Plaintiffs Harold and Claude Nussbaum, independent executors of the estate of
Appellant's first proposition is: “The undisputed facts in this case show that, in their dealings with Beasley and the banks, plaintiffs were guilty of negligence of the worst character and that such negligence caused, or contributed to cause, the loss they sustained.” The point raised requires a comprehensive statement.
The Sanitary Appliance Co., Inc., was granted a Texas charter in June, 1923, and was domiciled at Houston, Texas. It was engaged in the business of manufacturing plumbing supplies and selling them to schools and municipalities. It operated as a going concern until July, 1933, at which time its charter was forfeited, but neither the plaintiffs nor the defendant banks knew that said corporation had suspended business or that its charter had been forfeited. Its assets were liquidated without receivership or bankruptcy. It was not dissolved. It still remained a legal entity. Stephens County v. J. N. McCammon, Inc., Tex.Com.App.,
In February, 1934, Beasley opened an account in the name of said company with the Greenville Bank. This account began with the deposit of the seventh check issued by Julius Nussbaum in his transac
Neither of the plaintiffs had anything to do with his father’s affairs during his lifetime. Harold Nussbaum never met Beasley prior to his father’s death, but Claude had seen him a few times in his father’s office. Beasley called on plaintiffs after their father’s death for the purpose of continuing the business relationship that he had carried on with their father. Beasley advised plaintiffs how he had sold these school warrants to their father; that they were endorsed by said company, and that plaintiffs would not have to make collection of the same; that when they became due the warrants would be paid by said company; that plaintiffs would surrender the warrants; and that the transactions would be carried on just as they had been carried on with their father. Plaintiffs subsequently agreed to handle the warrants at a ten per cent discount. Beasley negotiated the sale of all of the warrants to plaintiffs, and they purchased same by issuing their checks on the Mexia Bank, payable to the order of said company. Substantially all of these transactions were handled through the mails. None of the warrants passed • through the defendant banks. Plaintiffs’ arrangement with Beasley was that they would notify Beasley for his company at Greenville as to the due dates of the warrants, and that the company would place the money in the Green-ville Bank, and that checks for the warrants due would be mailed to plaintiffs at Mexia, regardless of whether the company had collected the money from the school districts; that after plaintiffs received their money on the warrants due, they, in turn, would forward these warrants to the company through Beasley at Greenville. Plaintiffs did not know why Beasley wanted some of the warrants “canceled and marked paid,” that so far as they knew all warrants that were taken up between the dates of March 6, 1936, and April 20, 1937, may have been canceled, although in most instances Beasley requested them to return the warrants uncanceled. Neither of the defendant banks had knowledge of these facts. Plaintiffs believed that said company was a corporation, and for that reason made each of the checks in question payable to the order of said corporation, but they made no investigation (except their inquiry of Beasley) as to why it carried an account in a Greenville bank. The Greenville Bank had actual knowledge of the corporate existence of the said company prior to Beasley’s trans
Plaintiffs made no inquiry except of Beasley as to whether the postdated warrants were valid; they relied upon Beasley and the information they had about Beasley’s transactions with their father. Harold Nussbaum testified that he asked Beasley why the warrants were not approved by the county superintendents, but he never called on any county superintendent to find out why they were not approved; that the fact that each warrant was dated over into another year did not cause him to make any inquiry of anyone except Beasley. He further testified that he relied on the endorsements on said warrants; “I just assumed that any endorsement of the Sanitary Appliance Company was correct”; that one warrant came to them without an endorsement, which he returned to Beasley on November 23, 1937, at Greenville; that he knew that the unendorsed warrant must go to the company at Houston, and that he had the Houston address of the company in their files. Claude Nussbaum testified that he thought he knew something about the company; that he relied solely on what Beasley told him, and his father’s judgment; that he did not get any information from his father as to the company; that he got his information about the company from Beasley, and that he relied on the company when he purchased the warrants; that the reason why he did not know whether the company was solvent or insolvent, whether it was a going concern or not, was because he relied on his father’s judgment; that he knew that his father had been buying these warrants through Beasley; that his father’s transactions through Beasley had been satisfactory in the past, and he assumed that such transactions would be satisfactory in the future, but defendant banks had no knowledge of these facts.
