Thomas, Appellant, v. First National Bank of Scranton.
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
January 12, 1954
376 Pa. 181
In Rolling Green Golf Club Case, 374 Pa., supra, the Court said (pages 458-9): “On appeal from a decision of a Court of Common Pleas in a zoning matter the case comes before an appellate Court as on certiorari, and where there is adequate evidence to support the findings of the Court below and the proceeding is free from error of law and there has been no manifest abuse of discretion, the decision will not be reversed. Cf. Dooling‘s Windy Hill v. Springfield Township, 371 Pa., supra; Lindquist Appeal, 364 Pa., supra.”
In this case there was adequate evidence to support the findings of the lower Court, and there was neither error of law nor abuse of discretion.
The order of the Court of Common Pleas is affirmed; costs to be paid by Appellants.
William J. Oliver, for appellant.
C. H. Welles, 3rd, with him Welles & Mackie, for appellee.
The appeal raises the question whether or not a commercial bank is absolved from liability to its depositor because of its payment of a depositor‘s check after the bank had received notice from the depositor not to pay it. The depositor, in seeking to stop payment of his check, had executed and left with the bank a printed paper (supplied by the bank) titled “Request to Stop Payment of Check“. Among the terms of the paper was a provision which constituted a release of the bank from all liability where, in violation of such notice, the bank pays the check through “inadvertence, accident or oversight“. Payment of the check was made by the bank under those circumstances. The proceeding is in the nature of a Case Stated as provided by
First National Bank of Scranton, the defendant, is a federal commercial bank in which E. J. Thomas, the plaintiff, is a depositor. The depositor drew a check on his account October 12, 1950 and on October 13, 1950 went to defendant bank to stop payment, whereupon a clerk handed him a printed paper marked “Request to Stop Payment of Check“, which he signed and left with the bank. In the paper requesting the bank to stop payment are the words: “... Should the check be paid through inadvertence, accident or oversight, it is expressly agreed that the Bank will in no way be held responsible. The Bank receives this request upon the express condition that it shall not be in any way liable for its act should the check be paid by it in the course of its business. The undersigned
At law, a bank has the status of a debtor of the depositor and impliedly agrees to repay the deposit on demand or on order of depositor: 9 C. J. S. Banks and Banking sec. 330; Prudential Trust Company‘s Assignment, 223 Pa. 409, 72 A. 798. Payment by the bank of the check after notice to stop its payment was failure to exercise due care, precaution and vigilance. This constituted negligence, even though the failure to exercise proper care had been due to “inadvertence, accident or oversight“. There are many definitions of negligence. Perhaps the one most frequently quoted is that of Judge Cooley in his work on Torts (3d ed) pp. 1324-25, viz.: “... the failure to observe, for the protection of the interests of another person, that degree of care, precaution and vigilance which the circumstances justly demand, whereby such other person suffers injury“. This Court has cited this definition with approval: Caulton v. Eyre & Co., Inc., 330 Pa. 385, 389, 199 A. 136. It has also been defined in Wharton, Negligence, sec. 3 as follows: “Negligence, in its civil relations, is such an inadvertent imperfection, by a responsible human agent, in the discharge of a legal duty, as immediately produces, in an ordinary and natural sequence, a damage to another“.
It is not disputed that at common law a bank is liable to the drawer of a check for payment after receipt of a proper nonpayment notice: The German N. Bank v. The Farmers’ D. N. Bank, 118 Pa. 294, 12 A. 303; George W. Wall v. Franklin Trust Company of Philadelphia, 84 Pa. Superior Ct. 392; 9 C. J. S. Banks and Banking, sec. 353. The problem is therefore presented whether or not an agreement releasing the bank from liability because of its negligence is valid.
Here we have the incongruous situation in which a depositor, who has no obligation to sign any agreement of release, and who gives an unrestricted stop-payment order to the bank, is protected by law from the bank‘s negligence, but if he executes an agreement, such as is here involved, he releases the bank from liability for its negligence.
There is, it is true, a difference in various jurisdictions concerning the validity of agreements releasing a bank from negligence. The difference in view is whether or not such agreements are founded upon consideration. Judge HIRT in his opinion in the Superior Court discusses this question at length, citing cases. He accurately states, however, that under the
Even though the instrument is otherwise valid, such an agreement, releasing negligence, is void as against public policy. Banks, like common carriers, utility companies, etc., perform an important public service. The United States Government and the Commonwealth respectively stipulate how banks under their respective jurisdictions shall be incorporated and organized. All banks are examined and supervised by government or state officers with extreme particularity. The
Appellee urges that this case is ruled by Cohen v. State Bank of Philadelphia, 69 Pa. Superior Ct. 40. In that case plaintiff gave a check to the order of Levin to one Arkin for delivery. Levin, the payee, went to Arkin while Arkin was asleep and extracted the check from his pocket. When Arkin awoke and found the check missing he thought he had lost it and so notified plaintiff. Plaintiff, the maker of the check, directed the bank to stop payment, signed a paper handed to him by the bank, stated that he requested the bank to stop payment “as courtesy only” and released the bank from negligent payment. The court, in holding the agreement valid, stated (p. 42): “At the time the stop payment order was given to the bank the officers of the institution were told that the check had been lost, that it was intended for Levin and that Arkin had lost it. The bank subsequently paid the check to Levin. The plaintiff, although he knew that the first check was in Levin‘s possession, instead of withdrawing the stop payment order took the doubtful course of giving him
We note the suggested distinction between the liability of a commercial bank and a savings bank. It is argued that a savings bank is only liable to its depositors for want of ordinary care: Bulakowski v. Philadelphia Savings Fund Society, 270 Pa. 538, 113 A. 553. Cf. Wronski v. Frankford Trust Company, 84 Pa. Superior Ct. 511. But the liability of saving fund societies with respect to their rules over identification of depositors and production of pass books is not involved in this case.
The judgment of the Superior Court is reversed and the judgment below is reinstated.
DISSENTING OPINION BY MR. JUSTICE BELL:
I would affirm on the able opinion of Judge William E. HIRT speaking for a unanimous Superior Court.
