233 P. 668 | Wash. | 1925
Lead Opinion
PARKER, BRIDGES, MACKINTOSH, and MITCHELL, JJ., dissent.
A majority of the court, including the writer, who joined in that opinion, are now convinced that the decision affirming the judgment of the lower court was wrong. Certain questions of law were correctly decided, but one principal proposition was erroneously decided.
Among other things, it was there said that,
"Viewed from any angle, it seems to us that Sander never acquired any authority, express or implied, to use any of the funds of the company to pay any of his personal debts, if, indeed, such authority could, under any circumstances, be given to him by the trustees of the company. Besides, the bank never had any suggestion of any such authority on the part of Sander, nor even any claim of such authority on his part, other than as evidenced by the face of the three checks against the funds of the company given by him to the bank to apply upon his personal indebtedness to it. That this is not such evidence of Sander's authority to so use the funds of the company, upon which the bank had a right to rely, is rendered plain, as a matter of law, by all the authorities. The checks upon their face told the bank that it was the company's money, and not Sander's money, that it was receiving from *285 him towards the payment of his personal indebtedness. Our own decisions, and many of other jurisdictions, lead, we think, irresistibly to the conclusion that the company's trustees never, either expressly or impliedly, gave to Sander any authority to so use the funds of the company, and that the bank had no right to assume that Sander had any such authority. (citing cases)."
As was stated in the former opinion:
"For some time prior to January, 1921, Sander had been in the habit of paying his personal obligations with checks signed by the company by himself as president against the bank account of the company, and causing the amount thereof to be charged against himself upon the books of the company. Such issuance of the company's checks here in question in January, February and May, 1921, was but a continuance of that habit."
Having been somewhat overwhelmed with the voluminus legal discussion in the several cases before us involving transactions of the Hill Syrup Company through Sander, and the effect of the release which was much discussed in the former opinion, the court lost sight of the simple proposition that it was the negligence of the company, and not of the payees of the checks issued by Sander on the company's funds, and it was therefore the fault of the corporation in permitting the practice to be initiated and continued that contributed to the loss complained of by this respondent.
For a full discussion of that question and the decision of the majority thereon, see Hill Syrup Co. v. Frederick Nelson,ante p. 155,
No further discussion is needed than that contained in the opinion of Judge Tolman, supra, except to add *286 that, assuming that it was the duty of the bank to take notice of the state of the private account between the corporation and Sander, as was stated by Judge Tolman in the Frederick Nelson case, supra, ". . . inquiry at the company's office and examination of its books would have shown the long-continued practice. It is therefore quite immaterial whether the payee actually made the inquiry or not. . . . the payee . . . may claim the benefit of anything that inquiry would have developed."
For the reasons stated in Hill Syrup Co. v. Frederick Nelson, supra, and the cases cited therein, the former Departmental opinion in
TOLMAN, C.J., ASKREN, and MAIN, JJ., concur.
FULLERTON, J., concurs in the result.
Dissenting Opinion
I adhere to the views expressed and conclusion reached in the former opinion appearing in
BRIDGES, MACKINTOSH, and MITCHELL, JJ., concur with PARKER, J. *287