National Bank of San Mateo v. Whitney
National Bank of San Mateo v. Whitney
Opinion of the Court
This is an action upon a promissory note executed on September 13, 1915', to the plaintiff for three thousand dollars. The ease was tried before a jury. Plain, tiff recovered judgment, and defendant appeals. The sole issue presented to the jury was whether or not the promissory note was paid on September 14, 1915, by a cheek of the Leslie Salt Refining Company drawn on the Bank of California for three thousand dollars. This cheek was issued by the defendant as secretary of the Salt Company, and was received by W. M. Roberts, cashier of the plaintiff. That it was deposited by him to his credit with the plaintiff bank is admitted. The plaintiff, in support of its contention that the note was not paid by the check in question, relies upon *204 the possession of the note, as prima facie evidence of its nonpayment, and upon the fact that the check was made payable to W. M. Roberts, instead of to the bank, and was a check of the Leslie Salt Refining Company, instead of the defendant, and in support of its claim presented instructions to the jury which were given by the court, to the effect that its possession of the note raised a presumption of its nonpayment; that the giving of the cheek to W. M. Roberts personally gave rise to the presumption that it was in discharge of an obligation owing to Roberts.
In order to understand fully the assignments of error made by the appellant, it will be necessary to state additional facts. The defendant was a stockholder and the secretary of the Leslie Salt Refining Company. W. M. Roberts, plaintiff’s cashier, was a director of the Leslie Salt Refining Company, holding five shares of stock to qualify him as such director. The Salt Company was a borrower from the plaintiff, and having borrowed to the limit of its credit, the defendant negotiated a loan for three' thousand dollars on the thirteenth day of September, 1915, and gave his personal note herein sued upon as evidence of such indebtedness. Miss Zula Clements, stenographer and- general office assistant of the Leslie Salt Refining Company, testified that on September 14th, William M. Roberts, plaintiff’s cashier, called at the office of the Salt Company in the Flatiron Building, in San Francisco, between 3 and 4 o'clock in the afternoon and left a message for the defendant to the effect that the bank examiner had been at the bank and had questioned the loan, and that it was necessary for the bank to have a check for three thousand dollars to take up the'note, and that the cheek was to be made out personally to him and mailed down that night without fail, as he expected the examiner would be there again in the morning; that about 4:30. of that afternoon she gave this message to the defendant; that the check in question for three thousand dollars was made out at that time. The defendant testified that in pursuance of this message he wrote the check in question and mailed it to Mr. Roberts at the bank; that the check was made payable to W. M. Roberts because it was requested in that form, although other checks in payment of moneys borrowed from the plaintiff had been made payable to the plaintiff bank; that neither the defendant nor the Leslie Salt Refining Company owed any *205 thing to Mr. Roberts personally, nor was there any debt to Mr. Roberts in which the defendant or the Salt Company was interested, and that the three thousand dollar cheek was not sent as a loan to Mr. Roberts. Roberts testified that he received the check in question for the purpose of taking up a note of the defendant for the sum of three thousand dollars; that he received the check at the bank; that he had no personal transaction with the defendant, and that the defendant owed him no money and loaned him no money.
It will be observed, then, that the only persons who have any knowledge as to the purpose for which the check in question was given by the defendant, namely, the defendant, his stenographer and Roberts, all testified that it was given in payment of the note herein sued upon and for no other purpose.
Plaintiff, however, contends that both parties are not equally innocent in the transaction; that the defendant, by making the check payable to the cashier and by acceding to the unusual demand of the cashier, either had notice of the cashier’s fraud, or thus put it within his power to commit the wrong, and that, therefore, the defendant must suffer the loss. In view of the law that the cashier, by virtue of his office, had authority to collect the note, does the fact that he asked for and received a check payable to himself in payment so far inculpate the defendant in the wrongdoing of the cashier as to change the rule ? It is undoubtedly true that the form of the check received by Roberts may have .enabled him to deposit the same in his own name in the bank without arousing suspicion which might have resulted from the deposit by Roberts to his own account of a check payable to the plaintiff. But this would have been equally true in case the payment had been made by money or by the transfer of negotiable paper by indorsement in blank, or, in short, by any form of payment other than by negotiable paper payable to the order of the plaintiff. It cannot be said, therefore,, that the form of the payment facilitated the fraud of the cashier, but, rather, that the payment by a check drawn to the order of the bank might have made it less easy to. effectuate the fraud. Even if the check had been payable to the order of the plaintiff, the cashier, by virtue of his agency, would have had authority to indorse the same and thus gain the possession of the proceeds thereof.
(Dyer
v.
Sebrell,
135 Cal. 597, [67 Pac. 1036];
McBoyle
v.
