Defendants Fleet National Bank (Fleet)
The facts are uncomplicated. In October 1998, plaintiff, acting as a settlement agent in a real estate transaction, drafted and mailed a cheek drawn on its attorney trust account with Fleet payable to GE Capital to pay off a mortgage in a closing. GE Capital then presented the check to its bank, NationsBank, for $6000 more than the sum for which it was drafted, apparently misreading the hand-written numerals even though the correct amount of $51,547.41 was also noted in typed text. The check was encoded in the erroneous amount and was subsequently honored by Fleet and charged to the law firm’s account. On October 23, 1998, GE Capital sent the seller in the underlying real estate transaction a check in the amount of $6,676.75 as “escrow overage”.
Having fаiled to discover the discrepancy until some four years later in 2002, despite having received a bank statement on October 30, 1998 showing the $6000 overcharge, and despite its obligation to conduct monthly reconciliations of its trust account pursuant to Rule l:21-6(с), plaintiff filed a lawsuit in September 2004, nearly six years after the check was negotiated, to recover the $6000 overage paid by Fleet to GE Capital. In its complaint, plaintiff alleged that GE Capital, through “mistake, negligence, or inadvertence” рresented the check in the incorrect amount and was unjustly enriched in the amount of $6,000, and that Fleet negligently paid the incorrect amount with “complete disregard of the type-written terms” which indicated that $51,547.74 was to be paid.
Defendants moved for summary judgmеnt, claiming that plaintiffs action was time-barred, having been instituted outside the three-year statute of limitations of N.J.S.A. 12A:4-111. They argued that plaintiffs common-law negligence action actually arises under Article 4 of the UCC, which defines the rights of parties in matters conсerning negotiable instruments, and as such is governed by the UCC’s three-year statute of limitations. Plaintiff countered that the UCC does not displace its common-law tort action, for which the six-year statute of limitations of N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1 applies, but that even if the UCC’s shorter term governs, the discovery rule applies and its action accrued when plaintiff discovered the error, not when the check was negotiated.
Our review of a trial judge’s decision as to the applicable statute of limitations is plenary and de novo. See Balsamides v. Protameen Chems, Inc., 160 N.J. 352, 372,
An action involving a negotiable instrument accrues at the time the check is negotiated; that is, the statute of limitations begins to run at the time the cheek amount is debited from the maker’s аccount. New Jersey Lawyers’ Fund for Client Protection v. Pace, 374 N.J.Super. 57,
On this score, N.J.S.A. 12A:4-101, Official Comment 3, states that Article 4 of the UCC “defines the rights between the parties with respect to bank deposits and collections____ The rеvisions in Article 4 are intended to create a legal framework ... for the benefit of all customers.” In this regard, “the UCC is to be liberally construed and applied to promote its underlying purposes and policies, which include simplifying and clarifying the law governing commercial transactions, fostering the expansion of commercial practices, and standardizing the laws of the various jurisdictions!)]” Sebastian, supra,
The statute of limitations for actions under Article 4 is codified at N.J.S.A. 12A:4-111, which provides that
An action to enforce an obligation, duty, or right arising under this chapter must be commenced within three years after the cause of action accrues.
[N.J.S.A. 12A:4-111.]
Here, there is no question that plaintiffs action is one to enforce its rights arising under Article 4 of the UCC, particularly N.J.S.A. 12A:4-401, and that the UCC provides plaintiff a comprehensive remedy. Indeed, plaintiff admits it had a UCC-based claim against Fleet subject to the UCC’s three-year statute of limitations. However, plaintiff argues that the UCC does not displace its common-law negligence action against GE Capital, which is not а bank. We fail to see the distinction.
Plaintiff nevertheless relies on the City Check Cashing case for the proposition that the UCC does not disallow all commоn-law negligence claims. 166 N.J. at 59,
In. short, in the cheek collection arena, unless the facts establish a special relationship between the parties created by agreement, undertaking or contact, that gives rise to a duty, the sole remedies available are those provided in the Code.
[City Check Casking, supra, 166 N.J. at 62,764 A.2d 411 (emphasis added).]
Here, there is no “special relationship” between plaintiff and GE Capital from which a common-law duty arises, and none is claimed.
Having then identified no legally cognizable common-law right of аction against either defendant, plaintiff is thus left with its remedy under the UCC, which happens to be barred because beyond the UCC’s three-year statute of limitations. Nevertheless plaintiff argues, alternatively, that it is not time-barred under the three-year limitation period because under the “discovery rule”, its cause of action did not accrue until 2002 when the check discrepancy was discovered. We disagree. The clear weight of authority in this State and others holds that the “discovery rule” does not apply to this tyрe action.
In Pace, an attorney misappropriated her clients’ funds “by forging their endorsements on settlement checks” and Summit Bank “accept[ed] the forged ... checks for deposit.” Pace, supra, 374 N.J.Super. at 59,
Although plaintiff would limit our opinion in Pace narrowly to actions under Article 3 for forgery and check alteration, N.J.S.A. 12A:3-118(g), and not to claims of mere negligence, no such qualifying language appears therein, and we discern no reason to distinguish, for present purposes, intentional wrongdoing from simple error. Indeed, if as in Pace, an unsuspecting victim of forgery is bound by the strict аpplication of the UGC’s three-year limitations period, we see no reason in law or policy to extend any greater protection in this instance to plaintiff, whose claim is grounded only in negligence.
Moreover, the official comment to N.J.S.A. 12A:4-111 explicitly links these two articles of the UCC, indiсating that “section [4-111] conforms to the period of limitations set forth by Section 3-118(g) for actions for breach of warranty and to enforce other obligations, duties or rights arising under Article 3.” Furthermore, Sections 4-111 and 3-118(g) each contain the phrase “after the cause of action accrues”, which we did not interpret in Pace as indicative of legislative intent that the discovery rule should apply. Pace, supra, 374 N.J.Super. at 61,
Even if available to toll the statute of limitations, we find that the discovery rule would not inure to plaintiffs benefit in this particular instance. The discovery rule is “an equitable exception to the general rule that the statute of limitations begins to run when the cause of action accrues.” Sebastian, supra,
The order of judgment of the Special Civil Part is reversed.
Notes
Through acquisition, Fleet is the successor-in-interest to Summit Bank, where the law firm's trust account was first opened, and Fleet has since merged with Bank of America.
GE Capital is also known as Wells Fargo Home Mortgage.
