Strickland v. Kafko Mfg., Inc.
Strickland v. Kafko Mfg., Inc.
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from a judgment for defendant, Kafko Manufacturing Company, notwithstanding the verdict for plaintiffs, Lloyd and Linda Strickland, on their conversion claim, and from a directed verdict for Kafko on the Stricklands' claim for violation of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act, Code 1975, §
Lloyd Strickland attempted to purchase a swimming pool kit from Morgan Son Pool Company, which was allegedly a partnership between John R. Morgan, Sr., and John R. (Roger) Morgan, Jr. Strickland, a brick mason, was familiar with pool installations by Morgan Son, having done masonry work for the partnership. On July 29, 1983, Strickland obtained a cashier's *Page 715 check in the amount of $4,228.44, payable to Kafko, and including the words, "for Pool Kit to be delivered to Rt. 1, Box 225, Enterprise, Alabama." Strickland testified that several checks Morgan Son had given him in payment for masonry work had not cleared Morgan Son's account on first presentment. His testimony continued:
"Q. So you knew at that point, from that, you knew there were some problems with his [Roger Morgan's] cash flow, didn't you?
"A. Yes, sir.
"Q. And is that why you had this check here made out to Kafko Manufacturing because you wanted to make sure that your pool got paid for?
"A. Well, that is one of the reasons. I wanted to make sure who it was ordered from."
Strickland had not had any communication with Kafko, but had only been told by Roger Morgan that his pool would be purchased from Kafko. He gave the check to Roger Morgan, who said he would take it directly to Kafko's office near Atlanta, Georgia, so the pool could be delivered sooner. Although Strickland had discussed the pool with Roger Morgan and apparently had an oral agreement as to the type of pool he wanted, there was no written contract.
On or about August 7, 1983, Roger Morgan took the check to Kafko's office in Georgia and gave it to a secretary, who referred him to Jan DeRegt, the general manager. DeRegt testified that Morgan Son had last purchased pool kits from Kafko in June 1982 but still owed $1007.60 on that purchase. He testified that he had been trying to collect this amount, but Roger Morgan had told him that Morgan Son had not been paid for one of the pools and would not be able to pay Kafko until their customer paid them. DeRegt continued,
"So a week before he dropped this check off into our office he called me and said he had finally settled the account that he was waiting for, he now had the money to pay me off, but due to the fact that the customer knew that he still owed me money on the particular pool they made the check out to Kafko Manufacturing, and would it be possible to bring the check to my office and to receive the difference that was left over after the account was cleared. I told him that was okay with me as long as it was certified funds. When he dropped in the office the check went to my bookkeeper, I asked her to check it, she said it was a certified check, nothing wrong with the cashier's check, and at that time I proceeded to write Mr. Morgan and Son a check back for $3200, the difference between the check he delivered [and] what he owed me."
The Stricklands presented nothing to dispute this account of the delivery and negotiation of the check.
When Strickland asked Roger Morgan where his pool was, Morgan responded that it had been ordered and gave excuses for delays. In early September 1983 Strickland went to his bank and learned that the cashier's check had been cashed. From the endorsement he obtained Kafko's address and thereby its telephone number. He called and spoke to DeRegt, who initially professed not to know about a pool for the Stricklands. When Strickland mentioned that he had given the cashier's check to Morgan, DeRegt responded, according to Strickland's testimony, "that he had received a check from Roger on payment for some money that Roger had owed him." Strickland demanded delivery of the pool, but apparently did not ask for a return of the proceeds of the check.
Strickland testified that DeRegt said he would talk to Morgan and asked him (Strickland) not to communicate with Morgan. DeRegt said he asked Strickland to send him a current telephone number for Morgan. In any event, the two had no further communication, other than Strickland's sending a copy of the cancelled check. Strickland consulted an attorney and this suit was filed. The complaint also named Morgan Son as a defendant, but Roger Morgan declared bankruptcy. The case proceeded to trial against John R. Morgan, Sr., but he denied being a partner *Page 716 or principal in Morgan Son Pool Company. The trial court directed a verdict in his favor and the Stricklands do not appeal from that portion of the judgment.
The complaint as amended contained a count for breach of contract, a count for conversion, and a count for violation of the Deceptive Trade Practices Act. Kafko filed a counterclaim for $25,000, alleging abuse of process, but dismissed the counterclaim before trial commenced. The trial court granted directed verdicts on the breach of contract and Deceptive Trade Practices counts and submitted the conversion count to the jury, which returned a verdict against Kafko for $25,000. Upon Kafko's motion, the trial court granted a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The Stricklands do not argue that the directed verdict on the contract count was improper.
