Severin Mobile Towing, Inc. v. JPMorgan Chase etc.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 9, 2021
DocketD077409
StatusPublished

This text of Severin Mobile Towing, Inc. v. JPMorgan Chase etc. (Severin Mobile Towing, Inc. v. JPMorgan Chase etc.) 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
Severin Mobile Towing, Inc. v. JPMorgan Chase etc., (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 6/9/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SEVERIN MOBILE TOWING, INC., D077409

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2017- JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A., 00031451-CU-MC-CTL)

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Ronald L. Styn, Judge. Reversed and remanded with directions. Niddrie Addams Fuller Singh, Victoria E. Fuller and John S. Addams for Plaintiff and Appellant. Ballard Spahr, Amy Schwartz (pro hac vice), and Scott S. Humphreys for Defendant and Respondent.

Over the course of a few years, an employee of Severin Mobile Towing Inc. (Severin) took about $157,000 in checks made payable to Severin’s d/b/a, endorsed them with what appears to be his own name or initials, and deposited them into his personal account at JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. (Chase). Because the employee deposited all the checks at automated teller machines (ATM’s), and because each check was under $1,500, Chase—in accordance with its deposit procedures—accepted each check without “human review.” When Severin eventually discovered the embezzlement, it sued Chase for negligence and conversion under California’s version of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), and for violating the unfair competition law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200; the UCL) based on those alleged UCC violations. Severin moved for summary adjudication of its conversion cause of action and Chase moved for summary judgment of all of Severin’s claims. Chase argued Severin’s claims as to 34 of the 211 stolen checks were time- barred and the remaining claims were barred by two UCC defenses: California Uniform Commercial Code sections 3405 and 3406.1 Section 3405 (generally speaking) shields a bank from liability for accepting a check made out to an employer if an employee “fraudulently indorse[d]”2 the check by signing it in a manner “purporting to be that of the employer” (§ 3405, subd. (a)(2)), and the bank exercised “ordinary care” in accepting the check “in good faith” (§ 3405, subd. (b)). Chase supported its motion with an expert’s opinion that Chase’s automated deposit procedures satisfied the applicable ordinary care standard, but Chase did not address whether Severin’s employee had fraudulently indorsed the stolen checks as defined in section 3405, subdivision (a)(2). Chase also relied on section 3406,

1 Unspecified statutory references are to the California Uniform Commercial Code.

2 “The law in this area is riddled with spelling anomalies. Depository, depositary—endorse, indorse—insure, assure.” (HH Computer Systems, Inc. v. Pacific City Bank (2014) 231 Cal.App.4th 221, 226, fn. 3 (HH Computer Systems).) When referring to the statutory phrase, we will use “fraudulent indorsement.” In all other contexts, we will use “endorsement.”

2 which applies when a victim’s negligence substantially contributed to the fraud. The trial court granted Chase’s motion on statute of limitations and section 3405 grounds; the court did not reach section 3406. The court denied Severin’s motion as moot, and entered judgment for Chase. On appeal, Severin argues only that the court erred in granting summary judgment to Chase on Severin’s conversion cause of action (and, by extension, the derivative UCL cause of action). Severin does not challenge the trial court’s ruling as to the statute of limitations or the negligence cause of action. Specifically, Severin argues the court erroneously granted summary judgment under section 3405 because Chase failed to meet its burden of establishing that Severin’s employee fraudulently indorsed the stolen checks in a manner “purporting to be that of [his] employer.” (§ 3405, subd. (a)(2).) Severin further argues factual disputes about its reasonableness in supervising its employee preclude summary judgment under section 3406. We agree with Severin in both respects, and therefore do not reach the merits of Chase’s claim that its automated deposit procedures satisfy the applicable ordinary care standard. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment and remand with directions specified in the Disposition. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Factual Background Severin is an auto towing company doing business as “USA Towing & Recovery.” Severin is owned and operated by brothers Asad and Basil Raffo, who started the company in 2007. That year, Severin hired Guillermo Oseguera as its first employee. The company did not run a background check

3 on Oseguera when it hired him, but a check a few years later came back clean. Oseguera began as a tow truck driver, and was promoted to lot manager within a year. He was “ ‘100 percent responsible’ for running the lot.” Tow truck drivers would drop an average of four to five cars at the lot each day. Each driver would give Oseguera an invoice for the vehicle, which Oseguera was supposed to enter into Severin’s computer system. When someone would come to retrieve a vehicle, that person would give payment to Oseguera, who would release the vehicle. Oseguera “was the only lot manager that had the power to ‘release’ cars from the lot by himself.”3 At the end of each day, Oseguera was supposed to take the invoices and payments to Asad. Asad testified in his deposition that Oseguera “ ‘was 100 percent responsible for receiving the car, entering the information [into Severin’s computer system], receiving the check and then releasing the car, and he would run that all through [Asad].” No one at Severin reviewed Oseguera’s files or compared the invoices he delivered at the end of each day to the original invoices in his files. Severin first suspected in mid-2016 that Oseguera might be stealing money. Severin discovered that from time-to-time, at the end of the work day, Oseguera “would actually steal one or two checks and misfile the related invoices.” When Asad confronted Oseguera about the theft, Oseguera left work and never returned. Asad filed a police report, but never took legal action against Oseguera because he was “a fugitive . . . in Mexico.”

3 Asad explained in deposition that managers of Severin’s other lots “needed permission” because they did not have the software required to generate invoices.

4 After Oseguera’s departure, Severin implemented several new procedures to prevent employee theft, including installation of surveillance cameras on the lot, use of triplicate invoices delivered simultaneously to the lot manager and an owner, and division of responsibility for intaking and releasing vehicles. Still, Asad testified Oseguera “could have come up with something else” to circumvent Severin’s new measures. It “blew out [Asad’s] mind,” in the first place, “that somebody could cash a check written to somebody else.” About a month after it discovered the fraud, Severin notified Oseguera’s bank (Chase). Based on a review of Oseguera’s account records for the period January 2014 through September 2016, it appears he deposited into his own account 211 checks payable to “USA Towing” totaling $156,805.30. Each check was for an amount less than $1,500, and was deposited at an ATM. Oseguera endorsed the checks with what appears to be his own name or initials, rather than the name Severin or USA Towing.4 Under Chase’s applicable Deposit Review Operations procedures, checks under $1,500 deposited at ATM’s were “automatically processed and accepted for deposit without human review.” Accordingly, every check at issue “was processed by automatic means and accepted without review for deposit into Oseguera’s account.”

4 The appellate record contains Severin’s stolen checks and several unrelated checks payable to Oseguera. He endorsed all of these checks in a substantially similar manner, with what appear to be two initials followed by handwriting that is difficult to decipher (see exemplar attached as Appendix A, post, page 23).

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