175 N.E. 213 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1931
This action was brought originally in the common pleas court of Stark county by the filing of a petition by William Pluchel, individually, against the City Savings Bank Trust Company, of Alliance. Various motions were filed from time to time, and various amendments had, and apparently upon the suggestion of the defendant below additional parties were made parties plaintiff. This case proceeded to trial on the fourth amended petition, the answer, and the reply. The parties plaintiff, *424 at the time of the trial, as set forth in the fourth amended petition, were William Pluchel, Charles Pluchel, George Pluchel, and Charles Pluchel, as administrator of the estate of Henry Pluchel, deceased.
The fourth amended petition averred the corporate capacity of the defendant, and that, as a part of its business, it was renting for hire safety deposit boxes and operating and controlling a vault containing said safety deposit boxes, which boxes were leased and rented to the general public for hire; that one of said boxes was rented by William Pluchel, under instructions from him that no person, other than himself, at any time be permitted to use any keys or open said box. The fourth amended petition further alleged, among other things, that there had been deposited by said William Pluchel in said box prior to October 24, 1925, the sum of $12,000 in currency, and alleged that, upon examination by him of said box, in the month of March, 1926, said sum of $12,000 in currency was missing. It was further alleged that S.L. Sturgeon was, and had been, vice president of the defendant bank, in active charge of its management, and that one Fred W. Schaffer had been, and was, assistant cashier of said bank, and alleged that the said Schaffer, assistant cashier, had, with felonious intent, procured duplicate keys for the safety deposit box of the said Pluchel, without the same being ordered by said Pluchel and without his knowledge, and that they were used for the purpose of abstracting funds from said box. It was further averred that the defendant bank was negligent in not preventing the opening of said box by persons other than said Pluchel. The prayer of the *425 fourth petition was for a judgment in the sum of $12,000.
The answer of the bank admitted its corporate capacity; admitted the allegation with reference to its having safety deposit boxes and maintaining a vault for such purpose; admitted the allegations with reference to the manner of opening said boxes; admitted the renting of the safety deposit box by William Pluchel. It, however, denied the deposit of the $12,000 by Pluchel, and denied that it was found missing in March, 1926. It admitted that Sturgeon was active head of the business, and that the said Schaffer was assistant cashier of the bank. It further admitted that some time prior to 1925 the said Schaffer had ordered duplicate keys for the box, or boxes, rented by Pluchel, but denied that they were ordered with any felonious intent, and denied that any funds were ever abstracted from said box by any person other than Pluchel. It further denied that any agent or employee of the bank, acting within the scope of his employment, ever ordered any keys for the purpose of entering the Pluchel box or abstracting any money or funds therefrom.
The reply filed to this answer was a general denial of all allegations, except such allegations as admitted the truth of facts pleaded in the fourth amended petition.
The case proceeded to trial, and the jury rendered a verdict in the sum of $12,000 against the bank. A motion for a new trial having been duly filed was overruled, judgment was entered upon the verdict, and error is now prosecuted to this court.
Numerous assignments of error are made in the *426 petition in error, but these assignments can readily be reduced to three or four propositions.
The issues, in brief, were: First, whether or not this money was ever deposited in this box by Pluchel, and, if so, was it ever abstracted therefrom by any person other than Pluchel, or without his knowledge and consent? Second, if this money was abstracted from the box by some representative of the bank, was this conduct on the part of such representative such as to bind the bank and make it liable for the loss of this money?
The questions with reference to whether or not the money was deposited, and whether or not it was abstracted by persons other than Pluchel, or without his knowledge and consent, were questions of fact for the jury.
We find from an examination of the record that the trial court committed no error in the introduction or the exclusion of evidence, or in its charge to the jury upon these questions of fact, and that they were properly submitted to the jury and the jury found against the contention of the bank, which finding is not manifestly against the weight of the evidence and there would be no justification for disturbing the verdict of the jury. In fact, there are but two assignments of error to which we feel justified in directing specific attention. As to the other assignments of error we find no difficulty and see nothing in the record upon which they could be based which is prejudicial to the plaintiff in error.
The two assignments of error to be discussed are: First, the form of the verdict, in view of the pleadings and the evidence; and, second, the question whether or not Schaffer was acting in such manner *427 as to bind the bank by his action, it being obvious from the verdict that the jury must have found, and did find, that Schaffer, assistant cashier of the bank, abstracted this money from the box.
Discussing the first assignment of error, complaint is made that as the case was submitted to the jury there were four plaintiffs, and that the verdict as rendered is simply on behalf of the "plaintiff." This is the form submitted by the clerk, and the form which the jury signed. There is no complaint of defect of parties plaintiff. Indeed, as has been noted, these additional parties were made parties plaintiff at the suggestion of the defendant below on the ground that they might have some beneficial interest in this money. Having been parties to this proceeding, they are bound by the final result, and certainly the plaintiff in error cannot be prejudiced by this technical error in the form of the verdict. It runs no risk of being involved in the future in any other litigation by any of these parties as to this transaction, because they are precluded or estopped by this verdict.
