West Monroe State Bank v. Calvert

144 So. 745
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1932
DocketNo. 4378.
StatusPublished

This text of 144 So. 745 (West Monroe State Bank v. Calvert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Monroe State Bank v. Calvert, 144 So. 745 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PALMER, J.

Plaintiff sues to recover of the defendant the sum of $1,400, representing the amount of a loss plaintiff sustained in handling a piece of paper in the form of a cashier’s cheek in the sum of $2,500, for a party known in West Monroe as Walter K. Johnson, who was brought to the bank and introduced to the cashier by the defendant.

Plaintiff’s allegations are substantially as follows: That on June 18, 1921, defendant brought a party into the bank, whom he introduced as Walter K. Johnson, and advised plaintiff’s cashier that Johnson had an exchange which he, defendant, wanted the bank to handle, and that he, defendant, had an interest in it to the amount of $500 because of a land sale he was making to Johnson; that the item, when presented by Johnson, was in the form of a cashier's check, being in the sum of $2,500, and purported to have been issued to the order of said Johnson by, the Southwest National Bank of Oklahoma City; that defendant was at the time a director of the bank and was one of its vice presidents, and, because of the absence of the president, was the ranking officer of the bank at that time; that the cashier, acting upon the orders of defendant, who was vice president, handled this item, paying to Johnson $500 in cash and placing the remainder to his credit; . that a short time later during the same day Johnson withdrew from the bank an additional amount of $900, and that, in addition thereto, plaintiff cashed Johnson’s cheche .issued ,to defendant in the sum of $500, making a total of $1,900 paid by it to said Johnson or to his order; but that defendant later returned the said $500 which he had received; that the said check was a forgery and its payment was refused by the Southwest National Bank of Oklahoma City, and. that the said Johnson was a swindler and immediately disappeared on the same day; that its cashier would not have paid any money on this check .except for the fact that he was. directed to’ do so by defendant, ’his superior in charge of the transaction; that said Johnson was in fact a stranger to plaintiff and to defendant; also, that defendant gave its cashier instructions to handle the said item without first attempting to investigate its genuineness, knowing plaintiff’s cashier would carry out defendant’s orders. s

Defendant answered, admitting that he went with Johnson to. the b.ank aii'd introduced him to the cashier; that he did tell the cashier he had made a land deal with Johnson and was to receive out of the said check the sum of $500, but denies that he gave the cashier any directions or instructions, and in fact, he denies he had any authority to give such orders. He alleges that he was on a deal with Johnson, believing him to be in good faith, and that he did not represent the bank in any manner, but represented himself alone; that, while he was a director and vice president of the bank, he took no part in its operations and had no authority to do so; that he did not guarantee the integrity of the said check; and that whatever losses plaintiff may have sustained on account of handling the check were due entirely to the carelessness, negligence, and lack of diligence on the part of plaintiff’s cashier.

From a judgment rejecting its demands and dismissing its suit, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

Opinion.

This case involves legal questions almost altogether. The undisputed facts are substantially as follows; The party known as Walter K. Johnson, who committed the alleged forgery, ran an advertisement in the local paper serving West Monroe, stating that he was in the market to buy some real estate. Defendant answered the advertisement, after which Johnson called to see' him. Defendant submitted to Johnson certain properties he had for sale. Johnson told him that he was considering two other pieces of real estate and was obligated to give further attention to them before making a deal, but that he would probably see him later. After two or three days he returned and told defendant he liked the property; that the price was right and he was ready to make a deal. After, reaching an agreement Johnson told defendant that he had a piece of paper he would have to clear through a bank and asked him to recommend some bank where he could handle it. Defendant, recommended West Monroe Bank and went there with him, introducing him to the cashier, E. G. Thatcher. Thatcher says that defendant, when he and Johnson entered, addressed him as follows: “Mr. Thatcher, this is Mr. Walter K. Johnson. He and I are on a land'deal; he has an exchange I want you to handle for him. He is to pay me $500.00 out of it.” Herein lies the crux of the question of defendant’s liability.

Defendant denies that he made that statement in those exact words. He says he used the pronoun he instead, of the pronoun I, as to who it was that wanted the bank to handle, the exchange. Thatcher, however, was cor-, roborated in his testimony on this point by Mrs. Mahaffey, an employee of the bank who was present at the time-.

It is the contention of plaintiff that the de *747 fendant is responsible on the following two grounds: (1) That the forged check was handled by the cashier under defendant’s directions, he being the superior officer in the bank at the time; and (2) that a fiduciary relationship existed between defendant and plaintiff which placed a higher degree of care upon defendant in this transaction because he was a director and a vice president of the bank; that he failed to object when he should have objected and failed to speak when he should have spoken, allowing the cashier to handle the item, knowing that no investigation had •been made, which is in itself such gross negligence as to render him liable.

The evidence is undisputed that defendant, though a vice president, was inactive. He has held that title for many years, notwithstanding, according to the proof, he has never in a single instance attempted to give an order pertaining to the management and operation of thé bank affairs, nor has he been called on to do so by the officers actively in charge of the bank.

The theory of plaintiff is that the president was absent at the time, and, in his absence, the defendant, being present, became the ranking officer, and, since he gave the order to the cashier to handle this check, the cashier made no inspection or investigation, not being required to do so under such circumstances, but merely complied with the order of the defendant. We do not find that the facts sustain that theory. The cashier admits that, during his entire service in the •bank, which covered a number of years, the defendant had never given an order pertaining to the bank’s operations. He was only second vice president and does not appear to have even had an office in the bank building. He apparently visited the bank only when he had personhl business to attend to, or was called to attend a meeting of the board of directors.

The cashier was a trained banker and certainly knew that, if he was to depart from the regular course of handling such items by waiving any further identification of the party presenting the cheek or the genuineness of the cheek, and was to rely entirely upon the fact .that the defendant was directing him in his course, he should have at least secured from the defendant his O. K. on the instrument, which would have settled that part of the controversy. But this he did not do. As the evidence shows, in the absence of the president, the cashier himself had charge of the management of the bank.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-monroe-state-bank-v-calvert-lactapp-1932.