Plaintiffs, as executors, issued their first check payable to the Sanitary Appliance Co., Inc., on February 2, 1935. Thereafter and up until March 16, 1939, at various and sundry times, they issued forty-nine other checks, payable as aforesaid, in various and sundry amounts, the largest being in the sum of $3,351.60, and the last check, dated March 16, 1939, being in the sum of $2,950.20. The entire fifty checks issued totaled $46,927.80. On the checks given by plaintiffs there was noted upon each, with the exception of eighteen, that same was given in a transaction relating to school warrants. All of the checks issued by the Nussbaums in their transactions with Beasley were on the Mexia Bank and were collected through the Greenville Bank; and after Beasley opened the account for said company with the Greenville Bank these checks were deposited to that account. The total checks issued by the Nussbaums in their transactions with Beasley amounted to $50,559; Beasley made payments to them in the amount of $36,340.50, leaving a net loss of $14,218.50.
In March, 1939, the Nussbaums requested Beasley to furnish to them a financial statement of the company. That statement did not come promptly, and the Nussbaums made inquiry elsewhere and ascertained that the company had been out of business for several years. They purchased no other warrants from Beasley and notified the defendant banks of the fraud.
The evidence is undisputed that the Nussbaums and the Greenville Bank were guilty of negligence in their respective dealings with Beasley. Therefore, at the very threshold we are met with the question as to whose negligence proximately caused this loss. The Commission of Appeals, in Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland v. Ft. Worth Nat. Bank,
“The proximate cause of an injury is that cause which, in natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any efficient intervening cause, produces the injury, and without which the result would not have occurred.” Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Guidry, Tex.Civ.App.,
Did the Nussbaums do anything to lead the bank to believe that they ratified the wrongful conduct of Beasley? We think not. The Nussbaums made no examination nor comparison of the endorsements on the returned checks they had issued in payment of the warrants with the endorsements that appeared on said warrants. However, the testimony is without dispute that the endorsements on the warrants, as well as the endorsements on the checks, were forged by Beasley. If appellees had made such an examination or comparison, it does not follow that Beasley’s wrongdoing would have been detected. The Commission of Appeals, in Liberty State Bank v. Guardian Savings & Loan Ass’n,
Appellant contends that the Mexia Bank had a complete defense against the Nussbaums’ cause of action, and that it failed to present it in good faith, and that therefore it cannot recover over against the Greenville Bank. The basis of this contention is substantially that the Nussbaums own more than two-thirds of the capital stock of the Mexia Bank; that Harold and Claude are both directors; that Harold is president of the bank; and that they are, in effect, suing themselves in an effort to make the Greenville Bank bear the loss caused by their negligent conduct. The Mexia Bank was a corporate entity and its active officers and employees were selected by the Board of Directors, and such officers and employees conducted the affairs of the bank. The evidence is undisputed that the Greenville Bank placed upon the Nussbaum checks “All prior endorsements guaranteed,” which endorsement was relied upon by the Mexia Bank acting in good faith in paying said checks. As we view the record, the Mexia Bank had no defense against the Nussbaums’ cause of action. Labor Bank & Trust Co. v. Adams, Tex.Civ.App.,
Error is assigned to the action of the trial court in permitting Plarold Nuss-baum to testify to conversation with his deceased father. We have considered this assignment very carefully and are of the opinion that it does not present error for two reasons: (1) the conversation was wholly immaterial and irrelevant on the controlling issues in the case; and (2) the cause having been tried before the court without a jury, the admission of illegal evidence is not cause for reversal when there is sufficient legal testimony to justify the court’s finding. Schleicher v. Markward,
We have carefully considered each error assigned, and we are of the opinion that reversible error is not presented.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
