Worthen Bank & Trust Co. v. Kelley-Nelson Construction Co.

245 S.W.2d 405, 219 Ark. 882, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 624
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1952
Docket4-9615
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 245 S.W.2d 405 (Worthen Bank & Trust Co. v. Kelley-Nelson Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worthen Bank & Trust Co. v. Kelley-Nelson Construction Co., 245 S.W.2d 405, 219 Ark. 882, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 624 (Ark. 1952).

Opinion

Shields M. Goodwin, Special Justice.

On April 1, 1948, G. Larry Kelley and Louis C. Nelson became partners in the construction business in Little Rock under the firm name of Kelley-Nelson Construction Company (hereinafter called the company), plaintiff in the court below and appellee here. The company engages in the construction of commercial buildings in the $25,000.00-$75,000.00 price range. During the year ending April 1, 1950, it did approximately 30 jobs, and, at the time of the trial, had six buildings under construction.

Throughout the relevant period, (the eleven-month period beginning May 12, 1949), the company maintained an account in the Worthen Bank & Trust Company, of Little Rock (hereinafter referred to as the bank), defendant in the court below and appellant here. The partners were the only persons authorized to sign checks against this account. Over the period in question, Mrs. Katheryn Eldridge, who was employed by the company as a part-time bookkeeper, forged Nelson’s name to 24 checks in the amount of $400.00 each and to one check for $200.00 against the company’s account. She had no confederates, either in the bank or in the company, who assisted her in perpetrating the fraud. The bank, after applying the usual protective measures, paid the checks and charged them to the company’s account, believing them to be genuine.

In accordance with its custom with all its depositors, the bank mailed the company on or about the last day of every month all cancelled checks against the company’s account which had been paid during that month and a statement which showed the company’s balance at the beginning of the month, all debits against, and credits to, the account during the month, and the company’s balance at the end of every daj^ during the month on which there was a debit or credit. The partners examined the cancelled cheeks and statements in a manner that will be more fully described later, but did not find the 25 unauthorized charges (about two each month) which the bank made to the company’s account (As will be seen later, the original forged checks had been removed by Mrs. Eldridge). The forgeries were discovered for the first time by a firm of certified public accountants which, in April, 1950, in due course, audited the company’s books for its fiscal year, which ended March 31 of that year.

Promptly after the accountants reported the forgeries to the company, it made demand upon the bank for repayment to it of the total amount of the forged cheeks. The bank declined to make restitution, taking the position that the loss must fall upon the company by reason of its failure for eleven months to examine the cancelled checks and bank statements with sufficient particularity to discover the fraud; whereupon the company sued the bank for $9,800.

The trial court overruled the bank’s motion for a directed verdict in its favor. At the clo'se of the trial, the court instructed the jury upon the law of the case. By a nine to three verdict, the jury found for the company. While the bank objected to the court’s rulings on several of the instructions offered by each party, it does not seriously contend, and, in its belief, does not even argue, that the court’s rulings on any of the instructions given or refused were erroneous, except, of course, that it does strenuously maintain that there was not sufficient testimony to take the case to the jury and that the court below erred in not giving the peremptory instruction in favor of the bank.

The sole question on this appeal, therefore, is whether the court erred in refusing to g’rant the bank’s motion for a directed verdict.

At this point, reference is made to' the audit and to the manner in which the forgeries were discovered. It was not until the third day that the accountants suspected that anything was wrong with the company’s books. At that time, they found the record of a payroll check for $22.15 which was still outstanding, although it had been drawn several months before. They then checked the bank statement for the month in which the charge appeared and found that a check for $122.15 against the account had been paid in that month. Through the courtesy of the bank, the accountants and Kelley then looked at the picture machine in the bank and saw the check for $122.15, payable to the order of Katheryn Eldridge. Kelley thereupon advised the accountants that the company had never paid her that much on any payroll check. This led to a sweeping and searching investigation of all of the company’s checks that had been paid since March 31, 1949, and a comparison of these checks against the monthly bank statements as well as against the company’s books. The result was the discovery that she had forged the 25 checks sued on.

The forgeries were very skillfully accomplished. In fact, the bank first denied that the checks had been forged. One of its tellers testified that it is possible that they were traced, adding that he conscientiously believed at the time he passed them that they were Nelson’s signatures; and the bank’s vice-president and cashier said that he would have passed them as genuine (As is pointed out later, the good faith of the bank in paying the checks is not, under the circumstances of this case, material). The bank later conceded that the checks sued on were forgeries.

The accountants also discovered four additional checks (including the one for $122.15 described above), each of which was in the amount of approximately $122.15 and had been raised by $100. Mrs. Eldridge was the payee and endorser on these as well as on the checks upon which this suit was brought. The company did not sue on the checks which Mrs. Eldridge had raised for the reason that one of the partners signed at least one of them before the words containing the amount had been written in, thereby making it possible for her to raise it.

Mrs. Eldridge, of course, made no entries on the journal or on the check stubs reflecting any of the checks which she had forged. Moreover, when the audit was made in April, 1950, the 29 original cancelled checks which had been forged or raised were not found among the checks which the bank had returned to the company, Mrs. Eldridge evidently having destroyed them as soon as she was able to abstract them from the monthly statements in which they were enclosed. The record, however, contains photostatic copies of these checks which were made from the bank’s records.

The record also contains eight original cancelled checks, lohich ivere apparently but not actually gemdne. All of them were drawn on the appellant bank. They ranged in amounts from $234.65 to $1,044.30, and totaled $5,609. The payees were concerns with which the company did business. The checks bore the forged signature (as maker) of Nelson; and the endorsements of the payees were likewise not genuine. The checks were never delivered to the payees and, according to the undisputed testimony of a vice-president of the Union National Bank of Little Bock, whose endorsement appears on their reverse side, the stamped endorsement of that bank on the checks was not genuine. Moreover, according to the uncontradicted testimony of the vice-president and cashier of the appellant bank, the “paid” perforation cancellation of these eight checks was likewise not genuine. In other words, they were entirely fabricated by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
245 S.W.2d 405, 219 Ark. 882, 1952 Ark. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worthen-bank-trust-co-v-kelley-nelson-construction-co-ark-1952.