State Planters Bank & Tr Co. of Richmond, VA v. Fifth-Third Union Tr Co.

10 N.E.2d 935, 56 Ohio App. 309, 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 300, 9 Ohio Op. 297, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 401
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 18, 1937
DocketNo 5122
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 10 N.E.2d 935 (State Planters Bank & Tr Co. of Richmond, VA v. Fifth-Third Union Tr Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Planters Bank & Tr Co. of Richmond, VA v. Fifth-Third Union Tr Co., 10 N.E.2d 935, 56 Ohio App. 309, 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 300, 9 Ohio Op. 297, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 401 (Ohio Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

OPINION

By ROSS, J.

This is an action to recover the amount of a check. The appellee — plaintiff—was the drawer drawee of the check. The appellant — defendant— was the bank to whom appellee had paid the amount of the check upon presentment for payment, having received the same from a correspondent hank, to whom it had been transmitted by the paying bank, the indorsements of the payees having been forged.

At the conclusion of the evidence of ap *302 pellee the appellant made a motion for an instructed verdict, reserving the right to go to the jury in the event the motion was overruled. The court overruled the motion of the appellant, which then rested. The appellee then made a motion for an instructed verdict, which, over the protest of the appellant, was granted, and special charges tendered by the appellant were refused. Judgment was entered on the verdict so instructed.

If, therefore, under the circumstances there was substantial evidence introduced by the appellee tending to sustain a good defense in law or equity, or no substantial evidence tending to sustain a cause of action, the court was in error, and the judgment must be set aside.

It is alleged in the petition, that:

“There is due plaintiff from defendant as endorser on a bank check dated October 10, 1928, drawn by plaintiff on itself, payable to the order of Francos B. Kinzer, C. S. Kinzer, J. A. Kinzer and H. A. Kinzer, the sum of Two Thousand Three Hundred and Forty-eight and 64/100 ($2,348.64) Dollars, with interest thereon at six (6%) percent per annum from October 18, 1928, a copy of which bank check, with all endorsements thereon, is as follows:
Richmond, Va., Oct. 10, 1928. No. 4933. State Planters Bank and Trust Co. 68-2
of Richmond, Va.
Pay to the order of Frances B. Kinzer, C. S. Kinzer, J. A. Kinzer and H. A. Kinzer $2348.64.
Exactly Two Thousand Three Hundred Forty eight Dollars Sixty four Cents.
Investment Department Vouched by Randolph C. Harrison
E. Ray Burnett Vice President.

The following are the endorsements on said check:

Frances B. Kinzer
C. S. Kinzer
J. A. Kinzer
H. A. Kinzer
e/o C. S. Kinzer
Pay to the Order of
Any Bank, Banker or Trust Co.
All Prior Endorsements Guaranteed
Oct. 13, 1928
The First National Bank of Sevierville, Tenn.
Arthur T. Ingle, Cashier.
Pay to the order of
Any Bank, Banker or Trust Co.
Previous Endorsements Guaranteed Oct. 15, 1928
Holston-Union National Bank
87-50 of Knoxville, Tenn. 87-50
A. Y. Russell, Cashier.
Oct. 17, 1928
Pay to the Order of any
Bank, Banker or Trust Co.
Prior Restrictive
Endorsements Guaranteed
Fifth Third Union Trust Co. Cincinnati
13-31 Ohio 13-31
Paid through Cincinnati
Clearing House
Fifth Third Union Trust Co.”

It is further alleged that such check was delivered by the appellee on October 10, 1928 to The First National Bank of Sevierville, Tennessee, to take up a draft, purporting to have been drawn on appellee by Frances B., C. S., J. A., and H. A Kinzer, and which was presented to appellees for payment on such day; that prior thereto appellee had agreed to make a loan to the payees of the check, to be secured by a mortgage upon real estate situated in Tennessee, owned by such payees, and that the appellee believed said draft to have been drawn by such payees in consummation of such loan to them, that on February 7, 1931, the payees of such check, with the exception of C. S. Kinzer, instituted a suit in chancery in Sevierville, Tennessee, agSinst appellee and the trustee of such mortgage, resulting in a decree finding all of the signatures upon the note, mortgage, and draft to be forgeries, with the exception of the signature of C. S. Kinzer, and the indorsements of the names of the payees upon the check to be forgeries, with the exception of that of C. S Kinzer, and the note, mortgage, draft, and check were held to be inoperative against those whose signatures had been forged by C. S. Kinzer; that appellee first learned of the forgery on January 27, 1931, and until such date believed all such signatures to be genuine; that appellee gave appellant due notice of the filing of such suit, but appellant failed to take any action in connection with such litigation; that the said C. S. Kinzer was decreed in such chancery suit to have a one-third interest in a small strip of ground valued at $150.00.

The prayer of the petition is for judgment for the full amount of the check.

A demurrer filed to the petition was overruled. The appellant then filed'an answer in which it denied owing the amount claimed, and admitted the indorsements as alleged, the delivery of the check to the *303 Sevierville Bank on or about October 10, 1928. for the purpose of taking up the draft mentioned in the petition; that such draft was drawn for the amount of the loan made by appellee to the Kinzers.

Appellant then alleges that the signatures upon the note, mortgage, and draft, and the indorsements upon the check of the names of the Kinzers were all made by the same hand and that all the Banks including appellant, whose indorsement appears upon the check sued upon, were entitled to, and did rely upon the appellees approval of such signatures when such check was accepted for collection, and that appellees recognized and approved such signatures when it honored and paid the check in question, drawn by it upon itself to the order of the Kinzers.

The appellant further alleges that appelleels loss, if any, was due to its reliance upon a forged note, mortgage, and draft, rather than the forged indorsements upon the check.

It is also alleged that by reason of the delay ensuing from the date when such check was paid in October, 1928 until April 1931, the appellant was prejudiced and particularly so, in that, although appellee became aware of such forgery in the summer of 1930, the immediate predecessor bank in indorsement upon the check failed November 11, 1930, and the appellant was precluded from recovery from it.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.E.2d 935, 56 Ohio App. 309, 24 Ohio Law. Abs. 300, 9 Ohio Op. 297, 1937 Ohio App. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-planters-bank-tr-co-of-richmond-va-v-fifth-third-union-tr-co-ohioctapp-1937.