Court Opinion

ID: 6623596
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:33:22.057029+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:48.409135
License: Public Domain

JOHNSON, J.
— Plaintiff sued defendant bank to recover a deposit. Special defenses to which we shall refer were interposed in the answer. In obedience to a peremptory instruction from the court, the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for the amount claimed in the petition, but on the hearing of the motion for a new trial, filed by defendant, the court set aside the verdict and granted a new trial. Plaintiff appealed.
Plaintiff, a dealer in live stock at Centerview, a town about six miles from Warrensburg, shipped some cattle in his own name to Kansas City and sold them on the market on January 17, 1906. A commission firm acted as his agent and, pursuant to his instructions, deposited the net proceeds of the sale ($411.42) in a Kansas City bank to the credit of defendant, a bank at Warrensburg, for the account of plaintiff. The Kansas City bank notified defendant' by letter as follows: “We credit your account $411.42 deposited with us by direction of C. T. Whitsett.” Defendant received this letter January 18th and immediately entered the sum on its books as a deposit of plaintiff. Before the cattle were shipped in the name of plaintiff, Charles Ferguson, a live stock dealer at Warrensburg, had told the cashier of defendant bank that he was about to ship some cattle to the market at Kansas City and that the proceeds would come to defendant for deposit to his account. Ferguson called at the bank on the day it received the notice of the deposit in the Kansas City bank, and asked the cashier if the proceeds of the sale of his cattle had been *85received. The cashier replied that the proceeds had been deposited at Kansas City in the name of plaintiff and entered on defendant’s books to plaintiff’s credit. Ferguson declared a mistake had been made, that the cattle shipped and sold in the name of plaintiff belonged to him (Ferguson) and that the proceeds should have been entered to his credit. The cashier then told Ferguson to bring plaintiff in and “we would fix that up in a minute.” Ferguson left and returned in a short time with a check to his order, signed by plaintiff, for the exact amount of the deposit. The cashier discovered the check was drawn on the Bank of Centerview instead of on defendant bank and called Ferguson’s attention to that fact. Ferguson said “Well, it should have been on this bank. He surely made some mistake; this is my money for my own individual cattle and he has evidently made a mistake; should have drawn that on the Peoples National Bank.” It appears plaintiff was not a regular customer of defendant but transacted his banking business with the Bank of Centerview. .Satisfied a mistake had been made by plaintiff and that the check was intended to be on defendant bank, the cashier told Ferguson to endorse it and after this was done, immediately altered the check to make it read on defendant bank and then charged the amount on the books to plaintiff and gave Ferguson proper credit. No certificate of deposit or pass book was issued by defendant to plaintiff nor did plaintiff issue any checks against the deposit. About two months after the transfer to Ferguson the Bank of Centerview failed. Plaintiff had continued to do business with that bank and on the day of the failure gave checks to farmers in payment of live stock purchased from them. Learning that the bank had closed its doors, the holders of these checks went to plaintiff for their money. He told them his money was in the bank that failed and that he had no other funds. One of the farmers insisted on payment and plaintiff told him “I cannot give you a check here (meaning on a bank in *86Warrensburg) but Ferguson will give you a check on the Peoples National Bank.” The farmer agreed to take Ferguson’s check if the bank would cash it. They went to Ferguson and he gave his check on defendant bank for the amount of the debt and the farmer took the check to defendant bank and received the money. A few days later, plaintiff called at the bank and asked the cashier to give him the amount of his deposit. The cashier told him he had no funds to his credit as he had transferred the amount of his deposit to Ferguson. Plaintiff asked the cashier to show him the check by which the transfer had been made. The cashier at first refused but afterward, under considerable pressure, produced the check. Plaintiff denounced it as a forgery and then presented a check for the amount of the deposit. The cashier refused to honor the check and this suit followed.
