San Tan Irrigation District v. Wells Fargo Bank

3 P.3d 1113, 197 Ariz. 193, 313 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 18, 40 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 775, 2000 Ariz. App. LEXIS 9
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedJanuary 25, 2000
Docket1 CA-CV 99-0091
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 3 P.3d 1113 (San Tan Irrigation District v. Wells Fargo Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Tan Irrigation District v. Wells Fargo Bank, 3 P.3d 1113, 197 Ariz. 193, 313 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 18, 40 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 775, 2000 Ariz. App. LEXIS 9 (Ark. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

SULT, Judge.

¶ 1 Wells Fargo Bank appeals from the grant of summary judgment to San Tan Irrigation District on San Tan’s claim of conversion under Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial Code, Arizona Revised Statutes Annotated (“A.R.S.”) section 47-3420 (1997). Because the trial court erred in failing to consider the applicable statutory defenses asserted by Wells Fargo, we reverse the grant of summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 San Tan’s conversion claim was based on Wells Fargo accepting for deposit checks that, while payable to San Tan, had a forged endorsement placed thereon by San Tan’s bookkeeper, Glenda Miller, who deposited the cheeks into her personal account at Wells Fargo. According to San Tan, Wells Fargo’s acceptance of the forged deposits created prima facie liability to San Tan for statutory conversion. And because Wells Fargo did not exercise due care in the transactions, it became absolutely liable to San Tan in the amount of the checks accepted for deposit. The lack of due care, San Tan argued, lay in Wells Fargo’s employees’ violations of several bank policies designed to detect forged instruments and their general ineptness in failing to detect what should have been obvious fraud.

¶ 3 According to Wells Fargo, San Tan had entrusted Ms. Miller with the sole responsibility for receiving, posting, and depositing payments made to San Tan by its irrigation customers. Ms. Miller was San Tan’s only full-time employee, and the company neither monitored Ms. Miller’s activities nor placed any internal controls on her. The only reason the defalcation by Ms. Miller came to *195 light was because a customer questioned why it had not been credited with a payment it had made, a payment that had been diverted by Ms. Miller.

¶ 4 Based on its version of the facts, Wells Fargo raised the defenses to conversion provided by A.R.S. §§ 47-3405 and 47-3406 (1997). San Tan responded that these defenses did not apply and that Berthot v. Security Pacific Bank, 170 Ariz. 318, 823 P.2d 1326 (App.1991), was the controlling precedent. According to San Tan, Berthot required a finding that section 47-3420 imposed liability on Wells Fargo unless it could prove that it acted with due care, a defense San Tan asserted was provided by § 47-3420 and the only defense available against a claim for conversion. The trial court apparently accepted San Tan’s argument regarding Ber-thot and apparently also found that the evidence precluded any possibility that Wells Fargo could prove it exercised due care in accepting and processing the subject deposits. The trial court therefore granted summary judgment to San Tan, and Wells Fargo timely appealed.

ISSUE

¶5 On appeal, San Tan has changed its position, abandoning its assertion that sections 47-3405 and 47-3406 are not applicable to a conversion claim under section 47-3420, and arguing instead that Wells Fargo cannot utilize those defenses because it cannot meet the good faith requirement imposed by both statutes on a depositary bank. Wells Fargo not only argues that the defenses are available against a conversion claim under section 47-3420 but also adds that on this record, it clearly satisfies the test of good faith. Our focus on appeal thus becomes whether there is a genuine issue of material fact that Wells Fargo exercised “good faith” as that term is used in sections 47-3405 and 47-3406.

ANALYSIS

¶ 6 Section 47-3420 provides a right of recovery to the payee of an instrument against a depositary or payor bank that pays the instrument over a forged endorsement. See A.R.S. § 47-3420 U.C.C. emt. 1 (1997). The claim is considered to be one for conversion and replaces the previous common law remedy of negligence. See Berthot, 170 Ariz. at 324, 823 P.2d at 1332. 1

¶ 7 A claim under section 47-3420 may be defeated in whole or in part if the payee of the instrument is an employer and the forgery was accomplished by an employee entrusted by the payee with responsibility for the instrument. Alternatively, the action may be defeated or recovery reduced if the forgery was enabled by the negligence of the payee. These scenarios are covered in sections 47-3405 and 47-3406, respectively, and each scenario presents a series of factual questions that must be resolved in order to determine whether and to what extent the payee may recover from the bank.

¶8 We now set forth the pertinent portions of each statute. Section 47-3405(B) provides:

For the purpose of determining the rights and liabilities of a person who, in good faith, pays an instrument or takes it for value or for collection, if an employer entrusted an employee with responsibility with respect to the instrument and the employee ... makes a fraudulent indorsement of the instrument, the indorsement is effective as the indorsement of the person to whom the instrument is payable if it is made in the name of that person. If the person paying the instrument or taking it for value or for collection fails to exercise ordinary care in paying or taking the instrument and that failure substantially contributes to loss resulting from the *196 fraud, the person bearing the loss may recover from the person failing to exercise ordinary care to the extent the failure to exercise ordinary care contributed to the loss.

(Emphasis added.)

Section 47-3406(A) and (B) provide:

A. A person whose failure to exercise ordinary care substantially contributes to an alteration of an instrument or to the making of a forged signature on an instrument is precluded from asserting the alteration or the forgery against a person who, in good faith, pays the instrument or takes it for value or for collection.
B. Under subsection A, if the person asserting the preclusion fails to exercise ordinary care in paying or taking the instrument and that failure substantially contributes to loss, the loss is allocated between the person precluded and the person asserting the preclusion according to the extent to which the failure of each to exercise ordinary care contributed to the loss.

¶ 9 The two statutes share the requirement that a depositary bank seeking to defeat a recovery under section 47-3420 must demonstrate that it acted in good faith in paying, or taking for value or collection, a forged instrument. As to what “good faith” means, Wells Fargo relies both on the definition found in section 47-1201 (1997), describing good faith as “honesty in fact in the conduct or transaction concerned,” and on City of Phoenix v. Great Western Bank & Trust, 148 Ariz. 53, 712 P.2d 966

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Bluebook (online)
3 P.3d 1113, 197 Ariz. 193, 313 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 18, 40 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 775, 2000 Ariz. App. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-tan-irrigation-district-v-wells-fargo-bank-arizctapp-2000.