87 Ky. 306 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the opinion ot the court.
This action was instituted by Gustave Myers and others against the President andjpirectors of the Louisville SavingsJBank, to recover the various sums due to them as depositors in its savings department, the loss having been caused from the embezzlement of the funds of the bank by J. EL Rliorer, the cashier. The ground of recovery is the alleged negligence of the directors in the general conduct of the bank, and particularly in their failure to inspect, the books of the bank, and a waut_of__ diligence in supervising the acts..of .their subordinate, the-cashier.
Jones was made a defendant to the action, and by a cross-petition sought to recover of the directors for the default of Rhorer, on account of their negligence with reference to the affairs of the bank, alleging that he had delayed the litigation for the purpose of ascertaining the condition of the bank, and the facts, if any, upon which a recovery could be had against the directors.
A controversy originated in the court below as to the right of Jones to maintain this cross-action, and on motion of the creditors they were alone allowed to prosecute the cause of action set up in the original petition, and the claim of the assignee, in so far as it affected the depositors, was dismissed.
It is not necessary, in the light of the facts presented, to discuss the right of either Jones or the creditors to maintain the action further than to say that the bank or-its assignee is the proper party-plaintiff in such cases, unless it plainly appears that a cause of action exists and the bank refuses to bring the'jaction. We will proceed, therefore, to consider this case on its merits.
The. .corporation, the Louisville Savings Bank, was organized in the year 1866, and was the, successor of a bank called the Louisville Savings Institution, the former having been merged in the latter by taking
From the first of January, 1871, J. H. Rhorer filled the place of cashier,, _ feller and. book-keéper in the commercial or general department of the bank. The bank had two departments in the same building, one known as the savings department, and the other as the general or commercial department, both regarded, however, as the one bank, and money often transferred from one department to the other.
The directors sought to be made liable are Caperton, Henning, Speed and Sabine, the fifth director being J. H. Rhorer.
The books of the general department were kept by Rhorer, and of the savings department by Joshua F. Speed, Jr. * In the year 1872, shortly after' Rhorer was elected cashier, the bank built what is termed a safety vault, at a cost of fifty-five thousand dollars.
Rhorer was not only the cashier and the one-fifth owner of the stock, but, as is manifest from the proof in this case, was the leading spirit in directing and controlling the affairs of the bank during the series of years in which he was engaged in making fraudu-' lent entries in the books of the bank to enable him to appropriate its funds to his own use. His entire administration of the affairs of the bank evidences a systematic purpose in embezzling the funds of the institution, and betraying an almost unlimited confidence placed in him by the directors. It was not until the month of January, 1880. that the frauds were discovered, although practiced for the nine years he was cashier, and long before, and then made known by the written acknowledgment of Rhorer, found with the papers of the bank, to the effect that he had been robbing the bank, and had surrendered himself into the custody of the law.
The investigations and - settlements made since the assignment show the defalcation to be one hundred and eighteen thousand dollars.
The only question presented in this case is, whether the directors acted in good faith and with ordinary care and diligence in .conducting the affairs of the bank, or such diligence as ordinarily prudent men would have exercised with reference to the conduct of such a moneyed institution. It is not a question as to how the frauds of the cashier might have been discovered, but were these directors guilty of gross neg
The directors received no compensation for their . services, the benefits to be derived by them from the profits of the bank flowing solely from their interests as stockholders. If their liability is to be measured by that imposed upon the president, or the director, who receives as compensation a sum equivalent to an undertaking to supervise the entire affairs of the bank by an actual inspection and examination of the accounts and books of the bank, as well as the other duties pertaining to such a position, then there would be no question as to the liability of the appellees in this case; but with services rendered that.are merely gratuitous, or at least without reward, it can _not be held.th.at a liability is to be fixed upon them for no other reason than their failure to detect the fraudulent entries made by the cashier in the books of_tke bank, although extending through a period of nine years.
