SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the
convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please note that, in
the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
City Check Cashing, Inc. v. Manufacturers Trust Company (A-88-99)
Argued October 10, 2000 -- Decided January 17, 2001
LONG, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
The issue in this appeal is whether the bank on which a substantial invalid check was drawn breached a
common-law duty to the check-cashing company that cashed the check for a customer, and therefore may be liable
to the check-cashing company for the loss the company suffered when the bank returned the check unpaid.
The check-cashing company is City Check Cashing, Inc. (Check Cashing) of Jersey City. The drawee
bank that Check Cashing sued is Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company (Manufacturers), which was succeeded
during the events at issue by defendants Chemical Bank (Chemical or the Bank) and The Chase Manhattan Bank
(Chase).
The events concerning the check occurred in July 1994. On July 1, 1994, Check Cashing refused to cash a
check drawn on Manufacturers in the amount of $145,000 presented by Misir Koci after learning through a
computer at the Bank that the check was not good. Check Cashing's manager told Koci that he would not cash the
check unless it was certified.
Two weeks later, on July 14, 1994, Koci reappeared with another check drawn on the same Manufacturers
account and signed by the same person. This check was in the amount of $290,000. Unlike the previous check, this
one was stamped with a Manufacturers certification, although by that time Manufacturers had merged with
Chemical. In addition, the date on the check obviously had been changed from August 8, 1994 to July 7, 1994.
At her manager's request, Check Cashing's clerk called the Bank to verify the authenticity of the check.
The Bank employee with whom the clerk spoke questioned the serial number on the certification and asked Check
Cashing's clerk to send her a facsimile of the check. The clerk did so at 11:20 a.m. on July 14, 1994, stating on the
facsimile form the need to verify that the check date had been changed prior to certification. She asked to be called
as soon as possible.
Although Check Cashing did not hear back from the Bank that banking day and was unable to verify from
any other source that the check was good, Check Cashing cashed the check for Koci about 2:00 p.m. on July 14,
1994. When the check was presented to Chemical by Check Cashing's bank for payment, Chemical's computer
found the check to be invalid because the account number did not exist, the certification had been by an old, unused
stamp and the punched holes used by Chemical for certification were not present.
Koci disappeared after telling Check Cashing he would make good on the check. Check Cashing sued
Koci and his company, the maker of the check, and Manufacturers and its successor banks. In its complaint Check
Cashing alleged, among other things, that the Bank was negligent in dealing with the check and had violated several
provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code (U.C.C.), the statutory framework for allocating and apportioning the
risks of handling checks.
The Bank moved for summary judgment in its favor, which the trial court granted. On appeal, the
Appellate Division affirmed the judgment except as to the Bank's negligence. The court reversed that portion of the
judgment and remanded it for trial. The Appellate Division found that when the Bank is agent had asked for a
facsimile of the check, the Bank undertook a duty to respond within a reasonable time and that it was for a jury to
decide whether the Bank's actions were negligent. In addition, the court concluded that Check Cashing also may
have acted negligently and that its negligence and whether that negligence superseded the Bank's also were
questions for a jury.
The Supreme Court granted the Bank's petition for certification and denied Check Cashing's cross-petition
for certification of certain U.C.C. claims.
HELD: There was no agreement, undertaking or contact between the Bank and Check Cashing that established a
duty on the part of the Bank to respond to Check Cashing any earlier than the statutory deadline, so there is no basis
for a negligence claim against the Bank.
1. Through the U.C.C. provisions enacted by New York and New Jersey (New York law, which is identical to New
Jersey's, governs in this case), the Legislatures of those states have expressed policy choices in allocating liability
in the collection and payment of checks. For this reason and because of the comprehensiveness of the regulatory
framework, most courts have been reluctant to recognize common law negligence claims. Whether a common law
duty exists in a given set of circumstances is a matter of law to be decided by a court. (pp. 10-13)
2. In the realm of check collection, unless the facts establish a special relationship between the parties created by
agreement, undertaking or contact, that gives rise to a duty, the sole remedies available are those provided in the
U.C.C. (pp. 13-18)
3. There was no agreement between the Bank and Check Cashing, a non-customer, establishing an obligation on
the Bank to respond to Check Cashing's inquiry about the check prior to the midnight deadline set by the U.C.C.
