Lumpkins v. First National Bank
Lumpkins v. First National Bank
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action for damages for an alleged conversion of funds in a bank. Judgment was for defendant sustaining a demurrer to the petition. Plaintiff appeals.
After the formal allegations, the petition alleged that prior to and subsequent to March 4, 1927, plaintiff was a depositor in defendant bank and that on or about that day defendant fraudulently took from plaintiff money in the amount of $2,047.40 and converted it to its own use; that this conversion consisted of defendant’s agents making an unlawful deduction of that sum from a credit of $3,140.75 due plaintiff from defendant for a deposit; that the fraud was further consummated by the bank making fictitious credits and fraudulent entries on its books with reference to the account of plaintiff for forged notes purporting to have been given the bank by plaintiff and finally charging on March 4, 1927, to plaintiff’s deposit account
The petition was filed January 16, 1940. It will be noted that the conversion is alleged to have taken place about March 4, 1925, almost, thirteen years before the action was started. It will also be noted that plaintiff alleged in his petition that he did not learn about the false entries until February 25, 1938. If the statute started running on March 4, 1927, then the action is barred. If it did not start running until February 25, 1938, then it is not barred. The answer to this question requires a further examination of the record. In compliance with an order of the trial court to strike certain allegations from the petition and to make it definite and certain the plaintiff stated in an amended petition that on August 9, 1928, the bank gave him his passbook which showed that he had no balance in the bank and that from then on until February, 1938, he did nothing about it although from August 9, 1928, until June, 1934, he was in good health and able to do business. Defendant demurred to this petition. The demurrer was sustained. Hence this appeal.
Granting for the sake of argument that the petition did state a cause of action for relief on the ground of fraud, can plaintiff be heard to say that he did not learn until 1938 of the fraud practiced on him in 1927 when the bank told him, by delivering his passbook to him in 1928, that it owed him nothing?
“The relation of a bank to its depositor is that of debtor and creditor, and the sum he has on deposit in his checking account is a debt of the bank payable to him on demand; yet because it is payable on demand he cannot sue the bank for the amount of his deposit until payment on demand has been made and refused; and such demand and refusal are necessary to set in motion the statute of limitations. But where the bank renders a statement to the depositor showing the status of his checking account, it says to him in effect, ‘This bank owes you this stated balance, and no more.’ Such statement may fairly be construed as a notice that any claim the depositor may make in excess of the stated balance would be resisted by the bank. And in that view of the situation the depositor’s formal demand for a greater sum and the bank’s formal refusal to pay a larger sum would be unnecessary to perfect the depositor’s cause of action, and likewise to set in motion the statute of limitations. If this is not the legal effect of the bank’s monthly statement to its depositor, it is not apparent what function the monthly statement performs.” (p. 422.)
See, also, notes in 28 A. L. R. 1435; also, 87 A. L. R. 344.
The fact that, as alleged in the petition, the plaintiff was illiterate does not take the case out of this rule. He would be able to tell that the bank showed it owed him nothing even if he were unable to read or write. Besides, the bank owed him no greater duty than it owed its other depositors. The petition does not allege any act or word of the bank by which it sought to conceal from plaintiff the status of his account.
Plaintiff complains in this court that the trial court should not have required him to set out the matters that he was required to set out in his amended petition. Be that as it may, he did set them out. Had he not set them out they would have come out during the trial of the action. When they did come out they would have disclosed that the statute of limitations started running against the plaintiff’s cause of action not later than August 9, 1928, about twelve years before the action was commenced, and that it was barred.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.