The answer begins with the admission that on the -day of March, 1906, plaintiff drew his check on defendant bank for $411.42, presented it for payment during banking hours and that defendant refused to pay it. Then follow a general traverse and four special defenses. In the first of these defendant admits receiving the deposit for plaintiff’s account, but alleges that the money belonged to Ferguson and that “defendant transferred said credit and gave credit for the said sum to the said Charles Ferguson, at his instance and request, and afterwards paid out the same to him upon his order, and that plaintiff directed that said credits be entered to said Ferguson, and that payment of the said money be made to him, and agreed and assented thereto.” The second special defense in purport and effect is a plea of waiver and estoppel. In the third defense, it is alleged that plaintiff and Ferguson were partners, that the deposit was partnership property and that Ferguson “as one of said firm, had a right to receive the said sum of money, and that payment thereof by defendant to him made by it was a full and complete discharge *87of any and all obligations of defendant to plaintiff.” The fourth special defense thus is stated: “Defendant, further answering, states the facts to be that on the 18th day of January 1906, defendant received notice from the Union National Bant of Kansas City, Mo., that it had placed to the credit of defendant, by the direction of plaintiff, $411.42; that on the same day defendant placed to the credit of plaintiff the said sum of $411.42; that said sum of money belonged to and was the property of one Charles Ferguson; that said Ferguson so notified defendant before and after the said entry of credit was made, and demanded credit for the same; that on the said 18th day of January, 1906, plaintiff drew a check dated on said date, payable to the order of said Charles Ferguson, for the said sum of $411.42, and directed to the Bank of Centerview, Centerview, Mo.; that said Ferguson on said last-named date endorsed said check in writing and transferred and delivered the same to this defendant, whereupon on receipt of said check this defendant at said last named date placed the said sum of $411.42 to the credit of the said Ferguson, and afterwards paid out the same to him and upon his order; that defendant never presented said check to the bank of Centerview for payment, but herewith files the same, and tenders and offers it back to plaintiff, and that plaintiff, by reason of the said failure of defendant to present said check to said Bank of Centerview, has suffered no loss or damage.”
All of these affirmative defenses are put in issue by an appropriate reply.
The motion for a new trial was sustained on the ground that “the court erred in giving a peremptory instruction in this, that the question of waiver should have been submitted to the jury.” We have reached the conclusion that a new trial was properly granted on the ground stated by the court and that other grounds assigned in the motion for a new trial likewise should have been sustained. These other grounds must be *88deemed to have been overruled by the trial court, but they are before us for consideration under the well-settled rule in such cases that all the grounds alleged in a motion for a new trial are before the appellate court for review, though the trial court sustain but one of them and that, perchance, one in which there was no error. [Ittner v. Hughes, 133 Mo. 679; Hewitt v. Steele, 118 Mo. 463; Bank v. Armstrong, 92 Mo. 265; State ex rel. v. Adams, 84 Mo. 310.]
Throughout the trial, the court in ruling on objections to evidence offered by defendant acted on the theory that the one question of fact at issue was whether plaintiff ratified the act of defendant’s cashier in altering the check given by plaintiff to Ferguson. On this theory, the court excluded much of the evidence, we think erro-, neously. The pleadings properly raised the issue that the transfer of the deposit from plaintiff to Ferguson was made by defendant pursuant to a valid oral agreement between the parties and, as we shall show, that issue should have been regarded as one open to proof. Most of the excluded evidence was germane to that issue and should have been admitted.
