Paine v. Continental & Commercial National Bank

259 Ill. App. 526, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1348
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 26, 1931
DocketGen. No. 34,591
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 259 Ill. App. 526 (Paine v. Continental & Commercial National 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
Paine v. Continental & Commercial National Bank, 259 Ill. App. 526, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1348 (Ill. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McSurely

delivered the opinion of the court.

In an action of assumpsit tried by the court, plaintiffs had judgment for $11,562.50, from which defendant appeals.

Although the respective briefs give considerable space to a recital of the pleadings, yet we are not asked to pass on any point arising on them. The declaration in appropriate language alleged that defendant was obligated for money had and received by reason of its payment of its cashier’s check upon a forged indorsement. Defendant’s liability, if any, must be determined upon this action.

The facts were stipulated as follows: Plaintiffs are partners engaged in the stock brokerage business in Chicago and elsewhere. Defendant is a banking corporation carrying on business in Chicago. December 15, 1926, and for a long time prior and subsequent thereto plaintiffs maintained a checking account with defendant, carrying on numerous banking' transactions. During this time plaintiffs had in their employ in the Chicago office Joseph J. Collum as assistant cashier, whose duty it was to draft and receive checks on behalf of plaintiffs, enter the same upon the books and perform the usual duties of a cashier. He had no authority to draw checks for plaintiffs except to pay their obligations. No check drawn and signed by Collum was valid until it had been signed either by the resident partner or the office manager or Walter Brunton, the head bookkeeper of plaintiffs at the Chicago office. Brunton usually signed more than a hundred checks a day. The checks were drawn on the defendant bank, which had instructions to honor such checks. Collum also had authority to give directions in the name of plaintiffs to defendant to issue its cashier’s checks.

December 15, 1926, Collnm drew a check on plaintiffs’ account with defendant, payable to the order of defendant, for $10,000, and signed the same and presented it along with other checks to Brunton for signature. Brunton signed the check. Collum thereupon sent the check by messenger to defendant bank with a written requisition in the name of plaintiffs for a cashier’s check in the sum of $10,000, payable to the order of George Halas, a man in business in Chicago and a customer of plaintiffs. Brunton at this time did not know that Collum was acting dishonestly and did not know that the check was to be used for any other purpose than the payment of an obligation of plaintiffs. Brunton made no examination of his books to ascertaip the facts as to the Halas account but relied on Collum’s representations concerning the same. The facts were that on that date plaintiffs were not indebted to Halas and did not know of Collum’s intention to purchase the cashier’s check. Defendant accepted the check in the regular course of business and charged it to plaintiffs’ account and in consideration of the sum therein mentioned, $10,000, executed and delivered to plaintiffs’ messenger its cashier’s check for $10,000, payable to the order of George Halas. None of defendant’s officers had any knowledge of Collum’s secret intention to use said check for his own private purposes. This cashier’s check was never delivered to Halas.

When the messenger returned to plaintiffs’ office with the cashier’s check, it was given by Collum without the knowledge, consent or approval of any of plaintiffs and indorsed by Collum as follows: “Pay to order of George Gottschalk — George Halas” and was sent by Collum to Gottschalk at Los Angeles, California. Upon receiving same Gottschalk indorsed it to John C. Feys & Associates, Inc., who were stock brokers of Los Angeles, California. The check was sent by Collum through G-ottschalk, without the knowledge of plaintiffs, to be applied and the same was applied by Feys & Associates as required margin on an account that was then being carried on by Collum in the name of Gottschalk with Feys & Associates.

December 27, 1926, defendant paid the amount of said cashier’s check to the holder thereof. It bore the indorsement above stated and the subsequent indorsements of John C. Feys & Associates, Inc., and others. Defendant now has possession of the cashier’s check. George Halas never had possession of it nor any interest in it and has received no part of the proceeds of same. Plaintiffs have never delivered said cashier’s check to anyone for any purpose and have received no part of the proceeds thereof.

About June 1, 1927, plaintiff discovered the theft of the cashier’s check and thereupon notified defendant that said check had been stolen from them and had not been delivered to nor indorsed by Halas and called upon defendant to repay said sum of $10,000 paid by plaintiffs to defendant for the cashier’s check, which defendant refused to do.

From December 1, 1926, to July 1, 1927, defendant rendered monthly statements to plaintiffs showing all deposits made by plaintiffs and all checks drawn against their account and with such statements returned to plaintiffs the cancelled checks. This included the check of plaintiffs for $10,000, dated December 15, 1926, with which' the cashier’s check was purchased.

During all the time between November 1, 1926, and May 14,1927, Collum was a trusted employee of plaintiffs and none of them had any knowledge of his unfaithfulness. About May 14, 1927, while plaintiffs’ books were being audited, Collum voluntarily confessed to one of the resident partners of plaintiffs that he had embezzled large'sums of plaintiffs’ funds during the past year and that he had for a time successfully concealed his defalcations by manipulating the records and accounts of plaintiffs. Prior to June 1, 1927, none of plaintiffs had any knowledge of the purchase of the cashier’s check on December 15, 1926, payable to G-eorge Halas, and did not know that Collum had indorsed this with the name of Halas nor the use he had made of it nor that defendant had paid said check. Immediately upon discovering the facts plaintiffs notified defendant by letter and demanded payment. It being refused, this suit was commenced July 30, 1927.

Collum confessed that he had embezzled a total amount of over $100,000, and offered to make restitution so far as he was able to do so, and thereupon delivered to plaintiffs certificates of stock in the Julian Petroleum Corporation. Plaintiffs had no knowledge of the existence of Collum’s account with John C. Peys & Associates. When the certificates of the Julian Petroleum Corporation were delivered to plaintiffs by Collum, the shares were of unknown value and there was no market for them. Shortly thereafter the Julian Petroleum Corporation was placed in the hands of a receiver and new shares of stock were issued, plaintiffs exchanging the shares they had received from Collum for new shares. At this time plaintiffs knew that the cashier’s check had been used by Collum to pay his obligations to John C. Feys & Associates. The actual value of the new shares of stock is unknown and its market value is continually fluctuating, although it was agreed that at the time of the stipulation its market value was approximately 15c a share. Plaintiffs’ unrecouped losses as a result of Collum’s embezzlement still exceed $100,000.

Objections to certain paragraphs of the stipulation as irrelevant and immaterial were made by respective counsel, but we have set forth virtually all the facts contained in the stipulation.

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Bluebook (online)
259 Ill. App. 526, 1931 Ill. App. LEXIS 1348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paine-v-continental-commercial-national-bank-illappct-1931.