And, although the Bank's agent undertook to try to answer the inquiry, there was no undertaking to respond prior to
the statutory midnight deadline. The contact between the parties did not establish an obligation for the Bank to
respond by a certain, earlier time than the midnight deadline. (pp. 18-19)
4. A reasonable person in the position of the Bank's employee could not have foreseen that within two hours of the
open-ended conversation, Check Cashing would negotiate a check for almost $300,000. The Bank did not
unreasonably create a risk of foreseeable harm for which fairness requires a remedy. In this case there is no
articulable purpose that would be served by departing from the provisions of the U.C.C., which produce commercial
certainty. That the check at issue was certified is not significant as the U.C.C. does not distinguish between certified
and other checks. (pp. 20-21)
5. Even if a duty were found to have been created in this case, the facts are such that there still could be no question
for a jury to decide. (pp. 21-22)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED and the order granting summary judgment in favor
of the Bank is REINSTATED.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES STEIN, COLEMAN, VERNIERO and LaVECCHIA
join in JUSTICE LONG's opinion. JUSTICE ZAZZALI did not participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
88 September Term 1999
CITY CHECK CASHING, INC.,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
MANUFACTURERS HANOVER TRUST
COMPANY; CHEMICAL BANK;
CHEMICAL BANK, as successor
in interest to Manufacturers
Hanover Trust Company,
Defendants,
and
THE CHASE MANHATTAN BANK, as
successor in interest to
Chemical Bank,
Defendant and Third
Party Plaintiff-
Appellant,
v.
JUL-AME CONSTRUCTION COMPANY,
a/k/a JUL-AME CONSTRUCTION,
INC. and MISIR KOCI,
Defendants and Third
Party-Defendants,
and
NIMBUS ENTERPRISES, INC. and
MELVIN GREEN, Jointly,
Severally, or in the
Alternative,
Defendants.
Argued October 10, 2000 -- Decided January 17, 2001
On certification to the Superior Court,
Appellate Division, whose opinion is reported
at
326 N.J. Super. 505 (1999).
Anthony J. Sylvester argued the cause for
appellant (Riker, Danzig, Scherer, Hyland &
Perretti, attorneys; Harold L. Kofman, on the
briefs).
Gary E. Cohen argued the cause for
respondent.
Dennis R. Casale argued the cause for amicus
curiae, New Jersey Bankers Association
(Jamieson, Moore, Peskin & Spicer,
attorneys).
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
LONG, J.
This case requires us to plumb the relationship between the
Uniform Commercial Code (Code or U.C.C.) and the law of
negligence in connection with the return of a check by a drawee
bank within the time allowed by the Code. The question presented
is whether the drawee bank's dealings with a non-customer in an
unsolicited telephone conversation breached a common law duty,
rendering it potentially liable for the loss.
I
The facts of the case are largely undisputed. In 1994,
plaintiff, City Check Cashing, Inc., was a check cashing service
located in Jersey City that had been in operation for almost ten
years. Robert Santoro was the manager. The clerk was Peggyann
Slansky (also referred to as Peggy D'Anna).
On July 1, 1994, Misir Koci, an agent of Jul-Ame
Construction, presented Santoro with a $145,000 check signed by
Melvin Green, an agent of the Nimbus Corporation, drawn on
defendant Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company (Manufacturers)
for cashing. Slansky called Chemical Bank,
(See footnote 1)
1
the successor to
Manufacturers, and was informed by computer that the check was
not good. Santoro advised Koci that he could not cash the check
unless it was certified. Slansky also contacted Green, who asked
her to call his bank branch for verification. The number he gave
her was wrong. Green also told Slansky that the check would be
good despite the Bank's statement to the contrary. Check
Cashing refused to cash the $145,000 check.
