Opinion by
This case is before us on appeal from a lower court order granting Continental Bank's motion for summary judgment.
The facts as alleged by the appellant show that on the evening of June 16, 1973, Max Shectman prepared a bank deposit of $5,669.00 in receipts from his business, Phillips Home Furnishings, Inc. He then picked up his wife at her place of employment and proceeded to an office of Continental Bank [hereinafter Bank], where he had done his banking for nearly thirty years.
In response to the understandably anxious inquiries of its customer, the Bank showed Mr. Shectman a copy of the “Night Depository Agreement” signed by him the previous year. The Agreement states in pertinent part:
“1. Bank grants to the undersigned the privilege of using the Night Depository gratuitously and solely as an accommodation to the undersigned; and the exercise of the privilege by the undersigned will be at the sole risk of the undersigned. Bank will employ such safeguards ... as it deems proper, without any liability to the undersigned for their sufficiency.
"
“4. Bank shall be under no liability with respect to anything placed in the Night Depository, except for the amount of cash and checks actually taken into its possession upon opening the Night Depository Safe. In the event of any dispute as to whether or not the said bag dropped down the chute and entered the Night Depository Safe, or came into the possession of Bank, the report of the employee of Bank who shall open the Safe upon the following business day shall be conclusive and binding upon the undersigned.
“5. The relationship of debtor and creditor between Bank and the undersigned shall not arise until the Night Deposit bag has been opened .. . and the contents found therein counted and credited to the account of the undersigned. Until that time, Bank shall be obligated to exercise toward the Night Deposit bag and its
The Bank, relying upon this agreement, refused to credit the account of the appellant; and the appellant brought an action in assumpsit for failure to credit its account and in trespass for conversion. The court below found the Night Depository Agreement to be legal and binding; found that thereunder the appellant was bound by the report of the Bank’s employee who opened the safe;
I
The first issue thus presented is whether a bank may contractually absolve itself from all liability in connection with the use of a night depository facility, so that its customers are required to use the facility at their sole risk. Other courts which have examined this question have concluded that there is nothing inherently wrong with permitting a bank to make its Night Depository Service available under terms and conditions which place the risk of loss on the customer. Valley Nat'l Bank v. Tang,
In Pennsylvania, however, the rule has developed, albeit somewhat obscurely, that the bailor-bailee relationship is one in which the law will protect the former party from attempts by the latter to exculpate himself from the consequences of his own negligence. See, e.g., Atkins v. Racquet Garage Corp.,
In Downs v. Sley System Garages,
We, however, will not rest our decision upon so thin a reed because we find a much stronger foundation in the bank-customer relationship and the public policy which encircles it and similar relationships.
Generally, a written contract defines the extent of the obligations of contracting parties, Miller v. Weller,
However, the law also recognized that lying behind these contracts is a residuum of public policy which is antagonistic to carte blanche exculpation from liability, e.g., Employers Liab. Assur. Corp. v. Greenville Business Men’s Ass’n,
Those instances in which courts refuse to enforce exculpatory clauses fall beyond the sphere of agreements “between persons relating entirely to their private affairs” Dilks v. Flohr Chevrolet, supra at 434,
We, therefore, conclude that we must reject the reasoning of those courts which have found agreements similar to the one hereunder consideration not to be inimical to the public interest; and hold that a bank cannot contractually exculpate itself from the conse
II
In view of our holding that the exculpatory provisions are invalid as a matter of law, we must now determine whether the court correctly granted the motion for summary judgment. We hold that it did not. “A summary judgment is to be entered only in the clearest of cases where there is not the slightest doubt as to the absence of a triable issue of material fact.” Granthum v. Textile Machine Works,
Judgment reversed with a procedendo.
Notes
Pa. R.C.P. 1035.
Affidavits of the two employees who jointly opened the safe and found no bag belonging to the appeUant were filed with the motion for summary judgment.
The rule permitting exculpation from liability for negligent conduct assumes an arm’s length bargained-for agreement. See Galligan v. Arovitch,
Cf. Elderkin v. Gaster,
The section permits parties by agreement to set standards for measuring ordinary care so long as the standards are not “manifestly unreasonable;” but no such standards were set in the agreement before us.
