25 S.E.2d 202 | N.C. | 1943
Civil action in tort to recover damages for alleged wrongful refusal to honor check, and in contract to recover the amount of the check.
The complaint, in substance, alleges:
1. That on 3 September, 1933, the plaintiff issued to David P. Cauley a certificate of insurance under a group policy taken out by the Federal Postal Employees Association in the face value of $3,000, and payable to Ruth Sutton Cauley, wife of the insured, as beneficiary.
2. That in August, 1939, the insured mailed to the Federal Employees Postal Association, collecting agent for the plaintiff, a check for $21.38, drawn on the First-Citizens Bank and Trust Company (Kinston, N.C.), *50 in payment of the semiannual premium due on his certificate of insurance 1 August, 1939.
3. That on 1 September, 1939, the insured deposited with the defendant, First-Citizens Bank Trust Company, the sum of $21.38 "for the specific and sole purpose of covering the $21.38 premium check . . . and David P. Cauley instructed the agents and employees of the defendant bank that said funds were to be held solely for such purpose, thereby creating a special deposit."
4. That theretofore, on 13 July, 1939, the said David P. Cauley had drawn a check on the Branch Bank Trust Company (Kinston, N.C.) for $5.25, payable to the order of H. Stadiem; that this check was written in pencil, signed "D. P. Cauley," and was delivered to the manager of the business known as "H. Stadiem" and agent of the defendant, Mrs. Yettie Stadiem, with the understanding and agreement "that said check would not be presented to the bank upon which it was drawn or any other bank for payment."
5. That on 4 September, 1939, the manager of the business conducted by Mr. Yettie Stadiem altered, changed and forged the $5.25 check above mentioned by changing the name of the drawee bank from "Branch Banking Trust Company" to First-Citizens Bank and Trust Company, and presented said check, so altered and forged, to the teller of the defendant bank, who wrongfully and unlawfully cashed said check and debited it against the special deposit of $21.38 standing in the name of David P. Cauley.
6. That the premium check for $21.38 was duly deposited by plaintiff's agent in the Colorado National Bank of Denver, Colorado, for collection, and in due course reached the First-Citizens Bank Trust Company, Kinston, N.C. on or about 12 September, 1939; that said defendant bank wrongfully and negligently failed to pay said check, marked it "insufficient funds," and transmitted it back to plaintiff's agent.
7. That the insured, David P. Cauley, died on 15 September, 1939, and the beneficiary in said certificate demanded of plaintiff that it pay the face value thereof.
8. That relying upon the representations of the defendant bank that said premium check was worthless, the plaintiff declined to pay the insurance; that suit was brought on said certificate and after two trials in the Superior Court of Lenoir County and two appeals to the Supreme Court of North Carolina (see Cauley v. Ins. Co.,
9. That plaintiff is entitled to recover as damages its costs in defending said action, amounting to $2,596.48, and "the defendant Bank is also *51 indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $21.38, the face amount of said check, the payment of which was wrongfully and unlawfully refused by the said Bank."
Wherefore, plaintiff prays recovery of damages and the amount of the check.
A demurrer was interposed by the defendants, and each of them, on the grounds that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; that the damages alleged are too remote, and that no proximate cause exists between the negligence alleged and the loss sustained.
From judgment sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the action, the plaintiff appeals, assigning error.
The question for decision is whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, either in contract or in tort. C. S., 511, subsec. 6. The office of a demurrer is to test the sufficiency of a pleading, admitting for the purpose the truth of factual averments well stated and such relevant inferences as may be deduced therefrom, but it does not admit any legal inferences or conclusions of law asserted by the pleader. Leonard v. Maxwell, Comr.,
I. THE ACTION IN CONTRACT.
The plaintiff seeks to recover in contract on the allegation that "the defendant Bank is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $21.38, the face amount of said check." This is a mere conclusion of the pleader, and it is not supported by the facts alleged. In the absence of an acceptance or agreement to pay Cauley's check, the Bank assumed no liability to the plaintiff or its agent, the payee named therein. Perry v. Bank,
In First National Bank v. Whitman,
Indeed, it is provided by C. S., 3171, that a check of itself does not operate as an assignment of any part of the funds to the credit of the drawer with the bank, and the bank is not liable to the holder unless and until it accepts or certifies the check. Brantley v. Collie,
Such is the law as it obtains with us in respect of checks, albeit we have in a number of cases held that "where a contract between two parties is made for the benefit of a third, the latter may sue thereon and recover although not strictly a privy to the contract." Rector v. Lyda,
It is suggested, however, that the basis of the minority view was followed in Cauley v. Ins. Co.,
Hence, according to the law as it obtains in this jurisdiction, the facts stated are not sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendant Bank for the amount of the check.
II. THE ACTION IN TORT.
It follows from what is said above that the demurrer to the complaint on the cause of action sounding in tort was likewise properly sustained. *53
If a bank be not liable to the holder of a check "until and unless it accepts or certifies the check," the payee has no right of action against the bank on an unaccepted or uncertified check, for he is in no position to allege a breach of legal duty, and no action at law can be maintained except there is shown to have been a failure in the performance of some legal duty. Diamond v. Service Stores,
Moreover, the proximate cause of plaintiff's loss was not the negligent dishonor of the premium check, but the subsequent independent act of the plaintiff in refusing to pay the insurance. Butner v. Spease,
The definition of proximate cause requires a continuous and unbroken sequence of events, and where the original wrong only becomes injurious in consequence of the intervention of some distinct wrongful act or omission on the part of another or others, the injury is to be imputed to the second wrong as the proximate cause, and not to the first, or more remote cause. Cooley on Torts, sec. 50; Butner v. Spease, supra.
The rule is, that if the original act be wrongful, and would naturally prove injurious to some other person or persons, and does actually result in injury through the intervention of other causes which are not in themselves wrongful, the injury is to be referred to the wrongful cause, passing by those which are innocent. Scott v. Shepherd, 2 Bl., 892 (SquibCase). But if the chain of causation be broken by the intervention of some efficient, independent cause, such intervening cause is to be regarded as the proximate cause of the injury, and in an action against the original wrongdoer the law will not undertake further to pursue the question or resulting damage. McGhee v. R. R.,
In searching for the proximate cause of an event, the question always is: Was there an unbroken connection between the wrongful act and the injury, a continuous operation? Do the facts constitute a continuous *54
succession of events, so linked together as to make a natural whole, or was there some new and independent cause intervening between the wrong and the injury? Milwaukee and St. P. Ry. Co. v. Kellogg,
Here, the causal connection between the Bank's negligence and the plaintiff's ultimate loss was broken by an independent and responsible cause. The damages claimed are in no legal sense the proximate cause of the negligence alleged. "There was an interruption and the intervention of an entirely separate cause, which cause was an independent human agency, acting with an independent mind." Hartford v. All Day and All Night Bank,
It results, therefore, that the demurrer was properly sustained on both causes of action.
Affirmed.