What we shall say in the discussion of the law of the case will sufficiently suggest our views relating to the rulings of the court on the admissibility of evidence, without special reference to the rulings. Material facts defendants offered to prove thus may be summarized: Ferguson, who either was a partner or an employee of plaintiff, owned some cattle which he shipped to market in the name of plaintiff, with the understanding between him and plaintiff that the proceeds of the sale were to be deposited with defendant to the credit of Ferguson. By mistake, the deposit was made in the name of plaintiff who had no interest in the cattle or their proceeds. Ferguson and plaintiff then agreed orally that the deposit should be transferred to Ferguson, the rightful owner, and to effectuate this agreement, plaintiff gave Ferguson his check for the exact amount of *89the deposit, intending to direct the check to defendant bank', but in using a blank check on another bank where he transacted business, he failed to erase the name of the bank printed thereon and to substitute therefor the name of defendant bank. Defendant’s cashier, being informed of these facts and being satisfied that the money-belonged to Ferguson, that plaintiff had agreed that it might be transferred to him, that the check was given for that purpose, and that the failure properly to direct it was a mere mistake, concluded to make, and did make, the transfer without requiring Ferguson to return to plaintiff for another check. The act of the cashier in altering the check was in good faith, but it was a serious blunder and is the foundation of this lawsuit. It is astonishing, to say the least, that a man of long experience in handling commercial paper, would deliberately spoliate in this way a negotiable instrument, the validity and preservation of which, were matters of importance to the institution he served. There is no direct evidence in the record of the existence of an agreement between plaintiff and Ferguson that the deposit in defendant’s bank should be transferred, and defendant was not required to prove that fact by direct evidence, but could establish it by facts and circumstances from which its existence might follow as a reasonable inference. The facts and circumstances adduced very strongly support such inference. In addition to the facts to which we have referred, it appears that plaintiff, at the time he gave the check to Ferguson, was overdrawn at the Bank of Centerview and knew that his check for that amount would not be honored by that bank. He must have known that the transfer had been made by defendant and, apparently, was satisfied and went on with his business affairs in a manner to indicate that he did not think he had a deposit with defendant. He bought and sold and had use for the money if it belonged to him, but he did not attempt to use it, and when greatly embarrassed by the failure of the Center-*90view bank, did not attempt to relieve his embarrassment by checking on defendant bank. These facts bespeak the existence of a valid contract for the transfer of this deposit, as well as knowledge and ratification of the transfer and of the act of the cashier in altering the check. Plaintiff argues: “The bank having received the deposit from Whitsett and given him credit for it on its books, he became its depositor, and the bank when sued by him. cannot question his right to it and plead title or ownership in another. An attaching creditor or the true owner can, but the bank cannot.” Citing Morse on Banks and Banking, Vol. I, sec. 342; Lund v. Seaman’s Bank, 37 Barb. 129; Citizens National Bank v. Alexander, 120 Pa. St. 113; Interstate Bank v. Claxton, 97 Tex. 569, 80 S. W. 604; Martin v. Minnesota State Bank, 7 S. D. 263, 64 N. W. 127; German Bank v. Hemsted, 46 Ark. 537; Century Digest, Vol. VI, p. 1219; 5 Cyc., 517.
We accept this rule but say that it does not preclude defendant from showing that it paid out the deposit by transfer on its books to Ferguson, pursuant to the agreement and direction of plaintiff the depositor. Further, plaintiff argues that the deposit was not legally transferred because of the alteration of the check by defendant, the indorsee. We concede no authority to make the transfer was conferred on defendant by the check. In the first place, the check was not directed to defendant, but to another bank. Consequently, it amounted to nothing more than mere evidence to the cashier of an intention on the part of plaintiff to pay over to Ferguson the amount of the proceeds of the sale of the cattle. Had the cashier refrained from mutilating the check, defendant, if called on for the deposit by plaintiff would have had to justify its refusal to pay the money to him by establishing the facts that it had transferred the deposit pursuant to his agreement with Ferguson that it should be so transferred and that he had authorized Ferguson to attend to having the transfer made. *91Certainly a check drawn on another bank would not, of itself, be sufficient evidence of the right to make the transfer. In the second place, the alteration of the check by defendant so completely destroyed it that defendant thereby deprived itself of all rights and remedies under that instrument which otherwise it would have had against plaintiff, Ferguson, or the Bank of Centerview. And it is immaterial that the cashier acted from an honest, not a fraudulent motive. “An alteration which in any degree varies the legal effect of the instrument, to the prejudice of the other party releases the latter from it, though no actual fraud is meditated. An alteration is a fraud in law when not a fraud in fact.” Law v. Crawford, 67 Mo. App. 150; Laws 1905, p. 257, secs. 119, 124; German Bank v. Dumm, 62 Mo. 79; Evans v. Foreman, 60 Mo. 449; Moore v. Hutchinson, 69 Mo. 429; First National Bank v. Fricke, 75 Mo. 178; Morrison v. Garth, 78 Mo. 434.