Union Nat. Bank,
162 Cal. 279, [122 Pac. 458].)
It is next contended that the facts and circumstances surrounding the payment were such as to put the defendant upon inquiry; in other words, to cause the defendant to suspect the intended fraud of the cashier. It being conceded that the demand for payment of a note twenty-four hours after its execution, at the office of the defendant in San Francisco instead of at the bank, by the cashier personally coming to the office, was unusual and not in the ordinary course of business, the character of the demand was such as might justly allay all suspicion of the defendant. The defendant knew that the Salt Company had borrowed up to its limit from the bank, and that the three thousand dollars represented by the promissory note had been secured by him while an officer of the Salt Company for the Salt Company. Defendant knew that the plaintiff bank was supervised by the bank examiner and, therefore, that the demand of the bank for payment was not, under the circumstances, unreasonable.
“2. The court instructs you that the presumption of law is that money paid by one person to another was due the latter and therefore in this action if you believe from the evidence that.the Leslie Salt Refining Company issued its check payable to W. M. Roberts and delivered or sent said check to said Roberts, then the presumption of law is that said Leslie Salt Refining Company did so because it wished to make the check payable to said Roberts.”
. The jury were thereby instructed that under the circumstances and proof in the case, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, they were entitled to believe that the check given to Roberts was in payment of an obligation due from the Salt Company to Roberts. The real question in issue was whether or not the check was given to the plaintiff by the delivery of the same to its cashier, or whether it was given to Roberts personally for some other purpose.
At the request of the plaintiff the court instructed the jury as follows:
“7. The court instructs you that if you believe from the evidence in this case that W. M. Roberts went to the office of the Leslie Salt Refining Company in San Francisco *209 and there made a demand for the payment of the note here in question, and directed that any check drawn for the purpose of payment thereof be made payable to him, said W. M. Roberts, and that no other check for the payment of any note to said bank by the defendant, or by said Leslie Salt Refining Company had been made payable to said W. M. Roberts, but had been made'payable to the plaintiff, then you are further instructed that the drawing of the check here in favor of W. M. Roberts was not in the ordinary course of business between the defendant and the Salt Company and the bank, and that therefore the direction to have said check made payable to said W. M. Roberts was sufficient notice to put the defendant on inquiry as to why said check should he made payable to said Roberts instead of to the plaintiff bank. ’ ’
*210 “A bank’s client or customer dealing with the cashier of the bank permitted by its directors to have complete control of the business relations with its clients and customers may trust in the integrity of such cashier in transacting its banking business with him when there is nothing in the known state of the affairs of the bank, or of his relation to it, to excite suspicion that he is using his position to the prejudice of his bank.”
Under these instructions, upon the admitted facts, the jury must have understood, as a matter of law, that the defendant was not entitled to rely upon the integrity of the cashier, or, in other words, that defendant could not claim the check to be a payment if the cashier misappropriated it, as it is conceded he did. These instructions» were erroneous. The question as to whether the suspicions of the defendant were or should have been aroused was a question of fact for the jury. Other instructions were given at defendant’s request tending to modify, in some degree, the effect of these instructions, but we cannot say that they cured the basic error of the instruction that deféndant’s suspicions must necessarily have been aroused by the facts stated in instruction No. 7.
The testimony of the directors of the plaintiff bank was received, over the objection of the defendant, to the effect that they had not authorized the cashier to demand payment of the note in question, and that no examination was made or was to be made by the bank examiner. The effect of this evidence was merely to prove that the statements made by the cashier to the defendant at the time he demanded payment of the note in question were false. The defendant had a right to rely upon the representations of the plaintiff’s agent, and the plaintiff could not take advantage of their falsity. It was, therefore, immaterial whether or not such representations were true.
The defendant complains of those rulings of the court upon the admissibility of evidence which precluded his proving a transaction by which Roberts sought to reimburse the plaintiff for his wrongdoing. Under proper pleading and offers of proof it would no doubt be permissible for the defendant to show that the plaintiff had received the fruits of the check given by the defendant, if such was the fact. We cannot say, however, that there was error in sustaining the objections to the particular questions that were asked.
In view of the necessity of a new trial it perhaps should be noted that the evidence in this case is not entirely clear as to what became of the credit of three thousand dollars which the cashier secured to himself by the deposit of the check given by the defendant. If such deposit was used by him to reduce an overdraft and was not subsequently withdrawn by the cashier for his own purposes, the bank, of course, having received the benefit of the check could not now collect upon defendant’s note upon the theory that the same had not been paid, for it would in fact have received the benefit of the check in the form of a payment upon the indebtedness of the cashier, and the remedy of the bank would be against the cashier and not against the defendant in that event.
The judgment is reversed.
Melvin, J., Shaw, J., Angellotti, C. J., Lawlor, J., and Olney, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The NATIONAL BANK OF SAN MATEO (A Corporation), Respondent, v. ST. JOHN WHITNEY, Appellant
- Cited By
- 17 cases
- Status
- Published