Court Opinion

ID: 4131505
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-02-18 01:16:30.972139+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:34:21.046875
License: Public Domain

The Attorney            General of Texas
                                                            December 31, 1982

MARK WHITE
Attorney General

                                        Honorable Warren G. Harding              Opinion No.   MW-556
Supreme      Court Building             Texas State Treasurer
P. 0. Box 12546
                                        Treasury Department                                 Applicability of section
Austin. TX. 76711. 2546
5121475-2501                            P. 0. Box 12608, Capitol Station         ::tO6(d) , Texas Business and
Telex    9101674.1367                   Austin, Texas   78711                    COlNllerCe      Code,   to warrants
Telecopier     51214750266                                                       issued by the comptroller and
                                                                                 paid by the state treasurer
1607 Main St., Suite 1400
Dallas. TX. 75201-4709                  Dear Mr. Harding:
2141742-6944
                                             You have requested our opinion as to whether section 4.406(d) of
                                        the Texas Business and Commerce Code (hereinafter TUCC) applies to
4624 Alberta       Ave., Suite    160
                                        state warrants issued by the comptroller of public accounts and drawn
El Paso, TX.       799052793
9151533.3464                            on and paid by the state treasury.  In addition, you ask if there is a
                                        statute of limitations which applies to the return of state warrants
                                        to presenting banks or other parties due to late discovery of faulty
1220 Dallas Ave., Suite          202
                                        or improper presentation.
“ouston.     TX. 77002.6966
7131650.0666
                                             Before reaching your specific questions, we must address the
                                        threshold issue of whether chapter four of the TUCC can be said to
606 Broadway.        Suite 312          apply to the treasury of the state of Texas.     Chapter four covers,
Lubbock.     TX.    79401-3479
                                        generally, bank deposits and collections, and constitutes a uniform
6061747-5236
                                        statement of the principal rules of the bank collection process.  Tex.
                                        BUS. & Comm. Code 84.101, comment.    In the context of your inquiry,
4309 N. Tenth. Suite S                  the provisions of chapter four apply to the treasury of the state of
McAllen,     TX. 76501-1665             Texas only if the treasury is a "bank" within the meaning of the code.
5121662-4547

                                             Although the term "bank" may have a commonly understood meaning
200 Main Plaza. Suite 400               which connotes a state or federally regulated corporate entity and
San Antonio,  TX. 76205.2797            which would necessarily preclude the inclusion of a governmental body
5121225.4191                            as one of its kind, we are not dealing with the dictionary definition
                                        of a "bank."   The TUCC definitions are terms of art, limited to the
 An Equal      Opportunity/
                                        specific statutory enactment and not intended to apply generally.
 Affirmative     Action     Emplpyer    Reed V. Washington Trailer Sales, Inc., 393 F. Supp. 886 (M.D. Term.
                                        1974).   We are bound to apply the code's statutory definition in
                                        deciding the issue of the &p&ability        of chapter four.   Nelson v.
                                        Union Equity Co-Operative Exchange, 548 S.W.2d 352 (Tex. 1977).         A
                                        "bank" is defined as any person engaged in the business of banking.
                                        Tex. Bus. & Comm. Code §1.201(4).     A "person" is an individual or an
                                        organization,   and   an   "organization"   includes   a government    or
                                        governmental   subdivision    or  agency.    Tex.   Bus. &   COUUtl. Code
                                        §1.201(28), (30). Thus, the state treasury is a "bank" for purposes

                                                                   p. 2035
Honorable Warren G. Harding - Page 2    (MW-556)

of chapter 4 of the code if it is engaged in the "business of
banking."  Neither the Uniform Commercial Code nor the Texas Uniform
Commercial Code defines the "business of banking."

          This has a two-fold aspect. First, it permits the
          Code to apply to whatever business is known as the
          'banking business'     at the particular      time in
          question rather than narrowing the application to
          persons engaged in what was known as the banking
          business as of the time when the Code was adopted.
          This flexible coverage of the Code is in harmony
          with its underlying purposes of 'modernizing' the
          law   governing   business    transactions,    and   of
          permitting    continued   expansion    of   commercial
          practices through usage.    Secondly, it permits the
          Code to apply to persons and to organizations
          which engage in only a restricted area or segment
          of the total possible banking business.        To hold
          that to be a bank there must be an engaging in the
          totality of banking business would lead to the
          absurd result that many organizations which are
          admittedly    and    obviously    engaged    in    bank
          collections would not be considered banks within
          the meaning of the Code.

1 R. Anderson, Uniform Commercial Code, §l-201:8, at 74 (2d ed. 1970).
The courts have held that the keenina  .  I of denosits constitutes the
business of banking.     Moran v. Cobb, 120 F.26 16 (D.C. Cir. 1941),
cert. dismissed,     314 U.S. 703 (1941); Brenham Production      Credit
Association v. Zeiss, 264 S.W.2d 95 (1954); Kaliski v. Gossett, 109
S.W.2d 340 (Tex. Civ. App. - San Antonio 1937, writ ref'd).          "IA1
person carrying on the business of receiving deposits may be. said to
be carrying on the banking business."      Rosenblum v. Anglim, 135 F.2d
512, 513 (9th Cir. 1943). The treasurer of the state of Texas keeps
and pays out deposits.      V.T.C.S. arts. 4370, 4371.   To that limited
extent, the treasurer is engaged in what is commonly recognized as the
business of banking.     Thus, the state treasury is a "bank" to which
chapter four of the TUCC applies.      It must be reiterated that we are
finding here that the treasury is a bank only as defined by the TUCC,
with the only result being that the uniform commercial rules set out
in chapter four are applicable to the treasury.          This result is
compelled by the terms of the statute and fosters the underlying
purposes and policies of the TUCC. The code "was written in terms of
current commercial practices, to meet the contemporary needs of a fast
moving   cormnercial society and to advance       fair dealing."    1 R.
Anderson, Uniform Commercial Code, §l-102:7, at 12 (2d ed. 1970). The
treasury is involved, on an enormous scale, with daily financial
transactions.    The provisions of chapter four promote the smooth and
orderly disposition of financial transactions and are to the benefit
of the state of Texas.