Two weeks later, on July 14, 1994, Koci sought to cash
another check of Nimbus Enterprises, Inc., also signed by Melvin
Green and drawn on Manufacturers. That check, in the amount of
$290,000, was stamped with a Manufacturers certification stamp,
although, as has been noted, that institution had previously been
merged into Chemical Bank. The date on the check had clearly
been changed from August 8, 1994 to July 7, 1994.
Santoro asked Slansky to call Chemical Bank and verify the
authenticity of the check. Around 11:00 a.m., on July 14,
Slansky called Chemical and spoke to Anne McClellan. The
following is a transcript of the full conversation between
Slansky and McClellan:
S: Hi, I'm calling from City Check Cashing
and I have a customer here with a certified
check and I need to verify it's authenticity
of the certification.
M: What is the serial number?
S: The serial number on the certified thing?
It says number on top of the stamp, that
number?
M: Yes.
S: I as in ice cream, 2936898, it was
certified yesterday
[omitting interruption by a Check Cashing
employee].
M: Is that the number off the top right hand
S: The top of the certification, that's the
serial number on it. It looks like it was
certified at the 125th Street office in New
York City, West 125th Street.
M: Because normally it doesn't start with an
I, that's the only reason I'm asking.
S: I wonder what it is, it looks like an I to
me, it's signed by Walter or somebody with a
W, Walter, you know, what I'm talking about,
the certified stamp?
M: Right.
S: Is it possible that I can get through to
that branch, maybe they can help me?
M: How much is the check for?
S: $290,000.
M: $290,000?
S: Yes, okay, I'll - -
M: Let me just read it back, is that a
definite I?
S: Definite unless it's a T or something.
M: 29368898.
S: Uh-huh.
M: And you said it was certified yesterday?
S: Yes, at the 125th Street branch and it
looks like the signature on it, like it
begins with a W, Walter of something like
that. I have - the reason I'm calling is I
have a problem with the date, it looks like
the date on the check has been altered and
the customer claims - the payee claims that
the date was changed prior to the
certification and I need to make sure that
that is true, you know?
M: Okay, hold on.
S: I may have to fax this check to the branch
themselves and let them make sure that it was
changed prior.
M: All right, hold on for a second. Is there
any way you can fax that to us?
S: Sure, that's what I want to do, I want to
fax this to you to make sure it was altered
prior to the certification.
M: Okay, fax it to (516) 933-7182, fax it to
A: McClellan, Attention Unit Four and make
sure you put your name and a number where you
can be reached.
S: So (516) 933-7182, attention A. McClellan,
Unit Four?
M: Right, and make sure you put your name and
your telephone number where you can be
reached.
S: Okay, thank you very much.
M: You're welcome.
S: Bye.
M: Bye.
Pursuant to that conversation, Slansky sent McClellan a facsimile on July 14, 1994, at 11:20 a.m. The bottom of the facsimile stated, in bold, underlined, and capitalized print: Message, We just need to verify with the branch that the date on this check was changed prior to the certification. Please call Peggy D'Anna (201)435-7198 as soon as possible. According to McClellan,
because she did not understand the nature of Slansky's question
regarding the date on the check, she requested the facsimile. It
is unclear from the record at what point the fax was actually
received by McClellan. She stated that she received it on the
afternoon of July 14. McClellan also claimed (and it was
disputed) that she called Slansky back on the afternoon of July
14, 1994, and told her that she was unable to answer the question
regarding the date. Other than the original conversation, the
facsimile, and the disputed second conversation, there was no
further contact between Check Cashing and Chemical until July 19,
1994.
In addition to calling Chemical, Slansky also called Green.
He stated that the date on the check was altered before it was
certified. Slansky attempted to contact the bank manager who,
Green told her, would verify the check. Again, the phone number
he gave her was wrong.
Neither Santoro nor Slansky called Chemical back to inquire
about the check. Check Cashing cashed it at about 2:00 p.m. on
July 14, 1994. Koci was given the cash amount of the check,
minus the 1.5% fee ($4,500) that Check Cashing charged. The
check was deposited in Check Cashing's bank, The Bank of New
York, within an hour.