As to the second question, to which we now direct our attention, and which is the one most strenuously urged by counsel for plaintiff in error: Assuming, from the record and from the verdict of the jury, based upon the evidence, that Schaffer took this money, is the bank liable because of his act? The evidence shows that this safety deposit box was of the ordinary kind, operated in the manner of safety deposit boxes with which we are all familiar, to wit, that it can be opened only by the simultaneous insertion of two keys in two different slots, one a so-called customer's key, obtained by the bank and *428 given to the customer, and the other a guard key, remaining in the possession of the bank. The admission of the defendant and the answer show that Schaffer was an officer of the bank, to wit, assistant cashier, and the evidence further shows that he was the officer of the bank in charge of these safety deposit boxes, having access to the guard keys; that he, as such officer, ordered these duplicate customers' keys for the Pluchel box; and that these keys were paid for out of the funds of the bank. As to his conduct subsequent to obtaining the keys, and subsequent to the time that Pluchel learned of his loss, nothing need be said except that such conduct was naturally one of the factors in inducing the jury to return the verdict which it did. Under this state of facts, is the bank liable? The contention is made by plaintiff in error that, assuming that Schaffer took this money, he was acting beyond the scope of his authority, so the bank cannot be bound.
Mr. Thomas B. Paton, Jr., general counsel for the American Bankers' Association, in his digest issued for the guidance of American bankers, discusses the liability of banks for the wrongful acts of bank officers, and on page 121 lays down the general rule that a bank, or any other corporation, is liable for torts committed by its servants, or its agents, precisely as a natural person.
In 3 Ruling Case Law, page 457, Section 86, under the topic "Liability for Wrongful Act of Officer or Agent," this pronouncement is made:
"According to these principles a bank is liable for the fraudulent act of its president committed in the course of his duties and employment, although the directors of the bank have no knowledge of, and *429 do not authorize, such fraud. It is also liable for the fraudulent acts of its cashier done within the apparent, though not real, scope of his agency."
Hale on Bailments, Section 72, in the note discussing illustrative cases of special bank deposits and the question of responsibility for the act of any agent, states the rule apparently to be that a bank is liable for the felonious act of its cashier, when acting in the course of his employment, if not in the scope of it.
Plaintiff in error cites and places reliance upon the case ofFoster et al., Exrs., v. President, etc., of Essex Bank,
"The doctrine of exemption from liability in such cases was at one time carried so far as to shield the bailees from the fraudulent acts of their own employees and officers, though their employment embraced a supervision of the property, such acts not being deemed within the scope of their employment."
It is true that this Preston case is based on a somewhat different state of facts, but, nevertheless, it is sufficient to show that the Supreme Court of the United States has disapproved this doctrine laid down in Foster v. President, etc., of EssexBank.
This Preston case is cited with approval by the *430
Supreme Court of Illinois in the case of Gray v. Merriam,
Decidedly in point are certain cases passed upon by the Court of Appeals of Franklin County on January 6, 1930. Blair v. Riley,post, 513,
"There is some testimony tending to show that Browning had access to some of the boxes by means independent of the keys put into his possession by the box holders.
"Under this state of facts, the trial court held that the relationship existing between the box holders and the bank was that of bailment; that when the plaintiff had shown the rental of the box from the *431 bank, the placing of the securities therein, and the failure of the bank to return them on demand, a prima facie case was made out against the bank; that the defendant could not assert its want of knowledge of the honesty of its officer, the cashier, as a defense against its liability as bailee."
The Court of Appeals of Franklin County affirmed the judgment of the lower court with this statement: "We are of opinion that the court was sound in its conclusions as to the law of this case."
We think the case of National Liberty Ins. Co. of America v.Sturtevant-Jones Co.,
"Where a contract of bailment contains no exemption from liability on account of unauthorized acts of the servants of the bailee, no act of the servant of the bailee, whether or not authorized by the bailee, committed while the servant is in possession of the subject of bailment by authority of the bailee, is effective to abrogate the contract between the bailor and the bailee nor to absolve the bailee from liability to the bailor for a breach of such contract, which if done by the bailee in person would not accomplish such result."
Valuable, too, is the case of Dietrich v. Peters,
Attention is directed, also, to the case of Citizens' SavingsBank v. Blakesley,
"2. Where a transaction with an incorporated banking association properly pertains to the business of such an association, neither the abuse or disregard of his authority by its managing officer or agent, nor his fraud or bad faith will be permitted to be shown in defense of such bank in an action against it by an innocent party, growing out of such transaction."
In the case at bar Schaffer was an officer of the bank, not simply a bookkeeper, watchman, or other employee. He was the officer having the direct charge over these boxes, and having the authority to order necessary keys. He spoke for the bank more than any other officer would, or could, have done, under the circumstances. As we view it, so far as this transaction is concerned, he was the bank, and, obviously, the bank, the corporation, must respond for the acts of this man who was, in this instance, its alter ego.
We find no error in the judgment of the court of common pleas, and the same is therefore affirmed, and the cause remanded for execution.
Judgment affirmed.
LEMERT, P.J., and SHERICK, J., concur. *433