Because the alleged conversion was of a check, which is ordinarily a negotiable instrument, we look first to the Alabama enactment of the Uniform Commercial Code. Code 1975, §
A negotiable instrument may be subject to conversion outside the provisions of §
The question of whether Kafko acted wrongfully or illegally in taking, assuming ownership of, or using the check will turn on the question of whether the check was a negotiable instrument. A check is a negotiable instrument if it is signed by the maker or drawer, contains "an unconditional promise or order to pay a sum certain," is payable on demand or at a definite time, and is payable to order or to bearer. Code 1975, §
Code 1975, §
"(1) A promise or order otherwise unconditional is not made conditional by the fact that the instrument:
". . .
"(b) States its consideration, whether performed or promised, or the transaction which gave rise to the instrument, or that the promise or order is made or the instrument matures in accordance with or 'as per' such transaction."
(Emphasis added.) This Code provision prevents the language printed on the cashier's check, "for pool to be delivered," from conditioning the promise to pay upon the delivery of a pool kit. Delivery of the pool was the consideration for the check, or the transaction which gave rise to it, and the statute explicitly provides that payment of the check is not conditioned upon performance of the stated consideration. Thus, Kafko was not bound to inquire of its dealer whether he had delivered the pool purchased with the money represented by the *Page 717 check. See generally 5 R. Anderson, Uniform Commercial Code, § 3-105:4 et seq. (3d ed. 1984).
That such is the appropriate interpretation of the language is illustrated by the manner in which the check would be handled after it was cashed by Kafko. Kafko's bank would be fully justified in taking the check for deposit, and the Stricklands' bank would be fully justified in paying Kafko's bank, without any inquiry into whether the pool had been delivered.
The Court of Civil Appeals has decided two cases closely on point since the enactment of the Uniform Commercial Code. InHolsonback v. First State Bank of Albertville,
In contrast, the same court held in Participating PartsAssociates, Inc. v. Pylant,
A holder in due course takes a negotiable instrument free from all claims and defenses, with exceptions not pertinent here. Code 1975, §
"(1) A holder in due course is a holder who takes the instrument:
"(a) For value; and
"(b) In good faith; and
"(c) Without notice that it is overdue or has been dishonored or of any defense against or claim to it on the part of any person.
"(2) A payee may be a holder in due course."
Because §
Therefore, Kafko did not wrongfully take the check, illegally assume ownership of it, or illegally use or misuse it. The Stricklands appear to argue that Kafko illegally retained the money which was the proceeds of the check but, aside from the facts that Kafko paid part of the proceeds to Roger Morgan and that an action in conversion will not lie for unidentified money, see Lewis v. Fowler,
For the foregoing reasons, the trial court did not err in holding that the Stricklands did not prove a conversion. *Page 718
Neither can the Stricklands prevail on their Deceptive Trade Practices count. Section
"Any person against whom any civil action or proceeding is brought pursuant to this chapter shall have a defense to such action or proceeding upon a showing by a preponderance of the evidence presented that such person did not knowingly commit any act or knowingly engage in any activity which constitutes a violation of any provision of this chapter."
Not only was there no evidence that Kafko knew it was failing to ship goods for which it had been paid, but the evidence does not even support a finding that Kafko was paid for a pool. Therefore, subsection (17) does not support a holding that the trial court erred in granting a directed verdict on this count. The Stricklands argue that DeRegt's failure to ship the pool after he was notified of the true situation constituted a knowing violation at least of subsection (22), but the evidence indicates at most that both Strickland and Kafko were defrauded by Roger Morgan. The trial court did not err in granting Kafko a directed verdict on the Deceptive Trade Practices count.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
TORBERT, C.J., and MADDOX, SHORES, ADAMS and HOUSTON, JJ., concur.
JONES, and BEATTY, JJ., dissent in part but concur in the result, with opinion by BEATTY, J.