Later on July 14, 1994, the check was routed to Chemical
through the New York Clearing House Exchange. Chemical
immediately captured the information on the check and ran it
through its computers at 11:31 p.m. After that preliminary
procedure, the check was again run through the computers for a
process called posting, whereby the Bank makes a determination
on whether a check is payable. The posting occurred during the
early hours of Friday, July 15, 1994. Chemical's computers found
the check to be invalid because the account number did not exist.
In addition, the check was certified with an old, unused stamp,
and did not have the punched holes that Chemical uses when it
certifies a check.
On Tuesday, July 19, 1994, the check was returned unpaid to
the Bank of New York through the New Jersey Clearing House's 8:00
a.m. exchange. The Rules of the New Jersey Clearing House
Association provide that the return of unpaid demand items shall
take place no later than the second banking business day
following the receipt of such items. New Jersey Clearing House
Association Rules, Article 9, § 9.1 (effective August 1987).
Because the check arrived at the Bank of New York after 2:00 p.m.
on the 14th, it was deemed received on the 15th. Saturday and
Sunday were not banking business days. Thus, the Tuesday return
was timely under the New Jersey Clearing House Rules and the
U.C.C. On the 19th, The Bank of New York canceled its
endorsement. Check Cashing also learned of the problem on that
date. Santoro called Koci who advised him that he would make
good on the check. Koci also told Santoro that the money was
gone, taken by someone to England. Despite threats by Santoro
and promises by Koci, Koci disappeared shortly after the
conversation. The Federal Bureau of Investigations investigated
Koci's disappearance but could not locate him.
Santoro, who had never heard the tape of the conversation
between Slansky and McClellan, stated, in discovery, that if he
had been aware that Chemical had told Slansky that the
certification number on the check did not sound like one
belonging to the bank, he would not have cashed the check
because he would have known something was wrong.
In May of 1995, Check Cashing filed a ten count complaint
against Manufacturers and its successors, Nimbus Enterprises
Inc., Melvin Green and Jul-Ame Construction Company. City Check
Cashing, Inc. v. Jul-Ame Constr. Co.,
326 N.J. Super. 505, 512
(App. Div. 1999), certif. granted,
163 N.J. 396 (2000). Among
the counts were allegations that Chemical was negligent in
dealing with the check and also violated a number of Uniform
Commercial Code provisions in its handling. Id. at 512-13. The
trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Chemical.
(See footnote 2)
2
Check Cashing later obtained a default judgment against the maker
of the check. Check Cashing appealed the summary judgment and a
panel of the Appellate Division agreed that summary judgment was
proper on all counts, except for negligence, and reversed and
remanded that count for trial. Id. at 527-28. The Appellate
Division found that when Chemical asked for a facsimile of the
check, it undertook a duty to respond within a reasonable time
and that it was for a jury to assess whether its actions were
negligent. Id. at 521. Additionally, the court explained that in
cases dealing with certified checks, there is a need for extra
protection. Id. at 523-24. The court concluded that Check
Cashing's actions may also have been negligent, sufficient to
supercede Chemical's negligence. Id. at 525. Both issues were
left to the jury. Id. at 526.
We granted Chemical's petition for certification on the
negligence claim and denied Check Cashing's cross-petition for
certification on the U.C.C. claims. City Check Cashing v.
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co.,
163 N.J. 396 (2000).
II
The question presented is whether, under the circumstances
outlined above, the bank breached a common-law duty to
plaintiff, a non-customer, thereby permitting a claim of
negligence to lie. It arises in the context of the modern check
collection and payment system, the subject of detailed statutory
regulation.
The Uniform Commercial Code, augmented by federal
regulation, provides a comprehensive framework for allocating and
apportioning the risks of handling checks. The Legislatures of
New Jersey and New York, like those of other states, have made
policy choices in allocating liability in the collection of
checks. In this case, the pertinent policy choices made by the
Legislatures enacting the Code are reflected in the New York and
New Jersey counterparts to Uniform Commercial Code sections 4-301
and 4-302. N.J.S.A. 12A:4-301, -302; N.Y.U.C.C. Law §§ 4-301, -
302 (McKinney 2000).
