Steinbrecher v. Fairfield County Trust Co.

255 A.2d 138, 5 Conn. Cir. Ct. 393, 6 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 703, 1968 Conn. Cir. LEXIS 226
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1968
DocketFile No. CV 1-662-11344
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 255 A.2d 138 (Steinbrecher v. Fairfield County Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steinbrecher v. Fairfield County Trust Co., 255 A.2d 138, 5 Conn. Cir. Ct. 393, 6 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 703, 1968 Conn. Cir. LEXIS 226 (Colo. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

Kosicki, J.

By a complaint dated February 7, 1966, the plaintiff brought action against the defendant to recover a total of $3000 on five checks of $600 each drawn by the maker against its checking account in the defendant. Four of the cheeks were [395]*395returned dishonored and unpaid. A demurrer to the complaint was sustained on the ground, directed to a claim of law asserted in the complaint, that the defendant was not a quasi receiver of the funds of the drawer and the checks did not constitute an “equitable assignment pro tanto of a special fund.” The court, Stapleton, J., relied, in its decision, on our Uniform Commercial Code, which, in General Statutes § 42a-4-402, provides that a payor bank is liable only to its customers for damages proximately caused by the wrongful dishonor of an item. A customer has been defined as a depositor and not the payee. “[T]he certification or acceptance of the check[s] by the defendant was essential to liability. The failure to allege either of these facts in the complaint rendered it fatally defective . . . .” Leary v. Citizens & Manufacturers National Bank, 128 Conn. 475, 479.

The defendant then moved for judgment because of the failure of the plaintiff to plead further, and thereupon the plaintiff filed a substituted complaint in which, in addition to the claims originally made, he alleged that as to each check the funds of the maker, Pairport Rambler, Inc., had been “equitably assigned” to the plaintiff with full knowledge and consent to such assignment by the defendant.

The finding of facts, with such corrections as were made by the trial court, discloses the following situation. The plaintiff is the payee of five checks, each in the amount of $600. The drawer of all five checks was Fairport Rambler, Inc., hereinafter called Pair-port, an automobile dealer which had gone out of business before the commencement of the present action. The plaintiff was engaged in the sale of automobiles at wholesale and had been involved in a series of business transactions with Pairport. Prior to receiving the checks sued on, the plaintiff had made a loan to Pairport and received the five [396]*396postdated checks, each for $600, drawn on Fairport’s regular checking account at the defendant bank. The cheeks were postdated in five successive monthly intervals from June 10, 1965, through October 10, 1965. When the first four checks were presented to the defendant for payment, on their respective due dates, they were dishonored for lack of sufficient funds. The fifth check was never presented for payment because the plaintiff considered that such presentment would be a futile gesture.

Beginning on or about January and February, 1965, the defendant, which had been substantially financing Fairport’s business, maintained a close watch on Fairport’s activities, owing to Fairport’s financial difficulties. This watch included frequent supervisory visits to Fairport’s premises by Walter Loiewski, an officer of the defendant. Fairport was heavily indebted to the defendant because of various loans and advances by the defendant, thus making this intensive supervision necessary. To keep Fair-port in business and to protect its own loans as well as the interests of other creditors of Fairport, the defendant, with Fairport’s consent, set up four special “escrow” accounts in addition to Fairport’s regular checking account. These were for the purpose of (1) paying the Connecticut sales tax, (2) paying for parts and services, (3) maintaining a dealer’s reserve account, and (4) providing funds for used-car purchases.

The regular checking account was in a constant overdraft status on the dates when the four checks were presented for payment and on the maturity date of the fifth check. The defendant maintained substantially complete control of the four escrow accounts. As to the regular checking account, the signature of one of Fairport’s officers was required for the issuance of a check, and the honoring of it was subject to the final approval to the defendant’s [397]*397officers, because of the constant overdraft in the regular checking account.

The court found, and an examination of the evidence supports the conclusion, that there was no assignment to the plaintiff, either express or implied, of any funds on deposit to cash any of the five checks in suit, nor was there evidence to support an acceptance of any of the checks by the defendant. The defendant had substantial claims against Fair-port, in excess of the overdrafts in the regular checking account, including deficiencies due to its floor plan arrangements with Fairport, and, further, because of a loan and security agreement executed between Fairport and the defendant on or about February 16, 1965, giving the defendant substantial lien creditor rights against most of Fairport’s assets. At no time between February, 1965, and October, 1965, when Fairport went out of business, were any state or federal proceedings in insolvency, bankruptcy or receivership instituted by or against the company.

The trial court found the issues on the substituted complaint for the defendant and correctly arrived at the following conclusions: (1) On the dates when the first four checks were presented, and on the date of maturity of the fifth check, the funds in the regular checking account were insufficient to honor the checks; (2) there was no assignment, equitable or otherwise, of any funds relative to the checks to the plaintiff, at the time or times involved; (3) the defendant was not obligated to make transfers from the four escrow accounts to the regular checking account in order to honor these five checks; (4) the defendant was merely a depository of Fairport’s funds and was not an author, maker or drawer of the five checks; (5) the defendant’s failure to pay the checks was not wrongful or illegal; and (6) the defendant, as drawee, or as a depository, was not [398]*398liable to the plaintiff, as payee, for the alleged wrongful dishonor of the five checks.

The foregoing finding is not subject to any correction, except as to the one addition made by the trial court, which would be of any advantage to the plaintiff. There was ample evidence to support the subordinate facts found. There is no dispute that Fairport was in financial difficulties early in 1965. On January 22, 1965, the defendant loaned Fairport $33,192.76 on a promissory note payable one month after date. This was reinforced by the loan and security agreement dated February 16, 1965, which covered present and future loans to an aggregate amount of $750,000, together with advances or loans for taxes, levies, insurance, repairs to or maintenance of equipment and inventory as well as all other obligations, direct or indirect, due the defendant, then existing or arising in the future, and all reasonable costs and expenses of collection, including attorneys’ fees. By way of collateral, a security interest was granted the defendant in all property of Fairport, including equipment, inventory, business accounts and other like property interests, and future payments on conditional or time sales. On March 5,1964, a financing statement signed by Fair-port and the defendant was filed with the secretary of state pursuant to General Statutes § 42a-9-401, a part of our Uniform Commercial Code, giving the defendant a security interest in all of Fairport’s motor vehicles, new and used. On February 17, 1965, a similar instrument was filed giving the defendant a security interest in all of Fairport’s assets except motor vehicles.

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Bluebook (online)
255 A.2d 138, 5 Conn. Cir. Ct. 393, 6 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 703, 1968 Conn. Cir. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinbrecher-v-fairfield-county-trust-co-connappct-1968.