E.S.P., Inc., one of two drawees of a check drawn on appellant, Midway National Bank of St. Paul (Midway), in this suit alleges that by remitting funds over a forged endorsement to the First State Bank of Robbinsdale (First Bank) for deposit to the account of the other drawee, Midway had converted funds belonging to E.S.P., Inc. Minn.Stat. § 336.3-419(l)(c) (1988). Midway commenced a third-party action against First Bank in which it alleges First Bank, as depositary and collecting bank, breached the warranty of title provided by Minn.Stat. § 336.4-207(l)(a)(i) (1988).
1
This appeal relates only to the third-party claim. Each bank moved for summary judgment against the other. The trial court concluded Midway’s third-party claim was barred by Minn.Stat. § 541.05(1) (1988), Minnesota’s six-year limitation statute applicable to contract claims, and entered judgment in favor of First Bank. A divided court of appeals affirmed.
E.S.P., Inc. v. Midway National Bank,
Barr and Nelson, Inc. maintained a checking account with Midway. On February 3, 1981, Barr and Nelson, Inc. issued a check for $30,000 payable to Mechanical Constructors and E.S.P. Heating as joint payees. That same day Mechanical Constructors deposited the check into its First Bank account. At the time of deposit, E.S.P., Inc.’s endorsement had apparently been forged on the back of the check. E.S.P., Inc.’s share of the $30,000 check was $17,600. On February 6, 1981, First Bank received payment of the $30,000 from Midway., E.S.P., Inc. claims it never received its portion of the proceeds.
More than four years later, on February 25, 1985, E.S.P., Inc. sent to Midway an affidavit of forgery. Upon receipt, Midway notified First Bank of the forgery claim and requested that First Bank remit to Midway the $17,600 claimed by E.S.P., Inc. First Bank disclaimed responsibility and failed to remit.
Nearly six years after Midway paid the check, on January 30, 1987, E.S.P., Inc. commenced this action against Midway. Its claim is based upon conversion under Minn.Stat. § 336.3-419(l)(c) (1988). Under Minnesota law, E.S.P., Inc. is prevented from suing First Bank directly even though First Bank was that bank which collected the check without verifying the endorsements. Minn.Stat. § 336.3-419(3) (1988) provides a depositary or collecting bank with defenses in a direct suit by a payee; it does, however, permit a payee, such as E.S.P., Inc., to sue the payor bank for conversion because it converted the check when it paid on a forged endorsement. Minn.Stat. § 336.3-419(l)(c) (1988).
Although Midway, as payor bank, may be liable for conversion, it, in turn, may look to First Bank, the collecting and depositary bank, for restitution. The warranty of good title automatically arises as part of the inter bank collection process.
See
footnote 1. All banks in the collection chain are liable if that warranty is breached, but only the initial collecting or depositary bank has a duty to check endorsements. 7 R. Anderson,
Anderson on the Uniform Commercial Code,
§ 4-207:5 (3d ed. 1985). The purpose underlying the rule is to place the loss “upon the party who last dealt with the wrongdoer. This party
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is best able to prevent the conversion by carefully checking endorsements.”
Stapleton v. First Sec. Bank,
Because the Uniform Commercial Code places that ultimate responsibility for E.S.P., Inc.’s loss on First Bank, fourteen days after it had been sued by E.S.P., Inc., Midway served upon First Bank this third-party action. 2 In reply, First Bank argues that even though the Uniform Commercial Code saddles it with that responsibility, Midway’s action is barred by the statute of limitations because it was commenced more than six years after the statutory warranty was breached.
The question in this case is not which statute of limitation is applicable; both parties concede that the six-year limitation statute (Minn.Stat. § 541.05(1) (1988)) applicable generally to contract actions is appropriate. The dispute between them relates to when that six-year limitation period commences to run. First Bank argues that Midway’s claim is for a breach of warranty and, therefore, the statute commenced to run at the time of the breach (February 6, 1981). In contrast, Midway argues that its action is for indemnity for the loss it may sustain as the result of First Bank’s breach of the statutory warranty of title. Because limitation statutes generally commence to run on indemnity claims at the time the indemnitee sustains a loss, and since Midway sustains no loss until it is compelled to pay E.S.P., Inc., the statute has not yet commenced to run. Accordingly, Midway asserts, its third party action is timely.
