Milano v. Sheridan Trust & Savings Bank

242 Ill. App. 362, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 107
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 29, 1926
DocketGen. No. 30,803
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 242 Ill. App. 362 (Milano v. Sheridan Trust & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milano v. Sheridan Trust & Savings Bank, 242 Ill. App. 362, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 107 (Ill. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice McSurely

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs sought to recover $2,250 with interest and upon trial by the court, upon stipulated facts, had judgment for $7.74, from which they appeal, claiming that under the facts and law they are entitled to the entire amount claimed in their declaration.

Plaintiffs are employees of L. Klein & Company, which conduct a department store in Chicago. They are organized in an association known as “L. Klein Employes’ Savings and Loan Association.” The defeudant bank was engaged in the duties usual and in- . cident to banking in Chicago.

On August 26,1922, and for six months prior thereto one Sidney Owen Tresidder was a customer and depositor of the bank, maintaining an account in which he deposited funds and from which he withdrew funds from time to time by means of checks. Tresidder was an employee of L. Klein & Company, which fact was known to the bank on August 26, 1922. He was also the bookkeeper and auditor of the association from December 28, 1919, to April 28, 1923, but his connection with the association was unknown to the bank.

On August 26,1922, and for a long time prior thereto, the association carried an account with the West Side Trust & Savings Bank. On that date the association drew its check upon this bank, payable to the order of the Sheridan Trust & Savings Bank, the defendant, for $750, which was signed “L. Klein Employes’ Savings & Loan Ass ’n. Leo Friedman, Pres. Anna Medofsky, Sec’y.” This check was given to Tresidder with instructions to purchase certain bonds therewith from the defendant bank for said association, the name of the defendant as the party from whom to purchase said bonds being suggested to the association by Tresidder. On the same day, August 26, 1922, Tresidder mailed the check to the defendant bank, which was received by it on August 28, accompanied by a letter saying, “Please credit my a/c with enclosed check & oblige.” With this letter and check was a deposit slip filled out in the handwriting of Tresidder, directing the bank to credit the amount of said check to his account. Upon receipt of this the defendant bank credited the amount to Tresidder’s account, indorsed the check “Credit a/c of Sidney Owen Tresidder,” and in due course collected the proceeds through the clearing house from the West Side Trust & Savings Bank.

No bonds were purchased by Tresidder from the bank or any other person, in accordance with the instructions given him upon delivery of the check to him. The bank did not hold the proceeds of said check after collecting the same for the association, nor did the bank deliver or give anything of value to the association for said check. At the time this check was received the association was not a customer or a depositor of the bank, and it had had no dealings with said bank.

January 23,1923, another check, this time for $1,500, was drawn by the association, payable to the defendant bank and delivered to Tresidder by the association with instructions to purchase bonds from the defendant bank. This second check was also mailed by Tresidder to the bank with a deposit slip and his account was credited with $1,500. The defendant bank in due course collected the proceeds of this check from the drawee bank.

At the time these checks and deposit slips were received by the bank from Tresidder, the bank had no notice of any kind that Tresidder was acting as agent of the association and was not entitled to the proceeds of the checks, other than the notice, if any, appearing from the checks themselves. The first notice received by the bank other than the notice, if any, from the checks themselves, that Tresidder was acting as agent of the association and was not entitled to the proceeds of said checks, was on May 2, 1923, when the bank was advised by the attorneys representing the association that Tresidder was not entitled to the proceeds of the checks and that the association was the owner thereof and entitled to the proceeds.

After the deposit of the checks to his account Tresidder continued to be a customer of the bank and from time to time withdrew funds from the account and deposited additional funds therein. Prior to May 2, 1923, he had withdrawn all moneys on deposit in his account, including the proceeds of said checks, except the sum of $7.74, which on May 14 the bank permitted Tresidder to withdraw. He has made no additional deposits since that date, and at the time of the trial there was no money standing to his credit in said bank.

It was further stipulated that Tresidder was the bookkeeper and auditor of the association, and had full, complete and sole charge, custody and control of all returned checks issued by the association and the checking of the same, and had full charge of the bank books and vouchers and of all the securities purchased by the association; that Tresidder did not disclose to the association that these checks were credited to his personal account by the defendant bank or that he had not purchased bonds for said association with the checks aforesaid, and that the association first discovered that the proceeds of the two checks were deposited to the personal account of Tresidder on May 1, 1923, upon which date it also discovered for the first time that he had not purchased any bonds with said checks. On May 2 the association demanded of the bank that it pay to the association the proceeds of the checks, which was refused.

It was further stipulated that the bank did not at the time of the receipt of the checks, or at any time thereafter or prior thereto, make any inquiry of Tresidder or of the association, or any member thereof, or any other persons whatsoever, as to the authority of said Tresidder to deposit the checks to his personal account in said bank; that Tresidder has converted the proceeds of the checks mentioned to his own use and has not reimbused the association for said checks or for any part or portion thereof.

The trial court held that defendant accepted the checks in due course and gave plaintiffs judgment only for the amount left in Tresidder’s account on the date they made the demand on the bank.

We have concluded that, as the checks upon their face showed that they were drawn by the association to the order of the defendant, with which the association had no account and to which it was not indebted, it became the duty of the bank, if it accepted said checks, to collect the proceeds thereof and hold the same subject to the order of the association, and that the bank was negligent in crediting the proceeds of said checks to the personal account of Tresidder.

Among the cases supporting our conclusion is Kuder v. Greene, 72 Ark. 504, in which Kuder drew a check on a Kansas bank, payable to the order of Greene, cashier of the Citizens Bank of Harrison, Arkansas. The check was delivered to one Cole with directions to deposit the same with the Citizens Bank for collection for Kuder. Cole presented the check and had the proceeds credited to his personal account and thereafter withdrew the funds.

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Bluebook (online)
242 Ill. App. 362, 1926 Ill. App. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milano-v-sheridan-trust-savings-bank-illappct-1926.