Stowell v. Cloquet Co-Op Credit Union

542 N.W.2d 663, 1996 WL 33057
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedApril 1, 1996
DocketC4-95-1608
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 542 N.W.2d 663 (Stowell v. Cloquet Co-Op Credit Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stowell v. Cloquet Co-Op Credit Union, 542 N.W.2d 663, 1996 WL 33057 (Mich. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

HUSPENI, Judge.

Respondent, an account holder at appellant Credit Union, brought this action to recover amounts that the Credit Union paid over several months on forged cheeks drawn on his account. Prior to trial, the Credit Union moved for summary judgment, on the ground that respondent’s alleged noncompliance with either a 20-day notice provision in a draft withdrawal agreement or a 30-day provision under the Uniform Commercial Code should bar the action. The district court denied the motion, and the case proceeded to trial. On a special verdict form, the jury found that the Credit Union had exercised its duty of care with respect to respondent’s account for all but one of the ten months in question, while respondent had exercised his duty of care for only the first four months.

The Credit Union now appeals from the judgment entered following the trial court’s denial of the Credit Union’s motions for a new trial or for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. We affirm.

FACTS

Respondent Randall Stowell opened a savings account and a share draft (checking) account at appellant Cloquet Co-op Credit Union (Credit Union) in 1984. At that time, Stowell signed a draft withdrawal agreement, which provided in part that

[i]f items on the statements are not objected to within twenty (20) days from the mailing date of the statement, the accuracy of the items on the statement shall be considered final.

After opening the accounts, Stowell received his account statements from the Credit Union on a monthly basis without incident until December 1992. The Credit Union mails statements for a given month to its 30,000 members within the first ten days of the following month. The Credit Union mailed Stowell’s statements to his address in rural Barnum. Stowell’s home is separated *666 by approximately one-half of a mile from his mailbox, which stands next to the mailbox of the owners of the neighboring property. Robert Nelson moved onto the neighboring property in the early fall of 1992.

In December 1992, Stowell noticed that he had not received his account statement from the Credit Union for transactions he had made in the previous month. He informed an employee at the Credit Union that he had not received the statement. The employee told Stowell that the computers were down at that time, but that the Credit Union would mail a second statement to him later. Sto-well never received a second statement. Over the course of the next several months, as Stowell noticed that his account statements failed to arrive, he periodically contacted the Credit Union. He spoke with different employees at different times. Generally, each employee would respond that he or she would send out a second mailing. Stowell never received the second mailings.

Apart from his contacts with the Credit Union regarding his account statement mailings, Stowell also visited the Credit Union approximately twenty times between the months of December 1992 and August 1993 to complete various transactions. Most of those transactions involved Stowell’s savings account. Stowell generally kept a zero balance in his share draft account; the Credit Union covered Stowell’s checks by transferring money from his savings account. With each in-person transaction that Stowell made, the Credit Union would issue him a receipt that indicated the change in his account from the transaction. Because the transactions generally involved only Stowell’s savings account, the receipts usually reflected the balance in that account alone and not in his checking account.

In August 1993, Stowell called the Credit Union and spoke to Terry Kimber, the vice president of loans and a long-time Credit Union employee. Stowell told Kimber that he had been missing some of his mail and that all of the missing mail seemed to be his statements from the Credit Union. Kimber testified that he mailed Stowell duplicate statements for two or three prior months and that he told Stowell to contact the Credit Union within three days if the duplicates did not arrive. Kimber admitted that he never suggested that Stowell should pick up the statements in person rather than wait to receive them in the mail. Stowell did not receive the duplicate statements, and he did not contact Kimber within the three-day period.

On September 15, 1993, Stowell received a telephone call from a local bank about a bounced check drawn on Stowell’s account and written out to Robert Nelson, Stowell’s neighbor. Aware that he had never written a check to Nelson, Stowell realized that something was amiss, and he immediately contacted the police and the Credit Union. Until that day, Stowell had never suspected his neighbor of forgery. On searching Nelson’s property on September 17, 1993, the police discovered various pieces of mail addressed to Stowell from the Credit Union, including an account statement for December 1992. Nelson has since been convicted of forgery-related criminal charges.

Stowell and the Credit Union eventually determined that, starting on November 13, 1992, Nelson had forged Stowell’s signature on approximately 50 checks, totalling $22,-239.34. Stowell brought this action after the Credit Union refused to reimburse him for that amount. Acting consistent with a special verdict, the trial court awarded Stowell judgment of $12,366.27, plus $635.70 in interest.

ISSUES

1. Did the trial court err in ruling that a 20-day notice provision, in a draft withdrawal agreement that respondent signed, was “manifestly unreasonable” within the meaning of Minn.Stat. § 336.4-103(a) and therefore not enforceable?

2. Did the trial court err by concluding that Minn.Stat. § 336.4-406(d)(2) did not bar Stowell’s recovery for amounts paid for fraudulent checks written by a single forger more than thirty days after the Credit Union mailed to Stowell’s address an account statement listing unauthorized cheeks written by the same forger?

*667 3. Did the trial court abuse its discretion by not reading to the jury the text of Minn. Stat. § 336.4-406(d) and by not instructing the jury that Stowell’s account statements were made available to him upon mailing?

4. Was the jury’s finding that the Credit Union failed to exercise ordinary care by negotiating checks forged in August 1993 contrary to the evidence presented at trial?

ANALYSIS

I. Draft Withdrawal Agreement

The Credit Union first argues that Sto-well’s action must fail because he did not comply with the 20-day notice provision of the draft withdrawal agreement. That provision requires the account holder to notify the Credit Union of any errors in his account statements “within twenty (20) days from the mailing of the statement.”

The trial court rejected this argument when the Credit Union raised it as part of its motion for summary judgment and again as part of its motion for a new trial. The trial court found that the provision was “manifestly unreasonable” within the meaning of Minn. Stat. § 336.4-103(a) (1994), a provision of the Uniform Commercial Code that addresses when parties may use such an agreement to limit a bank’s responsibilities to its clients.

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Related

Stowell v. Cloquet Co-Op Credit Union
557 N.W.2d 567 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1997)

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Bluebook (online)
542 N.W.2d 663, 1996 WL 33057, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stowell-v-cloquet-co-op-credit-union-minnctapp-1996.