Both parties agree that New York law controls. Indeed,
there is no difference between the provisions of the New York
and New Jersey statutes regarding the issue before us. For
completeness, however, we cite the relevant provisions of the
Code from both states.
The Uniform Commercial Code provisions operate in the
following manner. Upon presentment of a check, a bank must
either pay or dishonor it by a midnight deadline. N.J.S.A.
12A:4-301(a); N.Y.U.C.C. Law § 4-301(1)(McKinney 2000).
Presentment is a formal demand to pay the instrument. N.J.S.A.
12A:3-501(a); N.Y.U.C.C. Law § 3-504(1)(McKinney 2000). The
deadline is midnight on the next banking day following the day on
which the bank receives the relevant item, or from which the time
for taking action commences to run, whichever is later.
N.J.S.A. 12A:4-104(a)(10); N.Y.U.C.C. Law § 4-104(1)(h)(McKinney
2000). In the normal course, presentment of a check triggers a
bank's electronic processing systems. Under the Code, the bank
must decide by the midnight deadline, usually electronically,
whether to pay or dishonor a check, and commercial certainty is
provided to banks, customers, and non-customers in the process.
The Code permits the variance of the midnight deadline by
agreement of the parties. N.J.S.A. 12A:4-103; N.Y.U.C.C. Law §
4-103(McKinney 2000). In addition, Clearing House Rules and
Federal Reserve regulations may vary the midnight deadline as was
the case here. N.J.S.A. 12A:4-103; N.Y.U.C.C. Law § 4-
103(McKinney 2000). Where a payor bank fails to act within its
midnight deadline, the penalty imposed by section 4-302 applies
and the bank is accountable for the face amount of the check.
N.J.S.A. 12A:4-302; N.Y.U.C.C. Law § 4-302 (McKinney 2000);
Penn. Nat'l Turf Club v. Bank of W. Jersey,
158 N.J. Super. 196,
202 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
77 N.J. 506 (1978); Hanna v.
First Nat'l Bank of Rochester,
661 N.E.2d 683, 687 (N.Y. 1995);
General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Bank of Richmondsville,
611 N.Y.S.2d 338, 339 (App. Div. 1994).
It is against that backdrop, and mindful of the balance of
interests reflected in the Legislatures' enactment of the Code's
provisions, that most courts have been reluctant to sanction
common law negligence claims. Only in very rare instances
should a court upset the legislative scheme of loss allocation
and permit a common law cause of action. Bank Polska Kasa Opieki
v. Pamrapo Savings Bank,
909 F. Supp. 948, 956 (D.N.J. 1995); see
also Girard Bank v. Mount Holly State Bank,
474 F. Supp. 1225,
1239 (D.N.J. 1979)(noting that [c]ourts should be hesitant to
improvise new remedies outside the already intricate scheme of
Articles 3 and 4.). It is fair to say, however, that implicit
in those expressions of the need for restraint is a recognition
that a common law duty, in fact, may arise and that its breach
may be actionable in spite of the existence of the Uniform
Commercial Code. Girard Bank, supra, 474 F. Supp. at 1239; see
also Penn. Nat'l Turf Club, supra, 158 N.J. Super. at 203
(stating that although a bank has complied with Uniform
Commercial Code provisions, such compliance does not necessarily
immunize it from ordinary tort liability.).
