The plaintiff subrogee of Dunham-Bush, Inc., appeals1 from a judgment by the trial court for the defendant in a suit for damages allegedly incurred when the defendant paid checks with unauthorized endorsements.
The trial court found that the defendant, Connecticut Bank and Trust Company (CBT), carried its burden of proof with respect to its own due care and on the issue of the negligence of the plaintiff's assignor, and, as a result, the court rendered judgment in the defendant's favor on all counts of the complaint. Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company (Hartford), as the assignee of Dunham-Bush, Inc. (Dunham), the party found to be negligent, appeals from the finding of negligence on the part of Dunham and the finding of due care on the *Page 111 part of CBT, and also claims that there were issues of law which should have been addressed, but which were not addressed because the trial court allowed the negligence and due care findings to dispose of the entire case.
The undisputed facts are as follows. Dunham maintained a checking account with CBT. Charles Currie, the general credit manager of Dunham-Bush International, a division of Dunham, also maintained a checking account with his wife at CBT. Between February and November of 1975, Currie deposited six checks, which were payable to Dunham, into his own personal account. These checks totalled $60,091.86. It was later discovered that Currie had misappropriated twenty-five checks over a period of at least three years.
Dunham is a wholly owned subsidiary of Signal Companies, Inc. Signal Companies, Inc., and its subsidiaries carried a comprehensive dishonesty, disappearance and destruction policy with Hartford which insured Dunham against losses from misappropriations by its employees. After the loss was discovered, Hartford paid Dunham $50,091.86 (the total less $10,000 deductible) on this policy. At that time, Dunham signed an agreement authorizing Hartford to act on its behalf in obtaining recovery of the loss from CBT. In this capacity, Hartford demanded payment of $60,091.86 plus interest from CBT, but CBT refused to make this payment.
Hartford brought suit demanding payment, alleging that CBT was negligent and careless in several respects; that CBT was liable for conversion; General Statutes
CBT alleged that it had acted in good faith in accordance with reasonable commercial standards applicable *Page 112
to the banking business; that Dunham was precluded from recovering because of its own negligent conduct; that Hartford could not recover because it is a compensated surety; and that General Statutes
Hartford appeals on the grounds that the trial court erred in finding that CBT carried its burden of proof and in finding negligence on the part of Dunham to be dispositive of the allegations of conversion under
The main thrust of the plaintiff's claims is an attempt to retry the factual questions of whether Dunham's own negligence substantially contributed to the making of the unauthorized signatures and whether the defendant bank acted in good faith and in accordance with the reasonable commercial standards of the banking industry of Connecticut at the pertinent times. *Page 113
"This appeal is merely an attempt to retry the facts and to have the Appellate Court substitute its finite view of the facts for the factual determinations of the trial court. This court will not reverse the decision of the trial court unless it is found to be `clearly erroneous in light of the evidence and the pleadings in the record as a whole.' Damora v. Christ-Janer,
The trial court filed an extensive memorandum of decision, Hartford Accident Indemnity Co. v. Connecticut Bank Trust Co.,
There is no error.
