Whorf v. Seattle National Bank

24 P.2d 120, 173 Wash. 629, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 696
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 1933
DocketNo. 24235. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 P.2d 120 (Whorf v. Seattle National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whorf v. Seattle National Bank, 24 P.2d 120, 173 Wash. 629, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 696 (Wash. 1933).

Opinions

Steinert, J.

The plaintiff brought this action to recover upon a check for sixteen hundred dollars, drawn to her order on the defendant, Seattle National *630 Bank. It is alleged that the check was forcibly taken from plaintiff and her endorsement forged thereon, the amount of the check being thereafter paid by the bank to the wrongdoer who presented it.' At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, she rested. The defendants thereupon rested without submitting’ any evidence, and the court subsequently entered a judgment dismissing the action with prejudice. The plaintiff has appealed.

While the judgment recites that the court had theretofore rendered a written opinion and had made its findings of fact and conclusions of law, these do not appear in the record. A reading* of the statement of facts in the case discloses an aberrant and somewhat confusing story. Separated from the frequent objections interposed, the'consequent argument of counsel and the many explanations and repetitions, it may be summarized as follows:

Appellant, Lenore C. Whorf, evidently a woman of mature years and with some experience in business affairs, had been acquainted with a man by the name of William L. Dierssen for forty years, as she says, and had had numerous business transactions with him. At one time, she had been engaged to marry him.

On January 22, 1929, she, accompanied by Dierssen, went to the office of A. W. Leonard, the drawer of the check, and there gave to Leonard her promissory note for sixteen hundred dollars, due thirty days after date, and as consideration for the note she then received from Mr. Leonard the check in question for a like amount. If anything else was said or done at that time, it is not disclosed, but the fact that Dierssen was present, coupled with other facts hereinafter related, indicates that he was probably interested personally in the disposition of the proceeds of the check.

With the check in her purse, the plaintiff, still accompanied by Dierssen, left Mr. Leonard’s office and pro *631 ceeded to the office of a lawyer who was in some way concerned in the transactions which were to be consummated by the use of the check. While appellant and Dierssen were in the reception room of the law office waiting to see the lawyer, Dierssen knocked the purse from appellant’s hands, picked it up and possessed himself of the check, refusing to return it. When the lawyer in whose office they were appeared, Dierssen exhibited the check, keeping it in his own hands, but promising to produce it at a conference to be held the next morning at another law office, at which a number of different persons were to be present. Apparently, he gave the idea that he was going to see that the check was used for the purpose for which it was intended. Nothing further with reference to the check occurred that day.

The next morning, appellant and Dierssen had breakfast together, again discussed the check and the matter of its possession, and then went to the other law office, where there was an appointed meeting of a considerable number of persons, all interested in some transaction in and about which the check was apparently intended to be used. This conference seems to have lasted an hour or two. Dierssen absented himself from the meeting once or twice for a short time, but each time returned and apparently participated in the conference. Finally, matters appear to have reached the stage where the check had to be produced or else accounted for, and Dierssen then said that he had cashed the check, but that he had the money and would produce it. The lawyer charged Dierssen’s act of cashing the check as forgery. Dierssen, resenting this, was about to make an attack on the lawyer, but was prevented from so doing when the lawyer directed his stenographer to call the police. Dierssen *632 offered to produce the check or the money if the police were not called.

The appellant and Dierssen’s father then went with Dierssen, at the latter’s invitation, to the bank on which the check was drawn, Dierssen saying that he would there get the money realized from cashing the check and give it to them. While in the bank, Dierssen seems to have had some conversation with one of its officers, the nature of which, so far as is disclosed, had nothing to do with the check. Dierssen then said to appellant that he had the money in his pocket, that they would go to lunch together, and that he would there give her the money.

Up to this time, notwithstanding Dierssen’s statement that he had cashed the check, appellant seems not to have believed that possible, and, relying upon the fact that she had not endorsed the check, and not believing that Dierssen would forge her name, she was still expecting that, instead of the money, Dierssen would give her the instrument itself. In this state of mind and under these conditions, appellant with Diers-sen and his father proceeded to a restaurant, where they intended to have lunch. Arriving at the door of the restaurant, Dierssen instructed the others to go in and order for him, saying that he would join them in a few minutes. This suggestion was followed, and Dierssen went his way, but did not return, as he had agreed.

Appellant, becoming suspicious by reason of Diers-sen thus failing to join her at the restaurant, proceeded, after her luncheon, to the bank on which the check was drawn, for the purpose of giving to the bank a stop-payment order. Arriving there and making known her errand, she was at once informed that the check had already been cashed by the bank. It now appears from the check, which is in evidence, .that *633 there is endorsed on the back thereof the following: “L. C. Whorf,” below that “Wm. L. Dierssen,” and below that in pencil ‘ ‘ OK La. ’ ’ The officer or employee of the bank whom the appellant first met apparently sent for the check and exhibited it to her. Thereafter, to quote her testimony, the following occurred:

“Q. Recite the conversation you had with Mr. LaGrave. • A. This man, when the check came down, when he looked at the back of it, he went over and got a man — he said ‘I will get the man who O. K’d that,’ and he brought this man over and introduced me to him. Q. Who was that man? A. I have forgotten the name of the man- at the statement window, but he introduced me— Q. (Interposing) To whom? A. Mr. LaGrave, he said, the man that O. K’d this. He asked him how he came to O. K. it, and he explained to him that he had known this man Dierssen for a great many years, and he told him he was going to open an account there at the bank, and that is why he did that. And he also said he was an officer of the bank. ’ ’

It further appears that, later, the bank in some way gained access to a safety deposit box belonging to Dierssen but rented in a name other than his own, and there found a considerable sum of money, mostly in one hundred dollar bills, such as had been paid to Dierssen when he cashed the check. Of the money so found, variously stated at from eight hundred to eleven hundred and fifty dollars, it appears that the bank paid to Mr. Leonard, the drawer of the check, five hundred or five hundred and fifty dollars, and that the remainder was turned over to an attorney, for what purpose does not clearly appear.

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24 P.2d 120, 173 Wash. 629, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whorf-v-seattle-national-bank-wash-1933.