But with the check completely emasculated, it still appears from the evidence offered that defendant had ample authority for the transfer. Though usually banks do not pay out the money of depositors except on the depositor’s checks, a check is nothing more than a written order and there is no reason in law for saying that a bank may not lawfully pay out or transfer money on a depositor’s account by oral order. Suppose, for example, plaintiff and Ferguson had gone to the bank and plaintiff had told the cashier to transfer the deposit to Ferguson, as the money belonged to him, and accepting this oral order, the cashier had made such transfer, would anyone have the hardihood to contend that the transfer was invalid because made without a written order? In effect, this is just what occurred in the present instance. Plaintiff did not go to the bank in person, but he did agree to the transfer and it is a fair inference to say that he authorized Ferguson to communicate the agreement to defendant in order that the transfer should be made and afterward ratified it by his *92silence and apparent acquiescence in what the bank did. We conclude that the evidence tends to show the existence of a legal transfer and that the issue thus raised should have been submitted to the jury.
But if it might be said that the transfer was. made without authority from plaintiff, still the facts and circumstances we have detailed tend to sustain the defense that knowing of the transfer plaintiff ratified it by his conduct and should be held to have waived his right to recover the deposit. This defense was sufficiently pleaded and the evidence presents it as one of fact for the jury. The questions of law on this branch of the case are well disposed of in the following excerpt from the opinion of Ellison, J., in Fulkerson v. Lynn, 64 Mo. App. l. c. 653:
“There is no necessity for setting out the evidence here, but a perusal of it has left no doubt in our minds that it was sufficient to authorize the hypothesis submitted to the jury. The question of what plaintiff intended by his conduct and conversation was one which could only be determined by the jury, and they could only interpret- his intention by the language he used, under the circumstances existing when he used such language. It is said in West v. Platt, 127 Mass. 372, that: ‘A waiver is indeed the intentional relinquishment of a known right; but the best evidence of intention is to be found in the language used by the parties. The true inquiry is, what was said or written, and whether what was said indicated the alleged intention. . . . The secret understanding, or intent of the defendants, or their agents could not affect his (plaintiff’s) rights.’ . . . Much of plaintiff’s contention against the defense of waiver is based on the idea that there must be an agreement in order to make a waiver. A waiver may be made by an agreement, but it may also be made without an agreement. It depends altogether on the nature of the matter to which the waiver pertains. The case of Haseltine v. Ausherman, 87 Mo. 410, and Reed v. Lam*93bertson, 53 Mo. App. 76, cited by plaintiff, have no application to this case.
“So the same may be said with respect to the necessity for a consideration. There are many instances where a waiver must be upheld by a consideration, but it is by no means so in all cases. Thus, it is familiar that a forfeiture may be waived by certain acts or conduct, without any agreement or consideration therefor. The doctrine of waiver of forfeiture does not stand on any advantage accruing to the one, or injury sustained by the other. [People v. Manhattan Co., 9 Wend. 381.] The statute of limitations may be waived, without an agreement or a consideration. -‘The doctrine is familiar that no man is compellable to stand on a right which the law gives him. He can always waive it, if he chooses.’ [Bishop on Contracts, secs. 94, 95.]”
The learned trial judge did not err in granting a new trial. We cannot refrain from adding that the equity of the case is wholly against the plaintiff. In the opening statement of his counsel to the jury, it is conceded that the cattle and their proceeds were Ferguson’s property. It appears that the check plaintiff gave Ferguson was not presented for payment to the Bank of Centerview, and, further, that plaintiff lost nothing by the failure of that bank. Therefore, he is in the attitude of seeking to hold defendant doubly liable for the deposit when he has no claim for the money and has suffered no injury or loss at the hands of defendant. He should never have brought the suit and would do well now to dismiss it.
The judgment is affirmed.
All concur.