The question of whether a duty exists is a matter of law to
be decided by the court. Woods Corporate Assocs. v. Signet Star
Holdings, Inc.,
910 F. Supp. 1019, 1033 (D.N.J. 1995); Strachan
v. John F. Kennedy Mem'l Hosp.,
109 N.J. 523, 529 (1988). It is
an inquiry that ultimately involves 'a weighing of the
relationship of the parties, the nature of the risk, and the
public interest in the proposed solution.' Kelly v. Gwinnell,
96 N.J. 538, 544 (1984)(quoting Goldberg v. Housing Auth. of Newark,
38 N.J. 578, 583 (1962)). In actions based on nonfeasance, as is
the case here, it is necessary to find some definite relation
between the parties, of such a character that social policy
justifies the imposition of a duty to act. W. Page Keeton et.
al., Prosser & Keeton on Torts § 56 at 374 (5th ed. 1984).
Moreover, a duty to disclose may arise where good faith and
common decency require it. Fisher v. Kletz,
266 F. Supp. 180,
188 (S.D.N.Y. 1967).
III
How a duty can arise in the banking context, outside of the
scheme provided by the U.C.C., is a subject that has received
attention from a number of courts. In general, courts have
recognized tort liability of a financial institution where a
special relationship has been established from which a duty can
be deemed to flow. See Cumis Ins. Soc'y, Inc. v. Windsor Bank &
Trust Co.,
736 F. Supp. 1226, 1233 (D.Conn. 1990) (noting that
banks have a duty to disclose where some special relationship has
been established such as fiduciary, confidential, contractual or
legal or where there was fraud or misrepresentation on part of
defendant bank).
Absent a special relationship, courts will typically bar
claims of non-customers against banks. The New York Court of
Appeals, for example, has held that a transient and non-
contractual relationship is not enough to establish a duty. FMC
Corp. v. Fleet Bank,
641 N.Y.S.2d 25, 26 (App. Div. 1996). That
court dismissed a negligent misrepresentation claim asserted
against a bank by a creditor of the bank's customer. Ibid. The
bank inaccurately had responded to a creditor's inquiry about the
creditworthiness of the bank's customer by stating that the
bank's relationship with its customer was satisfactory. Id. at
28. The court described the creditor's inquiry as a transient
and non-contractual relationship that did not create a duty on
the part of the bank to respond fully and accurately to the
creditor. Id. at 29.
In Pereira v. United Jersey Bank,
201 B.R. 644, 671
(S.D.N.Y. 1996), the United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York adopted the rationale of Penn.
Nat'l Turf Club, supra, 158 N.J. Super. at 203, when it dismissed
a negligence action brought under New Jersey law by non-
customers. The court held that defendant banks owed no duty of
care to those non-customers in a check-kiting scheme even though
the bank's alleged negligence foreseeably resulted in injury to
them. Pereira, supra, 201 B.R. at 671. In reaching its
conclusion, the court opined:
New Jersey's common law of negligence does not
impose a duty of care on the Banks upon which the
Customers may hinge their negligence claims. The
allegations in the Customers' complaints do not
support the existence of any agreement,
undertaking or contract[
(See footnote 3)
3
] between the Customers
and the Banks which would give rise to a special
duty on behalf of the Banks to take measures to
protect the Customers from Payroll's wrongdoing.
[Id. at 671.]
In Penn. Nat'l Turf Club, supra, 158 N.J. Super. at 201, the
bank was sued in negligence for permitting a depositor, Zeek, to
overdraw his account by substantial margins resulting in
financial damage to the plaintiff. The trial court reasoned that
the bank's pattern of conduct in handling the Zeek account
throughout its existence constituted a negligent failure to
exercise reasonable care which, in turn, permitted Zeek to carry
out his scheme to the damage of the Turf Club. Ibid. The
Appellate Division rejected that negligence theory, instead
holding that regardless of the manner in which the bank handled
the Zeek account it owed no duty to the plaintiff giving rise to
an action in negligence. Ibid. The panel stated:
[A] fundamental requisite for tort liability
is the existence of a duty owing from
defendant to plaintiff. [citations omitted].
In the context of the record facts herein,
the bank owed no general duty to Turf Club
merely by way of warning or other notice,
merely because the latter undertook to cash
its depositor's checks, which turned out to
be dishonored for insufficient funds. Beyond
the duty relating to return of the
instruments, the drawee bank herein had no
duty arising out of a relationship to the
holder of the checks which could ripen into
tort liability. In the absence of evidence
of any agreement, undertaking or contact
between plaintiff and defendant from which
any special duty can be derived, the improper
handing of the Zeek account cannot in the
abstract serve as a stepping stone for
liability to plaintiff.