Dissenting Opinion
It appears to me that the majority has reached the right result in this case, but for the wrong reasons. The majority summarily concludes that "[b]ecause the alleged conversion was of a check, which is ordinarily a negotiable instrument," the provisions of Alabama's Commercial Code pertaining to negotiable instruments apply in this case. Applying those provisions pertinent to the conversion claim, the majority affirms the judgment notwithstanding the verdict ("JNOV") granted in favor of Kafko on that claim. I agree that the JNOV was proper in this case but not because plaintiffs failed toprove a scintilla of evidence on their claim for conversion. Rather, JNOV was proper because at issue in this case is the conversion of a cashier's check, and the overwhelming majority of courts have held that cashier's checks are substitutes for cash. See National Newark Essex Bank v. Giordano,
The majority, apparently without realizing it, has followed the view of the commentators, evaluating (albeit erroneously, see discussion infra) the parties' respective rights by reference to the pertinent provisions of Article 3. This approach, however, has not been followed by the various courts which have heretofore been called upon to decide the issue. Almost uniformly, the courts have ignored the Code and have subordinated the interests of the issuing bank and the check's purchaser to the holder's (including a holder not in due course) expectation that he has received a true cash equivalent, thereby preserving the societal interest in having cashier's checks serve as cash substitutes. 64 Minn.L.Rev. at 280, 305. Indeed, this Court has held that the purpose of a cashier's check is "to enable the holder to use the check as money." Walker v. Sellers,
"Now, in conversion cases, the courts are not confronted so much with a particular piece of money, i.e., a coin or a bill, but with identified or segregated sources from which money has come or types of accounts into which money has been deposited.
"Money paid by an insurance company to a hospital which had been assigned to the hospital by the plaintiff has been determined as a matter of law not to be specific property which would support an action of conversion. Humana of Alabama, Inc. v. Rice, [
380 So.2d 862 (Ala.Civ.App. 1979), cert. denied,380 So.2d 865 (Ala. 1980)]. Shares in a 'Ready Assets Trust Account' which must be redeemed for cash and on which checks can be written have been held to be sufficiently identifiable to support an action in conversion. Limbaugh v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner Smith, Inc.,732 F.2d 859 (11th Cir. 1984) (citing Alabama law)."Section 7 of the Annotation, 'Nature of property or rights other than tangible chattels which may be subject to conversion,' 44 A.L.R.2d 927 (1926), lists numerous cases in which attempts have been made to recover for the conversion of money.
"In this case, the Court is being asked to determine whether money which was withheld from wages of an employee by an employer in response to a garnishment filed against the employer by a creditor of the employee is specific property which will support an action in conversion. Clearly, there is no identifiable coin or bill, and nothing that has been sealed up in a particular letter, 'wrapped up to itself,' or placed in a bag or chest. There is no evidence that this money was placed in a special account. It is merely money which was not paid to an employee or to the creditor of an employee, but was withheld from an employee's wages in response to a garnishment." (Emphasis added.) 479 So.2d at 726-27.
Plaintiffs in this case cite Lewis v. Fowler, supra; however, they fail to point to any evidence of record establishing the identifiability of the sum represented by the cashier's check. They argue that the special account at the issuing bank, into *Page 720 which their money was deposited at the time they purchased the cashier's check from the bank, would be a specific or special type of account into which the money had been deposited. This argument, however, overlooks the fact that the funds in this account are comingled; that is, the monies deposited as payment for a particular cashier's check are comingled with funds to cover other cashier's checks, and, according to the evidence, these funds are indistinguishable.
Plaintiffs also cite this Court to Limbaugh v. Merrill Lynch,Pierce, Fenner Smith,
Limbaugh is distinguishable from the present case because, inLimbaugh, all of the funds in the account in question belonged to the plaintiff. Here, the funds paid by plaintiffs for the cashier's check were placed by the bank into a comingled account containing funds paid by other individuals for cashier's checks. Under these facts, plaintiffs have failed to prove "specific money capable of identification." Hunnicutt v.Higginbotham,
However, under the approach taken by the majority, I do not think the granting of a JNOV was proper under the evidence adduced in this case. The standard of review applicable in this case is not stated in the majority opinion, but because it is essential to a proper review to bear it in mind, that standard of review is set out here: When reviewing the propriety of a trial court's order granting a JNOV, the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the party who secured the jury verdict; a JNOV carries no presumption of correctness.Warren v. Ousley,
The majority evaluates plaintiff's conversion claim based on its conclusion that the alleged conversion was of a negotiable instrument. To defeat plaintiffs' claim, the majority, relying on Code of 1975, §§
Relying on §
Under the former Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law, most courts held that a payee, not having taken the instrument by negotiation, could not be a holder in due course. Now, under §§
In this case, Kafko was the payee named on the cashier's check, not Morgan, Kafko's dealer. Yet, notwithstanding the fact that Kafko was the named payee on a cashier's check remitted from a consumer, with whom it was its practice not to deal, and that the check was for an amount $3,200 in excess of the year-old overdue debt owed by Morgan, the majority holds,as a matter of law, that "Kafko was not bound to inquire of its dealer whether he [Morgan] had delivered the pool purchased with the money represented by the check." While this conclusion would be correct if Morgan, as payee, had negotiated the check to Kafko in payment of Morgan's debt, it is not a correct conclusion to draw on these facts. Morgan merely delivered the check to Kafko, the named payee. Morgan did not endorse the check to Kafko, and thus it was for the jury to decide whether Kafko, as payee under these circumstances, was justified in relying on Morgan's misrepresentations as to the purpose of the check, and wrongfully applying the proceeds. Yet, the majority purports to weigh these facts itself and concludes that "Morgan served as an intermediary and his misrepresentations prevent Kafko from having notice of Strickland's claim." The jury, however, obviously believed that, under these circumstances, Kafko should have made further inquiries, and that its failure to do so made its application of the check to Morgan's benefit "wrongful" and, therefore, a conversion.
