Tennessee Products Corp. v. Broadway Nat. Bank

158 S.W.2d 361, 25 Tenn. App. 405, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 123
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 2, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 158 S.W.2d 361 (Tennessee Products Corp. v. Broadway Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennessee Products Corp. v. Broadway Nat. Bank, 158 S.W.2d 361, 25 Tenn. App. 405, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 123 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinions

FELTS, J.

The Tennessee Products Corporation had a wood distillation plant at Lyles-Wrigley, Hickman County, Tennessee, where it produced charcoal, acetic acid and methanol. In this it used large quantities of cordwood. Its agent to buy the wood was J. C. Eakle. He would pay for it by issuing sight drafts on the corporation, payable to the order of the sellers at the American National Bank at Nashville, where the corporation kept its bank account; and on *407 arrival of the drafts it would pay tbem by giving its check to the bank. A sample of the form of these drafts is as follows:

“TENNESSEE PRODUCTS CORPORATION Chemical Wood Department
No. N-104
_Oct. 8 1937
At Sight Pay To The Order Of
B. N. Leamon $305.62
Payable through AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK, Nashville, Tenn.
Three Hundred Five & 62/100 DOLLARS
For value Received, and Charge to Account of TENNESSEE PRODUCTS CORPORATION) Timber Department Nashville, Tennessee) (Signed) J. C. Eakle
Inspector”

Attached to each draft was a voucher to show for what the draft was issued. There were blanks to be filled up, showing the name of the seller, hauler or cutter, the quantity of wood, the price of it and the price for hauling and cutting, etc. Eakle would fill in these blanks so as to show in detail the purpose for which the draft was issued.

He was a customer of the Church Street Branch of the Broadway National Bank at Nashville. Between January 29, 1937 and October 16, 1937, he negotiated 100 of these drafts at this bank. Each of them appeared to have been endorsed in blank by the payee and Eakle likewise endorsed them. The bank cashed some of them and placed the rest of them to his credit in his personal account, which he later withdrew on his checks. The bank endorsed each of these drafts, “Prior endorsements guaranteed,” presented them and received payment of them through the American National Bank from the Tennessee Products Corporation.

About the time the Tennessee Products Corporation paid the last of the drafts its officers found a shortage of cordwood and discovered that E’akle had not issued'these drafts for the purposes shown on the vouchers, but had fraudulently issued them by falsely filling in the vouchers, making the drafts payable to persons to whom the Tennessee Products Corporation was not indebted, forging endorsements of the payees, and negotiating the drafts on his own behalf. Thereupon the Tennessee Products Corporation notified the Broadway National Bank and called on the bank to pay back the amount of the drafts, $40,944.68 less $2,733.97, which Eakle had paid out of his own funds for wood, or $37,760.71. ■ The bank denied liability, and the Tennessee Products Corporation brought this suit to recover $37,760.71 of the bank, upon the ground that the bank had obtained payment of the drafts on the *408 faith of its warranty that all prior endorsements were genuine, when in fact those of the payees were forged.

The Chancellor found that Eakle acted within his authority as agent of complainant in issuing the drafts with the forged endorsements thereon and that the drafts should be regarded as issued by complainant itself; and, following Litchfield Shuttle Co. v. Cumberland Valley Nat. Bank, 134 Tenn., 379, 183 S. W., 1006, and like cases, he held that complainant by issuing the drafts with the endorsements thereon warranted that they were genuine, and was precluded from asserting to the contrary; and he dismissed the bill.

Complainant appealed. It insists that Ealde acted for himself and outside his authority as its agent and it is not precluded from setting up the forged endorsements and from relying upon the bank’s warranty that they were genuine; and that, upon the authority of State v. Broadway Nat. Bank, 153 Tenn., 113, 282 S. W., 194, it is entitled to recover of the bank what it paid the bank upon the forged endorsements which the bank warranted to be genuine.

This issue of authority is to be resolved upon appellant’s proof. Ap-pellee took none. The only witnesses on the point were Mr. Poster, vice-president and treasurer, and Mr. Lackey, auditor of appellant. These are the material facts to which they testified.

J. C. Eakle had been a trusted employee of appellant for 20 years. E. H. Ealde, his brother, was assistant treasurer of appellant. He was an inspector and the superintendent of the timber and cordwood departments. He had three other inspectors under him. The cord-wood had to be aged for about eight months before being used. Due to lack of storage space, appellant would purchase the wood and leave it at places where it had been cut or yarded until it was ready for use. J. C. Eakle’s duties were to purchase the cordwood and to keep inventories of it.

He was authorized to issue drafts on the corporation to pay for the wood. He was supplied with blank forms of drafts. On the attached vouchers were blanks to be filled up, showing in detail the purpose for which the draft was issued. He would issue drafts on the corporation, payable to the order of sellers, cutters, and haulers of wood; but he was not authorized to issue a draft without supplying the information on the voucher to show what the draft was issued for. He was not authorized to issue cheeks. Cheeks were valid only when signed by two officers of the corporation. He was not an officer or a fiscal agent of the corporation. He was not authorized to issue drafts payable to cash or bearer, or to issue drafts and get money on them to pay for wood.

In a few instances, however, he had issued cheeks, and in a few instances he had issued drafts payable to a “named payee and/or cash”; and these drafts and cheeks had been honored. Also in a few instances he had issued drafts payable to the order of a named payee and had endorsed the payee’s name by himself.

*409 In February 1937, when tbe first of the drafts here in suit came to the American National Bank, Mr. Lackey called Mr. Foster’s attention to the fact that J. C. Eakle was endorsing’ the drafts and passing them through his personal account at the Broadway National Bank. He said he “knew from past experience that similar drafts had been handled by J. C. Eakle in this manner,” and as auditor he “did not care to honor future drafts of this nature without his (Mr. Foster’s) knowledge of it.” They, however, agreed that such drafts should be honored, because the Broadway National Bank had guaranteed the endorsements and because they could see it often might be more convenient for Eakle to pay the cordwood men the cash out of his own pocket and have them endorse the drafts so that he could reimburse himself. Mr. Lackey testified:

‘ ‘ Q. Did Mr. Foster have anything to say about the apparent reason for J. C. Eakle’s endorsements on these drafts other than what you have already stated?
“A. Yes sir, we discussed the method by which payment was made to the different cord wood men from whom the purchases were made and we could naturally see the practicability or reason for Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.W.2d 361, 25 Tenn. App. 405, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-products-corp-v-broadway-nat-bank-tennctapp-1941.