Yeomans' case is one that makes a great law school classic. Under 1-201(43) an "unauthorized signature" includes a "signature made without actual, implied, or apparent authority." Yeomans' signatures on company checks over the course of seven years would be unauthorized under the code. Section 4-406(d)(2)'s "same wrongdoer" rule precludes the customer (QWI) from claiming the loss from the bank for the acts of those like Yeoman where the customer did not notify the bank of the forgery within thirty days. With a longstanding scheme like Yeoman's, QWI will shoulder the load. It looks like about $2 million is recoverable from Yeoman, but apparently she lost the rest gambling. This becomes another case of faulty internal procedures resulting in a huge corporate loss. That Yeomans will likely spend some time in jail is small comfort for company employees at a time when jobs are already hard to come by.
— JSM
2 comments:
The notion that the signature was not APPARENTLY authorized is not altogether clear. I recall a case from North Dakota where the S. Ct. concluded that the company had given the CFO-type "apparent authority" by putting him in the position, allowing him to sign checks, and not adequately monitoring him. Sounds like the debtor here could shoulder the entire load, not just the checks paid after the review period for the first statement by the same wrongdoer.
In this case, she seems to actually had authority to sign checks, but perhaps the facts are unclear. I would think that she exceeded that authority. In any event, with a scheme ongoing for some seven years, the account holder (here QWI) would seem to shoulder the loss for waiting so long. And, yes, you are correct, that other rules may also play into this. This almost looks like an examination question I gave this past fall!
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