OPINION
T1 Tom Ramsey (Plaintiff) appeals the trial court's grant of First Security Bank's (First Security) Motion to Dismiss under Utah Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). We affirm.
BACKGROUND 1
1 2 Plaintiff sold livestock through the Ogden Livestock Auction (the Auction) in Farr West, Utah, from approximately January 1, 1997 through October 1, 1997. During this time, Bruce Hancock 2 was an employee of the Auction. 3 The Auction and Plaintiff agreed that Hancock would deliver to Plaintiff checks for proceeds from the sale of Plaintiff's livestock. The checks were written on the Auction's accounts at Zions First National Bank, naming Plaintiff as payee.
13 While Hancock delivered some of the checks to Plaintiff, twenty-three of the checks, totaling more than $194,000, were deposited in Hancock's First Security accounts. In at least one instance, the check bore no endorsement. Most of the checks, however, bore Plaintiff's forged endorsement.
14 Plaintiff did not endorse any of the checks or authorize the deposits; he was not a customer of First Security and did not have a contractual agreement with First Security. When Plaintiff discovered the missing funds, he notified the Auction and First Security and later initiated this lawsuit. Plaintiffs complaint alleges that Hancock forged Plaintiff's endorsement and deposited the checks, and that First Security was negligent in depositing checks with a forged endorsement or without endorsement.
15 First Security filed a Motion to Dismiss under Utah Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). The trial court granted the motion, holding that First Security did not owe Plaintiff, a noncustomer of First Security, a duty. Plaintiff appeals.
ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
T 6 The issue before this court is whether a non-payor depository bank owes a duty of care to a noncustomer payee of a check deposited by a customer of the depository bank. " 'Because the propriety of a 12(b)[ (6) ] dismissal is a question of law, we give the trial court's ruling no deference and review it under a correctness standard." " Ho v. Jim's Enters., Inc.,
*425 ANALYSIS
7 Plaintiff maintains the trial court erred when it granted First Security's Motion to Dismiss under Utah Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Plaintiff alleges that First Security breached its duty of care, and was thereby negligent in depositing checks without endorsement or with forged endorsements, and in failing to follow reasonable commercial banking procedures and standards when it failed to verify the endorsements.
T8 On appeal from the grant of this motion to dismiss, this court must determine whether the allegations in the complaint are sufficient to support Plaintiff's negligence claim. "To prevail on a negligence claim, a plaintiff must establish that the defendant owed a duty of reasonable care to him or her. 'Absent a showing of duty, [the plaintiff] cannot recover." " Jackson v. Mateus,
T 9 Utah has not addressed whether a non-payor depository bank owes a noneustomer a duty of care
4
However, courts in other jurisdictions have held that a bank does not have a duty to a noneustomer. In the three cases discussed below, Miller-Rogaska, Inc. v. Bank One,
[ 10 In Miller, the plaintiff payee claimed defendant depository bank, Bank One, and defendant payor bank, Citibank, were negligent. See id.,
[11 The appellate court upheld the grant of summary judgment in favor of the banks, holding that the payee "was not a customer of either bank, nor did it have a relationship with either bank." Id. at 664. Because the payee "failed to produce any evidence establishing a legal duty owed to [the payee] by the banks," the negligence action failed. Id. Plaintiff in the case before this court and the payee in Miller are similarly situated in that neither had a relationship with the defendant depository bank.
T 12 In Volpe v. Fleet National Bank,
the bank owes no duty of care to a noneus-tomer with whom it has no relationship. This rule is based on the legal principle that there is no privity between the parties and that therefore the bank owes a stranger no duty of vigilance. Simply stated, absent extraordinary cireumstances a bank is not liable in negligence to a noneustomer payee for having failed to ascertain whether a check paid by it bears the payee's genuine indorsement but is liable to its customer for the mishandling of that customer's account.
Id. at 664 (footnote omitted).
{13 Plaintiff argues that the number of checks the depository bank accepted-one in Volpe and twenty-three in this case-distinguishes the two cases. Plaintiff maintains the twenty-three checks constitute an "extraordinary cireumstance[ ]," id., and that therefore the bank's duty of care is different. However, Plaintiff fails to cite any authority to support this argument. We are not persuaded that the number of checks deposited is sufficient to create a duty where one does not exist. Thus, Plaintiffs argument is unavailing.
