
    BEACH NATIONAL BANK, a corporation organized and existing under the National Banking Laws of the United States of America, Appellant, v. The BANK OF HOLLYWOOD HILLS, a Florida corporation, et al., Appellees.
    No. 71-71.
    District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
    Dec. 15, 1971.
    Arnold D. Barr, of the Law Offices of Kjell Pedersen, Fort Myers Beach, for appellant.
    No appearance for appellees.
   PIERCE, Chief Judge.

Appellant Beach National Bank, plaintiff in the lower Court (hereinafter Beach) appeals to this Court from an order dismissing Beach’s amended complaint filed against appellees, The Bank of Hollywood Hills (hereinafter Hollywood) and Richard and Grace Grimaldi, defendants below.

Beach is a national bank located at Fort Myers Beach. Hollywood is a state bank located at Hollywood, Florida. On April 8, 1969, the Grimaldis opened a joint checking account with Beach, pursuant to an “agreement” signed by the Grimaldis which will be more fully discussed hereinafter.

On May 16, 1969, Hollywood issued and delivered to the Grimaldis a cashier’s check payable to the Grimaldis in the sum of $2,000. On May 19, 1969, Richard Grimal-di, as a joint payee endorsed the check “Grace Grimaldi by Richard Grimaldi”. Beach thereupon cashed it and paid the full amount to Grimaldi, either at that time or shortly thereafter. On or about May 20, 1969, the cashier’s check routinely arrived at Hollywood for payment. Hollywood, however, refused to honor the check and returned it to Beach unpaid because it did not contain the personal endorsements of both the Grimaldis.

Beach sued Hollywood in a five count complaint. The first count avers substantially the foregoing facts and contended that by the terms of the original “contract” between the parties Grace had authorized her husband Richard to endorse her name on the check as her agent, and that Beach had no notice of any change or modification of such authority at the time they cashed the check; that Beach, therefore, “is the owner and holder in due course of said cashier’s check and has a security interest therein”.

The second and succeeding counts reav-erred the same facts, and contended variously that Hollywood held the funds represented by the check under a constructive trust for Beach; that Hollywood “negligently failed to abide by reasonable commercial banking standards in its refusal to pay said check”; that when Richard endorsed the check as aforesaid and then either cashed it immediately or temporarily deposited it before converting it into cash, “thereby entered into a contract of endorsement” with Beach by which he became obligated to pay the sum represented thereby “in the event of an unjustified refusal to pay on the part of” Hollywood; that Hollywood refused to pay the check to Beach because Grace had “issued a stop payment order” to Hollywood, which she was without authority to do because of her “contract” of April 8, 1969.

Hollywood moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that the counts applicable to it showed that the check was improperly endorsed because not bearing the endorsement of both Grace and Richard.

The Court granted the motion to dismiss, and upon failure of Beach to amend within the time allowed, dismissed the case against Hollywood. Beach appeals to this Court and argues that under the facts set up in the amended complaint Beach should be indemnified by Hollywood for the amount of the check. Hollywood has not seen fit to file brief in this Court setting forth its contentions, but it is obvious from the pleadings and the rulings of the trial Court that it is Hollywood’s position that Beach in its amended complaint failed to state a cause of action. We agree and affirm.

Wading through the maze of immaterial and irrelevant contentions and averments made by Beach, the one simple fact remains which is decisive of this case, viz: the cashier’s check was Hollywood’s order to pay, not the Grimaldis or either of them; and Hollywood had control of that check until it was honored and paid by Hollywood, which payment could not lawfully be enforced until endorsed by both the Grimaldis as joint payees.

Mrs. Grimaldi had no authority to stop payment on the check because it was not her check. Hollywood could stop payment on the check but Mrs. Grimaldi could not. And Hollywood, in effect, did stop payment because it refused to honor the payment made by Beach to Richard.

The cashier’s check was made payable to “Richard Grimaldi and Grace Grimaldi”. The only endorsement it bore when it was presented by Grimaldi to Beach and paid by Beach was the notation on the back “Grace Grimaldi by Richard Grimaldi”. Grimaldi himself never did endorse the check individually for himself. And yet Beach cashed the check and gave the entire proceeds of $2,000 to Grimaldi. The most the bank could have done — and this at best would have been gratuitous to the Grimaldis — would have been to let the check be a deposit into the Grimaldis’ joint checking account and then hold or freeze the deposit until either the proper endorsements were furnished or the check otherwise would be paid by Hollywood upon its arriving there.

Beach argues that the “deposit contract” (so-called perhaps for want of a better name) constituted some sort of authorization to Richard to sign Grace’s endorsement. But such contention is patently untenable by a consideration of the “contract” itself. Nowhere is such carte blanche authority given. A copy of the “contract”, both front and back, was attached to the complaint as a part thereof, and for enlightenment is set forth in the margin herein.

In the transcribed argument before the trial Judge at the hearing upon Hollywood’s motion to dismiss, counsel for Beach seemed to take the position that the Grimaldis would have been entitled to the proceeds from the check even without any endorsement at all. Of course, such contention is untenable, especially in the light of all our banking statutes. Even a cashier’s check made to bearer would have to be endorsed by the recipient of the proceeds.

It all boils down to what we originally said herein, that the cashier’s check bore the names of two payees, and both payees had to endorse the check in order to hold the drawer bank, Hollywood, legally responsible for payment.

Accordingly, the order or judgment dismissing Beach’s suit is—

Affirmed.

HOBSON, J., concurs.

MANN, J., concurs in part, dissents in part.

MANN, Judge

(concurring in part, dissenting in part).