                                    p. 2036
Honorable Warren C. Harding - Page 3    (MW-556)

     Having found that chapter four of the TUCC does apply to the
state treasury, we turn to your inquiry regarding the applicability of
section 4.406(d) of the TUCC to state warrants.       Section 4.406(d)
provides:

          Without regard to care or lack of care of either
          the customer or the bank a customer who does not
          within one year from the time the statement and
          items   are   made   available     to    the   customer
          (Subsection    (a))    discover    and     report   his
          unauthorized signature or any alteration on the
          face or back of the item or does not within three
          years from the time discover and report any
          unauthorized    indorsement     is    precluded    from
          asserting   against   the bank     such unauthorized
          signature or indorsement or such alteration.

This section has been cited to you as a basis for a bank's refusal to
charge back an amount paid on a state warrant which had a forged
indorsement.

     Special Fund Warrant No. R499313 was issued on June 1, 1977. The
warrant was deposited in a collecting bank on June 6, 1977, and passed
through an intermediary bank to the state treasurer on June 8, 1977.
The treasurer paid the warrant on June 9, 1977. On June 18, 1980, the
payee notified the state, by affidavit, that she had neither received
nor indorsed the Family Care Provider Warrant issued to her for
services rendered in May 1977, indicating that the indorsement on the
warrant was forged by an unknown third party.    On June 30, 1980, the
warrant was returned to the collecting bank for a charge back.     The
collecting bank has refused to return the amount of the warrant to the
state, claiming that the treasurer is barred by section 4.406(d) from
seeking recovery based upon the forged indorsement.

     By its terms, section 4.406(d) governs the relationship between a
bank and its customer.     The treasury is not a customer of the
collecting bank in this instance.     If the treasury is barred from
recovering the money paid on a forged indorsement under the facts you
have described, it is by virtue of section 4.406(e) of the TUCC which
provides:

         If under this section a payor bank has a valid
         defense against a claim of a customer upon or
         resulting from payment of an item and waives or
         fails upon request to assert the defense the bank
         may not assert against any collecting bank or
         other prior party presenting or transferring the
         item a claim based upon the unauthorized signature
         or alteration giving rise to the customer's claim.

                                    p. 2037
Honorable Warren G. Harding - Page 4   (Mw-55h)

"Under the Commercial Code, defenses available to a drawee bank
against claims of its depositor, by clear implication are also
available   to a collecting   or depository bank."     Allied  Concord
Financial Corporation V. Bank of America National Trust and Savings
Association, 275 Cal. App. 2d 1, 80 Cal. Rptr. 622, 625 (1969). Those
defenses include the time limits imposed by section 4.406(d).   Sun 'N
Sand, Inc. v. United California Bank, 148 Cal. Rptr. 329, 582 P.2d 920
(1978). Therefore, if the treasury has a valid defense to a demand by
its customer to charge back the amount paid on the warrant bearing a
forged indorsement, such defense is, in turn, available to the
collecting bank.

     Under section 4.104(a)(5) of the TUCC, a "customer" is "any
person having an account with a bank or for whom a bank has agreed to
collect items and includes a bank carrying an account with another
bank."   The person whose funds were on deposit with the treasury and
whose funds were used to pay the warrant in question was the state of
Texas.   The state's failure to notify the treasury of the forgery of
Special Fund Warrant No. R499313 within three years triggers the bar
of section 4.406(d).   Consequently, the treasury may not look to the
collecting bank for reimbursement based upon the forged indorsement of
that warrant.

     In response to your second inquiry, it is our opinion that
statutes of limitations, generally, are not applicable to the state
when it is operating in its governmental capacity. Hemphill County v.
Adams, 408 S.W.2d 926 (Tex. 1966); Lewis Cox and Son, Inc. v. High
Plains Underground Water Conservation District No. 1, 538 S.W.2d 659
(Tex. Civ. App. 155
S.W.2d 1012 (Tex. Civ. App. - Waco 1941, writ rei?d). This principle
does not eliminate the bar of section 4.406(d) and (e). Statutes of
limitations may apply to the state if such provision is made by
statute.   State v. Stone, 271 S.W.2d 741 (Tex. Civ. App. - Beaumont
1954, no writ).    Through its definitions of "bank," "person," and
"organization," the TUCC makes clear that its provisions do apply to
the government or to governmental subdivisions or agencies.

                             SUMMARY

             Sections 4.406(d) and (a) of the Texas Business
          and Commerce Code apply to state warrants issued
          by the comptroller of public accounts and drawn on
          the state treasury.  The time limits set by these
          sections constitute a bar to recovery applicable
          to the state.

                                       MARK      WHITE
                                       Attorney General of Texas

                                   p. 2038
.

    Honorable Warren G. Harding - Page 5   (MW-556)

    JOHN W. FAINTER, JR.
    First Assistant Attorney General

    RICHARD E. GRAY III
    Executive Assistant Attorney General

    Prepared by Catherine Fryer
    Assistant Attorney General

    APPROVED:
    OPINION COMMITTEE

    Susan L. Garrison, Chairman
    Jon Bible
    Catherine Fryer
    Rick Gilpin
    Patricia Hinojosa

                                       p. 2039