[Id. at 298 (emphasis added).]
Indeed, the notion that under New York and New Jersey law a
special relationship must exist for a duty to arise conforms
with the law in other jurisdictions. In Portage v. Kentwood
National Bank,
307 N.W.2d 761, 762-63 (Mich. Ct. App. 1981), a
claim was asserted against a bank by the customers of a payroll
service that maintained an account at the bank when it closed the
account and returned the checks unpaid to the payroll service's
customers. The trial court found that the bank was liable to
customers of the bank's depositor for damages based on breach of
fiduciary duty and negligence. Id. at 763. The Court of Appeals
reversed and stated:
We adopt both the holding and rationale as
set forth by the Turf Court. Therefore, we
conclude that the trial court erred and that
the bank cannot be held liable to the
plaintiffs under a legal theory of
negligence. We find the record barren of any
unique relationship by which we can factually
distinguish the instant case from other
commercial transactions regulated by
traditional banking laws and the Uniform
Commercial Code. Again, we reiterate that to
hold defendant liable under these facts is
too radical a departure from well-established
law.
[Id. at 298-99.]
See also Shieman v. Lafayette Bank & Trust Co.,
492 A.2d 219, 222
(1985)(Conn. App. Ct. 1985)(holding that complaint against bank
by heirs of intestate payee of check for negligent handling of
that check stated no claim against bank absent any contract,
statute or circumstance which would give rise to a duty owed by
[the bank] which would support an action in negligence.).
In short, in the check collection arena, unless the facts
establish a special relationship between the parties created by
agreement, undertaking or contact, that gives rise to a duty, the
sole remedies available are those provided in the Code.
Agreement, undertaking and contact are distinct concepts.
An agreement is essentially a meeting of the minds between two or
more parties on a given proposition. Black's Law Dictionary 44
(6th ed. 1991). An undertaking is the willing assumption of an
obligation by one party with respect to another or a pledge to
take or refrain from taking particular action. Id. at 1060. A
contact is the loosest of the three terms, defined as the
establishment of communication with someone. Webster's Ninth
New Collegiate Dictionary 282 (9th ed. 1984). Both an agreement
and an undertaking will give rise to a duty with respect to the
subject agreed upon or undertaken. Whether a contact creates a
duty is determined by its nature and surrounding circumstances.
IV
The duty asserted here by Check Cashing was that the bank
should have responded prior to the midnight deadline set forth in
the U.C.C., more particularly within a reasonable time from the
inquiry. The question is whether by virtue of an agreement,
undertaking or contact, as described above, such duty devolved
upon the Bank. We think not.
Plainly, there was no agreement between the Bank and Check
Cashing establishing an obligation on the part of the bank to
act. Check Cashing was a non-customer that placed an unsolicited
call to a customer service line to verify whether a check in its
possession was good. That set of facts established no special
relationship based upon an agreement whereby the Bank contracted
to respond prior to the U.C.C. midnight deadline.
Although there was an undertaking by McClellan to try to
answer Slansky's inquiry, the critical undertaking - that she
would respond prior to the midnight deadline - was lacking, as
was a special relationship based on that undertaking.
What is left is the contact between McClellan and Slansky
arising out of their conversation. The very underpinning of that
conversation was Slansky's representation that she had a
problem with the check because it appeared to be altered.
Slansky's conversation with McClellan did nothing to disabuse her
of the notion that Koci's check was, in fact, a problem. From
the outset, McClellan told Slansky that there was something wrong
with the certification serial number in that it did not begin
with the proper letter. She did not assure Slansky in any way of
the validity of the instrument. She merely asked that it be
faxed to her to check on the certification and the alteration.
McClellan never indicated that she would respond within a
definite time, that she would only respond if there was a problem
with the certification, or that if she did not respond, Check
Cashing should feel free to negotiate the check.
