S. S. Allen Grocery Co. v. Bank of Buchanan County

182 S.W. 777, 192 Mo. App. 476, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 93
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 182 S.W. 777 (S. S. Allen Grocery Co. v. Bank of Buchanan County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. S. Allen Grocery Co. v. Bank of Buchanan County, 182 S.W. 777, 192 Mo. App. 476, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 93 (Mo. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J. —

:This is an action against defendant bank by the depositor of a checking account to recover a deposit of $2938.70. .On August 27, 1914, plaintiff, the depositor, presented a check for 'that amount to the bank but payment was refused on the ground that plaintiff had no funds on deposit and this suit followed. • The answer alleges that defendant “has paid to plaintiff or upon its order all sums of money that have been deposited by plaintiff with defendant.” A jury was waived and after hearing the evidence the court rendered judgment for defendant. Plaintiff appealed.

At the beginning’ of the trial the parties agreed that on August 27, 1914, plaintiff had a deposit of $2938.70 with defendant which was payable on demand unless it should be found that defendant was justified in charging against the deposit, as it did, three checks dated August 15, 1914, which bore the signature of plaintiff and purported to have been drawn to the order of O. J. Rose. These cheeks which were for the respective amounts of $2700.95, $395.60 and $195.15, were paid by defendant on presentation and charged to the account of plaintiff. They had been signed in blank by plaintiff but had been stolen from its office by Rose who, by forgery, had converted the signed blanks into checks for the respective sums stated.

Plaintiff, a corporation, operating a large retail grocery in St. Joseph, has a president, secretary, general manager, six or seven chiefs of departments and about fifty employees. Its office is in a mezzanine room six or seven feet above the first floor of the store and is reached by a narrow stairway from that floor. It is occupied by the officers, i. e., president, secretary and general manager, and the stenographer and telephone operator. Persons having business with these officers have access to the office which may be designated, as the general office of the company and of the [478]*478business it conducts. The president, S. S. Allen, alone has authority to sign checks on behalf of the company and such authority never has been conferred upon any other officer. When Allen found it necessary to be absent from the city it was his custom to sign a number of blank checks and leave the check book in the custody of the manager, with authority to fill out the blanks and issue checks for -use in carrying on the business until his return. He was absent on his summer vacation when the events under consideration occurred and, as usual, had signed plaintiff’s name to a number of checks and had left the book with Mr. Morrow the manager. Following his usual practice, Morrow had allowed this book to remain on the top of his desk in the office without instructions to anyone respecting its safe keeping and when he had occasion to issue a check, sometimes would draw it himself, and sometimes would have the secretary or stenographer draw it.

On August 15, 1914, Rose, a traveling salesman who had been selling merchandise to plaintiff and was well acquainted with its officers and office employees, especially with the manager, visited the office during the luncheon hour and found no one there but the stenographer. On being informed that Morrow, for whom he inquired, was out for lunch, he asked and was accorded the privilege of writing some letters and «°ated himself at Morrow’s desk on which, the check book was lying in full view and, of course, within easy reach. When the telephone operator returned from lunch, the stenographer left the office in her charge and shortly thereafter Rose, apparently having finished his writing, asked for and was given an envelope into which he placed some papers. Then he departed without waiting for Morrow to return. Some, time while at the desk he surreptitiously cut out a sheet from the check book which contained three signed blanks and [479]*479tlieir stubs. After filling out the blanks, Rose went first to defendant bank where he was known to the paying teller and presented the check for $395.50 which the teller paid, finding the signature genuine. Next he went to the Empire Trust Company; where he was also known, and presented the check for $2700.95 and, at his request, was given a cashier’s check which subsequently he cashed at a bank in Atchison. Then he went to a jewelry store and passed off the third cheek in payment of a diamond he purchased. After this he disappeared and thus far has eluded capture. The check for $2700.95 came to defendant through the clearing house bearing the indorsement of the Empire Trust Company and was honored by defendant though its payment overdrew plaintiff’s account by more than $600. The third check for $195.15 also passed through the clearing house with the indorsements of the jeweler and the Tootle-Lemon National Bank and was paid by defendant, further increasing the overdraft.

From all the facts and circumstances in evidence the inference is strong that Rose who two or three days before had received a check from Morrow in payment of an account for potatoes he had sold plaintiff had obtained knowledge through that transaction of the fact that the check book contained signed blanks and was allowed to remain on top of the manager’s desk without any special watch being kept over it. Doubtless his visit to the office at the noon hour was prompted by a criminal motive and his theft of the sheet was not the result of a mere accidental opportunity which arose while he was waiting for Morrow to return.

. After paying the last-mentioned check, defendant notified plaintiff of the overdraft and the discovery of the forgeries was a quick result of this notice. The good faith of defendant in paying the checks is not [480]*480and cannot be questioned, bnt an effort was made by plaintiff at tbe trial to show that defendant had been negligent, especially in view of tbe facts that plaintiff, during tbe long period of its relation to defendant of depositor, wbicb bad continued a number of years, bad never before overdrawn its account nor issued a check for so large a sum as $2700. We shall treat these facts as proved for tbe purposes of tbe present-discussion, but tbe inference of negligence drawn from them by plaintiff will be considered in tbe course of our opinion.

Tbe principal argument of counsel for plaintiff in support of their contention that tbe loss caused by tbe crime of Rose should fall upon defendant assumes tbe good faith and reasonable care of defendant in .the transaction but would charge it with liability on tbe ground that its titl-e to tbe checks was that of an innocen bolder for value within' tbe technical definition of that term, and that tbe checks never having been delivered by plaintiff did not become valid negotiable instruments nor acquire any contractual status or obligatory character by tbe mere affixing of plaintiff’s signature to blanks wbicb thereafter plaintiff retained in its own possession until deprived tbere’of not by or through-its own voluntary act but by theft. Counsel insist that their position has tbe support of tbe weight of authority as it stood at tbe time of tbe passage of tbe Negotiable Instruments Act and is completely and irrefutably sustained by that Act wbicb provides (Sec. 9986, R. S. 1909): “Where an incomplete instrument has- not been delivered it will not, if completed and negotiated without authority, be a valid contract in the bands of any bolder, as against any person wbos-e signature was placed thereon before delivery.” Especially is this argument urged against tbe validity of tbe checks of $2700.95 and $195.15, the payment of wbicb not being made out of funds of plaintiff on [481]

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W. 777, 192 Mo. App. 476, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-s-allen-grocery-co-v-bank-of-buchanan-county-moctapp-1916.