National Bank of San Mateo v. Whitney

183 P. 789, 181 Cal. 202, 8 A.L.R. 298, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 340
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1919
DocketS. F. No. 8377.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 183 P. 789 (National Bank of San Mateo v. Whitney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Bank of San Mateo v. Whitney, 183 P. 789, 181 Cal. 202, 8 A.L.R. 298, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 340 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

WILBUR, J.

This is an action upon a promissory note executed on September 13, 1915', to the plaintiff for three thousand dollars. The ease was tried before a jury. Plain, tiff recovered judgment, and defendant appeals. The sole issue presented to the jury was whether or not the promissory note was paid on September 14, 1915, by a cheek of the Leslie Salt Refining Company drawn on the Bank of California for three thousand dollars. This cheek was issued by the defendant as secretary of the Salt Company, and was received by W. M. Roberts, cashier of the plaintiff. That it was deposited by him to his credit with the plaintiff bank is admitted. The plaintiff, in support of its contention that the note was not paid by the check in question, relies upon *204 the possession of the note, as prima facie evidence of its nonpayment, and upon the fact that the check was made payable to W. M. Roberts, instead of to the bank, and was a check of the Leslie Salt Refining Company, instead of the defendant, and in support of its claim presented instructions to the jury which were given by the court, to the effect that its possession of the note raised a presumption of its nonpayment; that the giving of the cheek to W. M. Roberts personally gave rise to the presumption that it was in discharge of an obligation owing to Roberts.

In order to understand fully the assignments of error made by the appellant, it will be necessary to state additional facts. The defendant was a stockholder and the secretary of the Leslie Salt Refining Company. W. M. Roberts, plaintiff’s cashier, was a director of the Leslie Salt Refining Company, holding five shares of stock to qualify him as such director. The Salt Company was a borrower from the plaintiff, and having borrowed to the limit of its credit, the defendant negotiated a loan for three' thousand dollars on the thirteenth day of September, 1915, and gave his personal note herein sued upon as evidence of such indebtedness. Miss Zula Clements, stenographer and- general office assistant of the Leslie Salt Refining Company, testified that on September 14th, William M. Roberts, plaintiff’s cashier, called at the office of the Salt Company in the Flatiron Building, in San Francisco, between 3 and 4 o'clock in the afternoon and left a message for the defendant to the effect that the bank examiner had been at the bank and had questioned the loan, and that it was necessary for the bank to have a check for three thousand dollars to take up the'note, and that the cheek was to be made out personally to him and mailed down that night without fail, as he expected the examiner would be there again in the morning; that about 4:30. of that afternoon she gave this message to the defendant; that the check in question for three thousand dollars was made out at that time. The defendant testified that in pursuance of this message he wrote the check in question and mailed it to Mr. Roberts at the bank; that the check was made payable to W. M. Roberts because it was requested in that form, although other checks in payment of moneys borrowed from the plaintiff had been made payable to the plaintiff bank; that neither the defendant nor the Leslie Salt Refining Company owed any *205 thing to Mr. Roberts personally, nor was there any debt to Mr. Roberts in which the defendant or the Salt Company was interested, and that the three thousand dollar cheek was not sent as a loan to Mr. Roberts. Roberts testified that he received the check in question for the purpose of taking up a note of the defendant for the sum of three thousand dollars; that he received the check at the bank; that he had no personal transaction with the defendant, and that the defendant owed him no money and loaned him no money.

It will be observed, then, that the only persons who have any knowledge as to the purpose for which the check in question was given by the defendant, namely, the defendant, his stenographer and Roberts, all testified that it was given in payment of the note herein sued upon and for no other purpose. [1] The authority of Roberts, as cashier, to receive the payment of the note must be conceded. (McBoyle v. Union Nat. Bank, 162 Cal. 277, 279, [122 Pac. 458]; 1 Morse on Banking, 5th ed., sec. 159, pp. 356, 357; 7 Corpus Juris, sec. 160.) His application of the check to his own overdrawn account was a confessedly fraudulent misappropriation of the check, and the only question involved in the case is as to whether the plaintiff or defendant must suffer by reason of the cashier’s dishonesty. If we assume that both the plaintiff and defendant were equally innocent of wrong in connection with the transaction and that the loss resulted by reason of the fraud of the plaintiff’s agent in misapplying the proceeds of the check paid to him by the defendant, then, under a familiar principle of the law, the bank for whom Roberts was acting would be required to bear the loss, for “where one of two innocent persons must suffer by the fraud or negligence of a third, whichever of the two has accredited him ought to bear the loss.’’ (Mundorff v. Wickersham, 63 Pa. St. 89, [3 Am. Rep. 531], cited in Schultz v. McLean, 93 Cal. 329, 356, [28 Pac. 1053].) Still assuming equal innocence of both parties hereto, the loss resulted from- the fact that the plaintiff had in its employment in a position of trust and confidence a dishonest employee, who dishonestly utilized his position of trust and confidence to appropriate three thousand dollars paid to him as such agent for and on behalf of the principal. Where the agent of a depositor of a bank utilized his position of trust and confidence to fraudulently raise certain checks intrusted to him *206 and thereby secured from the bank larger sums than called for by the checks, it was held that, although such conduct amounted to forgery, and the bank would ordinarily be responsible to the depositor for payment of such forged checks, nevertheless, by reason of the fact that the crime was committed by the depositor’s agent, the depositor and not the bank should bear the loss, upon the theory that the principal was liable “for the fraud, torts or other wrongful acts committed by such agent in and as part of such business. ” (Otis Elevator Co. v. First Nat. Bank of San Francisco, 163 Cal. 31, 39, [41 L. R. A. (N. S.) 529, 124 Pac. 704, 707].) Similar reasoning would require us to hold the bank liable for the misconduct of its cashier, Roberts.

Plaintiff, however, contends that both parties are not equally innocent in the transaction; that the defendant, by making the check payable to the cashier and by acceding to the unusual demand of the cashier, either had notice of the cashier’s fraud, or thus put it within his power to commit the wrong, and that, therefore, the defendant must suffer the loss. In view of the law that the cashier, by virtue of his office, had authority to collect the note, does the fact that he asked for and received a check payable to himself in payment so far inculpate the defendant in the wrongdoing of the cashier as to change the rule ? It is undoubtedly true that the form of the check received by Roberts may have .enabled him to deposit the same in his own name in the bank without arousing suspicion which might have resulted from the deposit by Roberts to his own account of a check payable to the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P. 789, 181 Cal. 202, 8 A.L.R. 298, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-san-mateo-v-whitney-cal-1919.