Section
"(a) He has actual knowledge of it; or
"(b) He has received a notice or notification of it; or
"(c) From all the facts and circumstances known to him at the time in question he has reason to know that it exists."
In the present case, however, resort need not be made to §§
"(a) The purchaser [or payee] has notice of a claim or defense if:
"(a) The instrument is . . . so irregular as to call into question its validity, terms or ownership or to create an ambiguity as to the party to pay; . . ."
(Emphasis added.) Under this section, a payee does not have notice of a claim unless the irregularity "is such as to excite suspicion in the [payee] that . . . [the instrument] is not owned by the party from *Page 722 whom [it] was obtained, or . . . it cannot be determined from the instrument who is entitled to payment." 4 Hawkland,supra, § 3-304:11, at 430. It appears from the unqualified use of the phrase "call into question," that the standard intended to apply to such situations is whether a reasonable person would question its validity, terms, or ownership. Id.
The jury in this case could have easily found that just based on what appeared on the face of the check, a reasonable person in Kafko's position would have realized that an ambiguity existed as to Morgan's ownership rights in the check and therefore as to the proper party to pay, and would have questioned its right to apply the check to satisfy Morgan's overdue debt and refund him the difference.
These same facts go to the good faith element of holder-in-due-course status. However, the test for good faith is a subjective one which required Kafko to prove to the satisfaction of the jury that it had a "white heart" or was honest in fact. Thus, even the failure to inquire into what may be viewed objectively as suspicious circumstances may not amount to a lack of good faith. However, the facts may be so suspicious that a jury may not believe the holder's assertions that he was honest in fact. 4 Hawkland, supra, § 3-302:02 at 268. For example, evidence that the holder was negligent in failing to investigate suspicious circumstances may lead to a jury to conclude that the holder wanted to evade the knowledge that an investigation would have disclosed. Id. Under such circumstances, a jury's finding of a lack of good faith could be upheld.
The majority holds that Kafko acted in good faith, blithely concluding that "there is no indication in the record that [Kafko] had any way of verifying or disproving Roger Morgan's explanation of the check." With all respect, I would point out that this is a conclusion of fact, and there is at least a scintilla of evidence to the contrary. Both of the plaintiffs' names appear as remitter on the check, "Lloyd Strickland and Linda I. Strickland," as well as their address, "Rt. 1, Box 22, Enterprise, Alabama." A simple telephone call to the plaintiffs would have certainly "verified" Morgan's explanation. Unquestionably, on these facts, a jury could have found Kafko's failure to investigate to be evidence of a lack of good faith. Based on the foregoing, I, therefore, cannot agree that we can hold, as a matter of law, that Kafko was a holder in due course, and thereby affirm the JNOV entered in favor of Kafko.
The only question remaining is whether plaintiffs adduced a scintilla of evidence of a conversion of the instrument. "To constitute conversion, there must be a wrongful taking or a wrongful detention or interference, or an illegal assumption of ownership, or an illegal use or misuse." Ott v. Fox,
To summarize, I concur in the result reached by the majority upholding the JNOV on plaintiff's conversion claim because I would hold that a cashier's check should be treated as a cash equivalent rather than as an ordinary bank check. The majority, however, adopts the latter view; *Page 723 I dissent not only as to the adoption of that view, but also as to the majority's analysis thereunder in holding that, as a matter of law, Kafko was a holder in due course. Because there was evidence to the contrary, the issue of holder-in-due-course status was one of fact for the jury, and, on that basis, the JNOV on the conversion count was improper.
JONES, J., concurs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Lloyd Strickland and Linda Strickland v. Kafko Manufacturing, Inc.
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- 13 cases
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- Published