The simplicity of the plaintiff’s case is so obscured by excessive and contradictory allegations that the trial judge and my brother Pierce have missed what seems to me to be the essential point. The check, attached as an exhibit, bears the following endorsement : “Credited to the account of the within named payee Beach National Bank Fort Myers Beach, Florida.” As between the two banks in the case, I think this endorsement says all that needs to be said. When one bank certifies to another that it has credited an item to a depositor’s account, the authenticity of the payees’ endorsement is of no concern to the bank on which the check is drawn. Fla.Stat. § 674.4-205(1) (1969), F.S.A. specifically states if the Bank of Hollywood Hills had required the personal signatures of Richard and Grace Grimaldi, it could have said so, but did not. In Count III of its complaint Beach National sets forth this claim, although it also incorporates by reference the allegations of Counts I and II, in which it alleges that it “cashed” the check.

The problem in this case is caused by an excess of pleading. In its first two counts, the plaintiff bank asserts that it “cashed” the check for Grimaldi, and that Grace authorized Richard to act as her agent. These counts allege that Richard’s authority to act as Grace’s agent is founded on the deposit agreement governing their joint account. I agree with the majority that this agreement does not extend beyond transactions affecting the account.

It should be a simple matter to determine whether in fact the Grimaldis’ joint account was credited with these funds, and, if so, whether the instrument on which the Beach National Bank paid the funds out to Richard Grimaldi met the requirements of its contract with the joint depositors. The answer to that question is certainly to be arrived at during the course of litigation, and the motion to dismiss Count III should not in any case have been granted. If one accepts as true the plaintiff’s allegation that it “cashed” the check, it would seem that Mrs. Grimaldi may well have a claim against the Beach National Bank since nothing in the record so far suggests any authority for Richard Grimaldi to act as her agent except with respect to the joint account. In any event, the Bank of Hollywood Hills had no business stopping payment on this check. A smooth flow of commercial transactions demands that the statute be given its intended effect. One may in fact affix his name with a rubber stamp to a check deposited to his account, and the bank in which that check is deposited, by indicating simply that the funds had been credited to the payee, has said to the maker of the check all that need be said.

A decision upholding the dismissal of this complaint will result in serious practical difficulties in the administration of the banking business. I would reverse the order granting the motion to dismiss Count III and remand. 
      
      .
      [On the face] “JOINT ACCOUNT FORM BK-17 ACCOUNT NO. NAMES 003 853 RICHARD or GRACE GRIMALDI SAY. REG. SPEC, x
      TO BEACH NATIONAL BANK, PORT MYERS BEACH, FLORIDA
      
        
      
      You are authorized to recognize any of the signatures subscribed below in the payment of funds or the transactions of any business for this account. It is agreed that all transactions between you and the undersigned shall be governed by the contract printed on the reverse side of this card.
      The undersigned, joint depositors, hereby agree each with the other and with you that all sums now on deposit, or heretofore deposited by any of said joint depositors with you to their credit as such joint depositors with all accumulations thereon, are and shall be owned by. them as joint tenants with right of survivorship and not as tenants in common, and be subject to the check or receipt of any of them or the survivor(s) of them and payment to or on the check or receipt of any or the survivor(s) shall be valid and discharge you from liability.
      Each of the undersigned appoints the other (s) their attorney, with power to deposit in said joint account, moneys of the other (s) and for that purpose to endorse any check, draft, note or other instrument payable to the order of the other (s) and or any said joint depositors.
      Payment to or on check or receipt of the survivor(s) shall be subject to all applicable statutes and regulations.
      Signature Grace Grimaldi
      Signature Richard Grimaldi
      Signature Mailing Address
      Residence Address 253 Ohio St. Ft. Myers Beach, Fla. 33931
      Date Opened 4-8-69 closed 5-19-69
      Opened by ab “EXHIBIT “A”
      [On the back]
      DEPOSITORS CONTRACT
      Items received for deposit or collection are accepted on the following terms and conditions. This bank acts only as depositor’s collecting agent and assumes no responsibility beyond its exercise of due care.’ All items are credited subject to final payment and to receipt of proceeds of final payment in cash or solvent credits by this bank at its own office. This bank may forward items to correspondents and shall not be liable for default or negligence of correspondents selected with due care nor losses in transit, and each correspondent shall not be liable except for its own negligence. Items and their proceeds may be handled by any Federal Reserve bank in accordance with applicable Federal Reserve rules and regulations, and by this bank or any correspondent, in accordance with any common bank usage, with any practice or procedure that a Federal Reserve bank may use or permit another bank to use, or with any, other lawful means. This bank may charge back, at any, time prior to midnight on its busines, (sic) day next following the day of receipt, any item drawn on this bank which is ascertained to be drawn against insufficient funds or otherwise not good or payable. An item received after this bank’s regular afternoon closing hour shall be deemed to have been received the next business day.
      It is agreed that this account, whether active or dormant (a checking account shall be considered dormant when no deposit shall have been made or checks or receipts drawn for a period of one (1) year and in the case of savings accounts, the period is five (5) years. The crediting of interest to a savings account does not constitute a deposit), shall be subject to such service and maintenance charges heretofore adopted by this bank and now in effect, and to such service and maintenance charges as may hereafter be adopted by this bank without notice to depositors.
      This bank accepts no responsibility for payment of checks which are presented the same day deposits are made, unless there is already sufficient collected balance to the depositors credit in addition to such deposits. Deposits are not posted to accounts until after regular banking hours on the day they are received by this bank.
      This bank is authorized to mail statements and cancelled checks to the last address known to this bank.
      
      
      . Fla.Stat. § 674.4-205(1), F.S.A.: A depository bank which has taken an item for collection may supply any indorsement of the customer which is necessary to title unless the item contains the words “payee’s indorsement required” or the like. In the absence of such a requirement a statement placed on the item by the depositary bank to the effect that the item was deposited by a customer or credited to his account is effective as the customer’s indorsement.
     