T14 Although the claims in Anschutz v. Central National Bank of Columbus,
[iIn many instances the drawee bank has no means of verifying the authenticity of endorsements made by those who are not their customers ... and whose signatures are wholly unknown to it. In such case it would appear that there is a reasonable basis for restricting the bank's liability to the customer with whom it deals. This leaves the question relating to the proof of the matters with respect to the forgery and the negligence, if any, of the maker and payee to be determined in an action between them.
Id.; see also IBP, Inc. v. Mercantile Bank of Topeka,
*427 115 In Anschutz, Volpe, and Miller, the courts held that a depository bank does not owe a duty to a noncustomer payee. Still other courts have considered whether a duty is owed to a noneustomer when the parties are not necessarily payee and depository bank. Despite the differing roles, these cases also hold that a bank owes no duty to one who is neither a customer of the bank nor contractually related to the bank.
1 16 For example, in ALG, Inc. v. Estate of Eldred,
{17 The plaintiffs in ALG were not the payees of the checks, as in this case. Nevertheless, the court held that the bank was not liable for those checks which were not drawn on the depository bank, based on the lack of a "customer-payor bank relationship." Id. So too in this case, there is no customer-payor bank relationship between First Seeu-rity and Plaintiff, ALG supports our holding that absent a customer or contractual relationship, First Security owes Plaintiff no duty.
118 Further, in Schleicher v. Western State Bank,
19 In comparison, the twenty-three checks at issue in this case had forged endorsements or no endorsement, rather than a forged payor's signature. However, contrary to Plaintiff's arguments, this difference does not impose a duty on the depository bank to examine its customer's signature card or to directly contact the payee before accepting the check. 7 Indeed, in this case, looking at the signature card of First Security's customer, Hancock, would do nothing to determine the authenticity of Plaintiff's forged endorsement, since Plaintiff was not a customer of the bank, and his endorsement is unrelated to Hancock's signature card. Therefore, this case is similar to Schleicher, where the bank had no duty to determine the authenticity of the plaintiff's signature, where the plaintiff was not a customer of the bank.
CONCLUSION
120 Although the cases discussed above are from jurisdictions other than Utah, they consistently hold that a bank does not owe a duty to a noncustomer payee. Therefore, we hold the trial court did not err when it held that depository bank First Security did not owe payee Plaintiff, a noneustomer of the bank, a duty and granted First Security's motion to dismiss. Plaintiff's complaint fails to allege sufficient facts to support his negligence action against First Security. We affirm.
*428 121 WE CONCUR: NORMAN H. JACKSON, Presiding Judge, and JUDITH M. BILLINGS, Associate Presiding Judge.
Notes
. "On appeal from a motion to dismiss, we review the facts as they are alleged in the complaint. We 'accept the factual allegations in the complaint as true and consider all reasonable inferences to be drawn from those [acts in a light most favorable to the plaintifl.' " Ho v. Jim's Enters., Inc.,
. Although Bruce Hancock is a named defendant in this action this appeal does not affect him.
. The Auction was involuntarily dissolved by the State in January 1999.
. Utah case law has not previously addressed this issue, although the Utah Supreme Court has held that "that UCC section 4-103 recognizes a bank's duty to act in good faith and exercise ordinary care in all its dealings." Arrow Indus., Inc. v. Zions First Nat'l Bank,
. Indeed, a remedy may have been available in this case if the drawer (the Auction) had brought an action against the drawee bank (Zions First National Bank). The drawee bank would then be able to recover from the depository bank (First Security), through the statutorily mandated collection process. See Utah Code Ann. §§ 70A-4-102 to -504 (2002).
. The plaintiff was not a depositor in Schleicher v. Western State Bank,
. Plaintiff maintains that Schleicher is inapplicable because the plaintiff was claiming damages for "malicious prosecution; defamation, libel, and slander; intentional infliction of emotional distress; invasion of privacy; return of proceeds of the check he was alleged to have forged; and punitive damages." Id. at 294, While the cause of action is different, the analysis concerning a bank's duty to a noncustomer payee is similar.