The facts, however, presented by this record, must determine the question of negligence, or the want of diligence on the part of the appellees.
It was incumbent on the directors to appoint all the officers necessary to carry on the business of the bank, and to use ordinary .diligence in .the._gelection of men-qualified to fill such positions.
In the year 1871, when Rhorer was elected cashier of the bank, and also made its book-keeper, his ..past life as a business man, so far as then known, was a sufficient guaranty to the directors of his honesty and
It is insisted, as one of the grounds for imputing negligence to the directors, that Rhorer, who had been elected president of the Savings Bank, and was directed to transfer the balances from the books of the Savings. Institution to the new bank, failed ..to- open nejyjaooks, but continued to use the old books, and especially the individual ledger containing the ac-. counts of depositors sin the Savings Bank, until its suspension in the year 1880,, That this a_icled Rhorer to cover uphis.... defalcation in the old bank, and to practice his frauds in the new bank, when, if the accounts on the old books had been balanced, and the proper entries made in the new books, the fraud already practiced might have been detected. That a proper and thorough examination of the accounts of the Savings Institution would have been the safest method for these directors to have pursued, with new
There was nothing to excite the least suspicion as to his honesty, and it can not be regarded as neglect on the part of the directors in permitting him to use the books of the old for the purposes of the new bank.
If balances had been struck and transferred from the old set of books to the new, the fraud already practiced would necessarily have entered into the books of the new bank, as Rhorer, who was directed to make the transfer, would scarcely have made entries that would have resulted in an exposure of his fraudulent practices.
The frauds perpetrated by the cashier in abstracting the money of the bunk were committed in various ways. First. Where deposits in certain instances were made he would credit them on the individual ledger, but make no charge of them on the blotter. In one instance the Louisville Steel Works is credited on the individual ledger with five thousand dollars, and this sum not credited to the concern, or charged to cash on the blotter. Again, the same party is credited by several items, ■ amounting to two thousand seven hundred and nineteen dollars, in the same way.
Again, he would charge a depositor on the blotter with a certain sum as if paid on the depositor’s check. This sum would be posted to his account on the individual ledger, and when balancing the account, the item would be omitted from the addition. This character of fraudulent entries in the books of the bank was practiced from the year 1871 until the close of
The principal grounds relied on for a reversal in this case are: First, that the directors, in giving to Rhorer the sole control of the books of the bank, making him cashier, book-keeper and teller, placed it within his power to perpetrate the fraud, and for that reason they were guilty of such neglect as make them responsible to the bank. Second, they failed to make proper examinations as to the condition of the bank, and allowed the books to be falsely kept. We have said that it was their duty to exercise that reasonable and ordinary care with reference to the affairs of the bank that ordinarily prudent men would exercise in reference to such business affairs. If it was the duty of ’ the directors to examine the books, of the bank in the absence of any reason for suspecting the honesty of the bank’s cashier, with a view of testing their correctness with the weekly statements made them, or when making their periodical investigation of the money on hand, and the notes, bills and bonds belonging to the bank — it being manifest that the frauds could have been easily discovered at least by a book-keeper of ordinary intelligence — their responsibility would necessarily follow. It is difficult
If they have selected a cashier and book-keeper,
In the present case the cashier made weekly statements to the directors that were compared with the cash balances and found correct, or if not compared at the time, those statements agreed with the general balance found on the books, that were, however, false and erroneous by reason of fraudulent entries and forced balances. They examined the general condition of the bank once in every six months, by making an actual count of the cash, and ascertaining the amount of bills, notes, bonds and securities on hand, all of which agreed with the statements made by the cashier and verified by the general balance found on the books.