Both the trial court, when it granted First Bank summary judgment, and the court of appeals, when it affirmed that judgment, rejected Midway’s argument. Both courts concluded that Midway's third-party action was premised on the breach of warranty, which, if it occurred at all, took place six years and six days before institution of this third-party action against First Bank. In so holding, both relied on
Trust Co. Bank v. State,
In Trust Co. Bank, the State of Alabama, drawer of pension cheeks, sued Trust Co. Bank, the collecting and depositary bank, which had paid the face amount of the checks on forged endorsements. In the absence of a specific statute of limitations in Alabama’s version of the Uniform Commercial Code, the Alabama court in this direct action for breach of warranty applied Alabama’s contract limitation statute. The State of Alabama made no claim by way of indemnity; its claim was for damages for breach of warranty. In that case the State of Alabama’s claim matured when the defendant collecting bank breached the statutory warranty of title. It sustained an immediate loss, and it could have sued any time thereafter.
Here, Barr and Nelson, the drawer of the check, occupies the role filled by the State of Alabama in
Trust Co. Bank.
Had Barr
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and Nelson sued First Bank for breach of the warranty of title six days beyond the expiration of the contract limitation period, its claim too, as was that of
Trust Co. Bank,
would be barred. But, here, Midway acts in a different role. It is the payor bank. Although under the Uniform Commercial Code Midway is entitled to be indemnified for any loss it sustains, its claim for indemnification does not ripen until it has sustained a loss — here, when it is compelled to pay E.S.P., Inc. The contingency giving rise to the indemnity claim does not occur until loss is experienced by the in-demnitee.
See, e.g., Colder v. City of Crystal,
Because of this dissimilarity in the roles of the parties and the rules of law prescribing the time within which each must assert its claim or the time barred, it appears to us the reliance of the courts below on Trust Co. Bank has been misplaced.
The court of appeals’ majority opinion in the instant case opined that Midway received from E.S.P., Inc. in 1985 an affidavit of forgery and was put on notice of the potential claim, after which it could have commenced a declaratory judgment action against First Bank. Because it did not do so, the majority implied, though it did not specifically hold, that Midway cannot now complain if the six-year statute is now applied to bar its claim.
See E.S.P., Inc.,
Actions seeking indemnity may arise out of contract.
Aetna Casualty & Sur. Co. v. Bros,
In doing so, however, we emphasize the narrow application of today’s holding. It is limited to actions by payor banks, or other banks in the collection chain, for indemnity arising from the breach of the warranty of title under the Uniform Commercial Code, and is specifically designed to further a major purpose of that code — the development of consistent and commercially reasonable rules of law to govern commercial transactions. See 1 J. White & R. Summers, Uniform Commercial Code 21-22 (3d ed. 1988). 4
Accordingly, we vacate the opinion of the court of appeals and the judgment of the trial court, and remand to the trial court for resolution of other issues raised by the pleadings.
Notes
. Minn.Stat. § 336.4-207(l)(a) reads:
WARRANTIES OF CUSTOMER AND COLLECTING BANK ON TRANSFER OR PRESENTMENT OF ITEMS; TIME FOR CLAIMS.
(1) Each customer or collecting bank who obtains payment or acceptance of an item and each prior customer and collecting bank warrants to the payor bank or other payor who in good faith pays or accepts the item that
(a) it has a good title to the item or is authorized to obtain payment or acceptance on behalf of one who has a good title; * * *
. Albeit with considerable reluctance, we have felt compelled to require parties to follow this "round about” approach in resolving responsibility for loss under the Uniform Commercial Code.
See, e.g., Denn v. First State Bank,
. Illustrative of the equitable nature of the relief as being dependent upon the factual setting is
Leisure Dynamics v. Falstaff Brewing Corp.,
. At oral argument counsel suggested that a holding, such as the one we adopt today, could extend liability of the collecting or depository bank for 12, or more, years after the breach of the statutory warranty of title. Admittedly, that would be theoretically possible. However, other legal precepts mitigate against that result. First of all, since indemnity is an equitable doctrine, the equitable doctrine of laches, which may be applicable, provided prejudice can be demonstrated, may limit such extended risk of liability.
See, e.g., Anderson v. First Nat'l Bank,