Indeed, it is obvious that neither party to that
conversation viewed it as establishing a particular temporal
obligation to respond. Check Cashing's negotiation of the check,
without even calling McClellan to ascertain whether it was good,
reveals its lack of reliance on the conversation. On McClellan's
part, it cannot be said that a reasonable person would have
foreseen that Check Cashing would negotiate an almost $300,000
check within two hours on the basis of an open-ended
conversation. She had absolutely no reason to suspect that Check
Cashing would act in the face of her silence. Thus, the Bank did
not unreasonably create a risk of foreseeable harm for which
fairness requires a remedy.
The structure of the U.C.C. itself is instructive in
reaching that conclusion. Formal processes include presentment,
acceptance, provisional and final payment, notice of dishonor,
return and a midnight deadline. The legislative choice of a
fixed deadline is significant because it produces the commercial
certainty that the free flow of commerce demands. In the absence
of a specific agreement or undertaking by the Bank, or a
contact clearly implying that the Bank would respond within a
specified period of time earlier than permitted by the Code's
midnight deadline, no duty can be said to have arisen. Simply
stated, the Code's provisions should govern, and no articulable
purpose is served in this case by departing from those
provisions.
The fact that the check was certified does not change that
result. Certified checks, like other items, are subject to the
Code's midnight deadline provisions as contained in sections 4-
301 and 4-302. The Code does not distinguish between certified
checks and other checks. If the New York and New Jersey
Legislatures had wished to vary from the Uniform Commercial Code
with respect to processing certified checks, they certainly could
have done so. In the absence of such legislative variation from
the Code, there is no reason to create new rules for such
instruments.
V
Finally, even if we agreed with the Appellate Division that
a duty was created on the part of the Bank to respond within a
reasonable time, there remained no issue in this case to be tried
by a jury. No fair minded jury could denominate as unreasonable
the passage of only two hours after an unsolicited call by a non-
customer to a customer service line about a large, obviously
altered check. Ferdinand v. Agric. Ins. Co. of Watertown,
22 N.J. 482, 493 (1956)(noting that when the proof on a question of
fact is so strong as to admit of no reasonable doubt as to its
existence . . . there is no question for the jury to decide.).
VI
The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed. The
order granting summary judgment in favor of the Bank is
reinstated.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES STEIN, COLEMAN, VERNIERO,
and LaVECCHIA join in JUSTICE LONG's opinion. JUSTICE ZAZZALI
did not participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
NO. A-88 SEPTEMBER TERM 1999
ON APPEAL FROM
ON CERTIFICATION TO Appellate Division, Superior Court
CITY CHECK CASHING, INC.,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
MANUFACTURERS HANOVER TRUST
COMPANY; CHEMICAL BANK;
CHEMICAL BANK, as successor
in interest to Manufacturers
Hanover Trust Company,
Defendants.
DECIDED January 17, 2001
Chief Justice Poritz PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice Long
CONCURRING OPINION BY
DISSENTING OPINION BY
CHECKLIST
REVERSE AND
REINSTATE
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ
X
JUSTICE STEIN
X
JUSTICE COLEMAN
X
JUSTICE LONG
X
JUSTICE VERNIERO
X
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
X
JUSTICE ZAZZALI
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TOTALS
6
Footnote: 1
--------------- FOOTNOTES ---------------
Footnote 1 Defendant Chase Manhattan has since succeeded Chemical.Footnote: 2 Footnote 2 In so doing, the court properly accepted only the evidence favorable to the plaintiff. R. 4:46-2(c). Thus, McClellan's contested claim to have returned Slansky's call was not considered. Nor do we consider it here.Footnote: 3 Footnote 3 A review of Pereira reveals that the use of the word contract resulted from a typographical error. Pereira cites Penn. Nat'l Turf Club correctly at page 670 for the proposition that an agreement, undertaking or contact could give rise to a duty. Pereira, supra, 201 B.R. at 670.Converted by Andrew Scriven