Siminoff v. Jas. H. Goodman & Co. Bank

121 P. 939, 18 Cal. App. 5, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 373
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 8, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 884.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 121 P. 939 (Siminoff v. Jas. H. Goodman & Co. Bank) 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
Siminoff v. Jas. H. Goodman & Co. Bank, 121 P. 939, 18 Cal. App. 5, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 373 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

The question presented in this ease is whether the complaint states a cause of action. The complaint was filed on September 27, 1909, and sets forth six causes of action. In the first cause of action, it alleges that the defendant was and is a banking corporation organized under the laws of this state, and conducting a general banking business and acting as a banking corporation, with its principal office and place of business located in the city of Napa in Napa county. It is next alleged that, at all the times involved, the plaintiff was a trader in good financial standing and credit, and engaged in the business of manufacturing, selling and dealing in ladies’ cloaks and suits in said city of Napa; and that he was a customer of and depositor with the defendant, and had and kept a banking account with defendant, subject to his, said plaintiff’s, checks. , It is then alleged that, from June 16 to June 19, 1909, plaintiff had in defendant bank a balance due and owing him exceeding the sum of $21.05, subject to plaintiff’s checks; that, on June 16, 1909, plaintiff drew his cheek number 627 on defendant bank, for $21.05, payable to the order of Meyer Cloak Company, in payment for an indebtedness then owing by plaintiff to said Meyer Cloak Company, and delivered said check to said Meyer Cloak Company in payment for said indebtedness; that said Meyer Cloak Company, immediately upon receipt of the check, caused it to be presented to defendant bank for payment, properly indorsed, during business hours, and in the *8 usual course of business; but that defendant bank, notwithstanding that it' then had sufficient funds belonging to plaintiff on deposit with it wherewith to honor said check, refused to pay said check, and marked the same “no funds,” and returned the cheek to Meyer Cloak Company dishonored. It is then alleged that, by reason of the foregoing acts and conduct of defendant bank, plaintiff has suffered and sustained damage in the sum of $75,000, in this, that is to say, by reason of the foregoing acts and conduct of defendant bank, plaintiff has suffered great injury in his name and credit with said Meyer Cloak Company and others, and his standing as a reputable merchant has been lost, and his credit destroyed.

The remaining five causes of action are based on similar facts as to five other checks, drawn in favor of different firms, in sums varying from $3.75 to $287.45, all of which were returned to the payees dishonored. Four of these checks were drawn on June 12, 1909, and two of them on June 16, 1909, and all shared the same fate, although defendant, as is alleged, had funds in its hands to the credit of plaintiff sufficient to meet the same.

The question of importance to be determined is whether section 3302 of the Civil Code prescribes the only measure of damages in cases of this character, or, in fact, was intended to apply to such cases at all. It reads: “The detriment caused by the breach of an obligation to pay money only, is deemed to be the amount due by the terms of the obligation, with interest thereon.” This section is found, among others, in chapter II, article I of part II, and is designated by its subhead, or what may be termed its syllabus, to pertain to cases for “breach of contract to pay liquidated sum.” Section 3300 of the same code and part of the same article provides: “For the breach of an obligation arising from contract, the measure of damages, except where otherwise expressly provided by this code, is the amount which will compensate the party aggrieved for all the detriment proximately caused thereby, or which, in the ordinary course of things, would be. likely to result therefrom.”

Article II of the same part, in general, relates to “damages for wrongs.” Section 3333 is as follows: “For the breach of an obligation not arising from contract, the measure of damages, except where otherwise provided by this code, is the *9 amount which will compensate for all the detriment proximately caused thereby, whether it could have been anticipated or not.”

The same code defines an obligation to be “a legal duty, by which a person is bound to do or not to do a certain thing” (Civ. Code, sec. 1427); and may arise “either from the contract of the parties, or by operation of law,” in which latter case it “may be enforced in the manner provided by law, or by civil action or proceedings.” (Id., sec. 1428.) It will be observed that the code furnishes a different measure of damages for breaches of obligations “to pay money only” and breaches of obligations arishig from contracts generally, and from obligations not arising from contract, i. e., from wrongs.

The position taken by respondent is that “section 3302 controls the measure of damages to the exclusion of every other section of the code, and to the exclusion of every other principle of law,” and this results, as is claimed, from “the relation of debtor and creditor existing between the depositor and the bank.” Furthermore, “that there is no other obligation, the breach of which is alleged, and no other is anticipated by the contract; that if there is an element of tort about the act of refusal to pay for which a different rule may apply as to the measure of damages, the nature and character of the circumstances must be alleged- and shown, and special damages pleaded.”

Appellant contends, as does respondent, that the cause of action rests upon the duty of the bank toward its depositors, but it is claimed by appellant that this duty is not alone that of debtor and creditor, but “that upon the proper presentation of a proper check by a proper person, there being sufficient funds on deposit to the credit of the drawer of the check, it is the duty of the bank promptly to honor the check, subject, of course, as Mr. Morse points out (2 Banks and Banking, sec. 445), to the right of the bank to take a reasonable time to make inquiries in cases in which suspicious circumstances appear. . . . That the whole commercial community, and every interest dependent upon commerce, are affected by the honor of traders’ checks,” and that “the courts should hold banks to the proper performance of their duties to their trader depositors. ” It is further contended by appellant that, whether the alleged cause of action be treated as upon con *10 tract or in tort is, in this state, immaterial upon the question of damages; because we have but a single form of action, in which nothing more is necessary than to state the facts and pray for the appropriate relief; “that in actions for damages for breach of contract, the parties need not to have consciously anticipated the precise damages which would flow from the breach, but, as our supreme court points out (Hunt Bros. Co. v. San Lorenzo Co., 150 Cal. 51, 56, 57, [7 L. R. A., N. S., 913, 87 Pac. 1093]), will be taken to have contemplated all damages which they ought, as reasonable persons exercising their faculties with reasonable prudence and discretion, to have contemplated; because no one can escape liability by the simple expedient of closing his eyes to what he would have seen if he had but looked; and because the consequences to a trader from the dishonor of his checks is so notorious that no bank can justly affect ignorance of what the whole commercial world is vividly alive to; . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 P. 939, 18 Cal. App. 5, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siminoff-v-jas-h-goodman-co-bank-calctapp-1912.