It is argued, however, that as one of the means, of preventing such defalcations it is prudent to have different employes in charge of the books, as checks upon each other, and not intrust those duties to one man. This, no doubt, is the safest course to pursue so as to prevent fraud and have perfect accuracy in the accounts ; but the fact that these directors saw proper to confide in Rhorer, and permit him to discharge the double duty of book-keeper and cashier, does not evidence a want of ordinary diligence on their part. If
The case of Dunn’s Adm’r v. Kyle’s Ex’r, 14 Bush, 134, is very similar in many of its features to the case before us, in which it was held that the directors were not liable to stockholders for the default of the cashier, unless occasioned by their fraud or gross neglect. The absence of ordinary care was attempted to be shown in that case, because of the failure of the directors to discover the fraudulent acts of the cashier, such as required the skill of an accountant to develop.
Where directors, by their own act, cause the loss to the bank or the corporation they represent, no doubt as to their liability can arise. Where they discount paper known to be worthless, or cause the cashier or other officer of the bank or corporation to do that which is forbidden by the charter, and loss arises, they will be held responsible. (Spering’s Appeal, 71 Pa. St., 11; United Society of Shakers v. Underwood, 9 Bush, 609; Bank v. Hill, 56 Me., 385.) Here the directors are charged not with any wrongful act of theirs by which loss has been sustained, but for neglect in failing to do that which they ought to have done. They were ignorant of the thefts being committed, but it is
So at last it is the bank suing the directors in this case for a neglect of duty; and if there were no depositors, could the bank claim that the directors were guilty of neglect in permitting Rhorer to act as cashier and book-keeper, or in failing to detect the frauds so manifest after the discovery % We think not.
The appellants also say that the directors were guilty
These bonds belonged to the savings side of the bank, the books of which were under the control of Joshua Speed, Jr. This book-keeper reported in his statements these bonds as belonging to the savings side of the bank, and the directors believing them perfectly secure, and having placed them with that bank to enable the bank at Louisville, as Henning states, to draw upon the New York bank whenever it might need money, made no inquiry as to any use that might have been made of them by its bank officers. They had no reason to believe that Rhorer had pledged them as collateral to raise money, that he might increase the fund in the home bank upon which to plunder; and we perceive no reason for holding them guilty of an imprudent act in depositing them with the New York bank for the purposes mentioned by Henning, one of the directors. They, it is true, might have suspected Speed of using them for his purposes if his honesty had ever been questioned or doubted by them, or they might have suspected Rhorer of stealing the bonds from Speed or the New York bank; but as no cause existed for suspecting either of the book-keepers, the depositing of the bonds with the bank in New York did not constitute any character of neglect, as it was proper that they should do so under the circumstances.
In the case of Scott v. De Peyster, 1 Edwards’ Chancery Reports, 513, the cashier or treasurer of the corporation embezzled the funds by a series of frauds running through several years in a manner much like the cashier did in this case. The stockholders attempted to make the directors liable on the ground of neglect, etc. The court, in discussing the facts of! that case, said that “such subordinates (alluding to the cashier) must be supposed to act honestly until the contrary appears, and the law does not require
In the case of the Manhattan Co. v. Lydig, 4 Johnson’s Rep., 389, it is said on this question of diligence: “The examinations of the bank by the committee of directors were in the usual way, and the fraud practiced eluded detection by means of a false balance sheet. It is not for the court to point out the mode banks are to pursue to detect frauds; but if they take the usual and uniform method adopted not only by this but by other banks, they can not be subject to the charge of negligence.” And if the mode adopted by business men in such cases is to fix the measure of diligence, or determine the question of neglect, as said by Lord Hatherley in Turquand v. Marshall, 4 Law Rep., Chan. App. Cases, 382, then these directors are relieved from liability. Taking the entire testimony of bankers in this case, and these directors were as vigilant, or more so than the directors of other larger moneyed institutions, and to hold them responsible under the facts presented would be to deter business men from accepting the position of a director, when by doing so they are required in effect to insure the honesty of bank subordinates by being-made responsible for their fraudulent acts. We have considered other questions of neglect made in this case involving fraudulent overdrafts, and the fact of notice given a man, supposed to be perfectly honest,
The judgment below is affirmed.