Tex. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

*185 LaGARDE, Justice.

Appellants, Jerry and Peggy McDowell, appeal from a take nothing judgment in favor of appellee, Dallas Teacher’s Credit Union (D.T.C.U.). We hold.that, under the admitted facts of this record, D.T.C.U. is liable to the McDowells for amounts paid on forged share drafts. 1 We reverse and render.

In the trial below, the McDowells alleged that D.T.C.U. breached its duties under the Texas Business and Commerce Code by paying forged share drafts, charging the share drafts against the McDowells’ account, and then refusing to reimburse the McDowells for those payments. In six points of error, the McDowells assert that the trial court erred in: (1) denying their Motion for Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict (J.N.O.V.) and denying their Motion to Disregard the Answer to Jury Question number three because there was no evidence that D.T.C.U. made available to the McDowells, in a reasonable manner, the share drafts charged against their account; (2) denying the McDowells’ Motion for New Trial since there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s answer to jury question number three in which the jury found that D.T.C.U. made available to the McDo-wells, in a reasonable manner, the share drafts charged against their account; (3) denying the McDowells’ Motion for J.N. O.V., denying the McDowells’ Motion to Disregard the Jury’s Answer to Question number four, and granting judgment for D.T.C.U. because the evidence established, as a matter of law, that D.T.C.U. failed to use ordinary care in its treatment of the forged share drafts; (4) denying the McDo-wells’ Motion for New Trial because the jury’s answer to jury question number four that D.T.C.U. did not fail to exercise ordinary care in its treatment of the forged share drafts was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence; (5) denying the McDowells’ Motion for J.N.O.V., denying the McDowells’ Motion to Disregard the Jury’s Answer to Jury Question number five, and granting judgment for D.T.C.U. because there was no evidence that D.T.C.U. acted in accordance with reasonable commercial standards in cashing the forged share drafts; and (6) denying the McDowells’ Motion for New Trial because there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s answer to jury question number five stating that D.T.C.U. acted in accordance with reasonable commerieal standards in cashing the forged share drafts. We agree with points of error three and five; consequently, we reverse the trial court’s judgment and render judgment for the McDowells in the amount of $51,937.75 and award reasonable attorney fees of $26,700 for the trial below, $15,000 for appeal to this Court, and $10,000 if appealed to the Texas Supreme Court.

At the outset of our discussion, we note that the parties have not cited and we have not found any occasion when a Texas court has ruled on the particular issues presented in this case. This case, therefore, presents a question of first impression under Texas law.

Facts

The McDowells had several accounts at D.T.C.U. They used one of these accounts, called a share draft account, for their fund raising business. This share draft account was set up to function in a manner similar to a bank’s checking account.

At the time that the McDowells established the account, the share draft agreement stated, in pertinent part:

I/We, hereinafter called “Undersigned” whether one or more, do hereby authorize the DALLAS TEACHERS CREDIT UNION, hereinafter called “Credit Union” to establish a special share account for the Undersigned to be known as a “ShareDraft Account”. The Credit Un *186 ion is authorized to pay drafts signed by me or by any of us, if this Agreement is signed by more than one person, and to charge the payments against this Share-Draft Account.

The agreement then went on to state:

The Credit Union shall be authorized to pay a draft presented for payment even though the signature or signatures thereon do not correspond exactly with that set forth below.

Although the McDowells did not remember reading these specific provisions when they opened the account, Mrs. McDowell testified that she believed that the share draft account functioned in the same manner as a regular bank checking account. A brochure attached to the share draft agreement did, in fact, state that “[s]hare drafts function in every way just like checks....”

In line with the theory that the share draft account functioned like a checking account, the McDowells could write out share drafts just like checks. Furthermore, the parties to whom the share drafts were made out could present those share drafts for payment at one of the offices of the credit union or send them through normal banking channels for presentment to the credit union.

During at least a portion of the time that the McDowells maintained their share draft account at D.T.C.U., the McDowells’ bookkeeper was Pat Mitchell. In late July and early August 1984, the McDowells discovered that, over the previous several months, Mitchell had forged Peggy McDowell’s signature on fifty-five share drafts. The total amount of those share drafts was allegedly $52,255.02. D.T.C.U. charged all of those drafts against the McDowells’ share draft account and, once the forgeries were discovered, refused to reimburse the McDowells.

The McDowells testified that Mitchell’s signature was not on the signature card and that they did not authorize Mitchell to sign any share drafts. D.T.C.U. produced evidence that the McDowells requested that D.T.C.U. treat Mitchell as they would treat the McDowells and to provide Mitchell with information necessary to balance and reconcile the share draft statements; however, the evidence also showed that the McDowells never told D.T.C.U. that Mitchell had authorization to sign share drafts or make withdrawals from the share draft account.

During the course of the trial, D.T.C.U. called two witnesses to testify as to the general industry usage in regard to share draft accounts. Both witnesses, one an officer from D.T.C.U. and one an officer from the Texas Credit Union League (T.C. U.L.), testified that the vast majority of credit unions operated their share draft accounts in the same manner as D.T.C.U.

Consistent with the procedure used by a majority of Texas credit unions, the share drafts involved here were paid in one of two ways. First, T.C.U.L. acted as a clearinghouse and processor for share drafts that were deposited or cashed at other institutions. T.C.U.L. recorded certain information from the share drafts onto a magnetic tape, and the tape was then forwarded to D.T.C.U. Unless the share draft was drawn against insufficient funds, payment had been stopped on the share draft, or the account was closed, D.T.C.U. paid the share draft. Neither D.T.C.U. nor T.C.U.L. had any procedure for verifying the depositor’s signature on any of the share drafts that were paid in this manner. Indeed, as one of D.T.C.U.’s experts explained, the general industry usage did not even require that share drafts be signed before they were paid.

Additionally, even when share drafts were paid in the second manner, i.e., presented directly to a D.T.C.U. branch office for payment, D.T.C.U. did not verify the depositor’s signature.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
772 S.W.2d 183, 1989 WL 73890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdowell-v-dallas-teachers-credit-union-texapp-1989.