Safeway Stores, Inc. v. King Lumber Co.

113 P.2d 483, 45 Cal. App. 2d 17, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 888
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 22, 1941
DocketCiv. 2589
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 113 P.2d 483 (Safeway Stores, Inc. v. King Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Safeway Stores, Inc. v. King Lumber Co., 113 P.2d 483, 45 Cal. App. 2d 17, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 888 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, J.

Plaintiff and respondent brought this action to recover $337.32 from defendant and appellant on two counts, one based on money had and received, and the other based on a liability for prior endorsement of a check. The material allegations of the complaint were denied. The case went to trial on these issues with no affirmative defenses al *19 leged. Findings of fact consistent with the allegations of respondent’s complaint were made and judgment favorable to respondent on the first count was entered for the recovery of the principal sum plus interest from September 19, 1939. A motion for a new trial was made and denied. This appeal followed.

Appellant corporation, whose principal place of business was in Bakersfield, opened a branch lumber yard in Arvin, a town approximately twenty-five miles southeast of Bakersfield. The town had no banking facilities. A Mr. B. Oeschger was first employed by appellant corporation in the year 1936 in its Bakersfield Lumber Yard. In 1938 he was transferred to Arvin to open and act as manager of the company’s new lumber yard. At Arvin his duties were to sell merchandise, to make statements of accounts of sales, to receive money and checks on account of sales, to advertise the business in Arvin newspapers, and to hire and discharge employees. ITe was also authorized to pay wages, advertising and petty cash transactions, from such money as was on hand. He made reports to the main office of all such transactions. These reports were made in compliance with the company's bookkeeping system which had been in effect since the year 1905. The system did not require him to differentiate between cash receipts and check receipts. Accordingly, it was impossible in the main office to determine whether any particular payment on account was a check or a cash transaction. About two months after opening the Arvin Yard, Oeschger embarked upon a practice of endorsing checks which he had received in the course of his duties in payment for merchandise sold and upon accounts opened, and cashing them at various places of business in Arvin. The endorsements were in the name of King Lumber Company, by Oeschger as manager. The claimed reason for doing this was that he needed cash to make disbursements in his business as manager. He cashed at least thirty such checks at respondent’s Arvin store during the period of time between his arrival in Arvin and the" transaction here involved. A Mr. Shields was respondent’s manager at Arvin during that period. Oeschger also cashed numerous checks payable to King Lumber Company at the Arvin Drug Store, as often as twice a week, for the same claimed reason. This practice was discussed between the druggist and Shields, the Safeway Store manager. No trouble *20 of any kind had developed from Oesehger’s practice of endorsing snch checks and cashing them during' this period. During all of this time Oeschger paid certain wages, advertising and miscellaneous small bills, and had actual authority to do so out of receipts from the business. Mr. King, an officer of appellant corporation, testified that no officer of the corporation had authorized Oeschger to endorse checks payable to the King Lumber Company.

Shortly before September 19, 1939, Oeschger presented to Shields a check drawn by one Ike M. Davis upon the Bank of America, payable to King Lumber Company in the amount of $337.32, and endorsed 1 ‘ King Lumber Company, by B. Oeschger,” and asked to have it cashed, stating he needed change for the business. Shields at first refused to cash it. Later that day, Oeschger asked for a part of the money and Shields then gave him the entire amount to avoid bookkeeping. Shields forwarded the cheek to the Bakersfield main office of the Safeway Stores, Inc., and it was deposited for collection by that company but returned on account of some minor discrepancy. Shields then, on September 19, 1939, returned this check to Oeschger and took a receipt therefor. Two hours later Oeschger returned and delivered to Shields another corrected check. This check was then deposited through the Safeway account at the Anglo-California National Bank and cleared the Davis account at the Bank of America. The check was endorsed by the Safeway Stores, Inc., for deposit previous to a guaranteed endorsement of the Anglo-California National Bank.

It did not appear upon Oeschger’s statements to the company that Davis had paid his account, due to Oeschger’s omission to report the transaction. Mr. King, of the Lumber Company, inquired at the Arvin Branch about the Davis account. In checking over a list of delinquent accounts, according to the records kept thereof at the Bakersfield office, on November 4, 1939, he was told by Oesehger’s assistant that the Davis account was paid. On November 15, 1939, an investigation of the Arvin office was made by Mr. King, and a $560 shortage was discovered.

Prior to that time the company claimed to have had no knowledge that Oeschger had been short in his accounts. It is also claimed that it had no knowledge that Oeschger had been endorsing checks. The firm had never notified any *21 Arvin merchant that Oeschger did not have authority to cash checks payable to King Lumber Company. There is no convincing evidence that Oeschger did not use the money received from the check in the business.

On December 21, 1939, three months after the check was cashed, the secretary of the appellant corporation filed an affidavit with the Bank of America to the effect that the endorsement, “King Lumber Company, by B. Oeschger, Manager", upon the check in question was a forgery. Davis was given credit upon his account with the company for the check. The King Lumber Company was reimbursed for Oeschger’s shortage by its bonding company. On January 18, 1940, the amount of the check was apparently charged to the account of Safeway Stores, Inc., at the Anglo-California National Bank by the bank, and the check, together with the affidavit of forged endorsement, was given to respondent. Previously, the Bank of America had delivered the check and affidavit to the Anglo-California National Bank and charged its account. The funds so collected from the Safeway account by the Anglo-California National Bank were forwarded to clear the charge of the Anglo-California National Bank made by the Bank of America, and the Bank of America credited the funds to the King Lumber Company account. Appellant then delivered the funds to the bonding company. After a formal demand upon King Lumber Company for reimbursement, this action was filed on January 26, 1940.

It is appellant’s contention that respondent was not forced to pay, by reason of its prior endorsement, the sum of $337.32 to the Anglo-California National Bank; that any such payment made by respondent to that bank was wholly voluntary ; that the finding that the appellant endorsed the check for value received was contrary to the evidence; that the finding that appellant was indebted to respondent on account of monies had and received by appellant from respondent for the use and benefit of appellant was also unjustified. It is argued that upon payment of the check by the drawee bank, the transaction was closed, citing 9 C. J. S., page 722, section 354-a; and that payment to the holder in due course discharges the instrument, citing Civil Code, sections 3132, 3147 and 3200.

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Bluebook (online)
113 P.2d 483, 45 Cal. App. 2d 17, 1941 Cal. App. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safeway-stores-inc-v-king-lumber-co-calctapp-1941.