Equitable Vs SSP

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REQUIRED DEGREE OF DILIGENCE IN VERIFYING THE GENUINENESS OF

INDORSEMENT
Equitable Banking Corporation, Inc. vs. Special Steel Products Inc. (SSPI)
G.R. No. 175350, June 13, 2012
Del Castillo, J.:

DOCTRINE:
Since the banking business is impressed with public interest, the trust and confidence of the
public in it is of paramount importance. Consequently, the highest degree of diligence is
expected, and high standards of integrity and performance are required of it.”

FACTS:
Augusto L. Pardo is SSPI’s President and majority stockholder. International Copra Export
Corporation (Interco) is its regular customer. Jose Isidoro Uy, alias Jolly Uy, is an Interco
employee, in charge of the purchasing department, and the son-in-law of its majority
stockholder. Petitioner Equitable Banking Corporation (Equitable bank) is a private domestic
corporation engaged in banking and is the depository bank of Interco and of Uy.

In 1991, SSPI sold welding electrodes to Interco, as evidenced by the following sales invoices:
Sales Invoice No. 65042 dated February 14, 1991 for P 325,976.34; Sales Invoice No. 65842
dated April 11, 1991 for P 345,412.80; Sales Invoice No. 65843 dated April 11, 1991 for
P 313,845.84. The due dates for these invoices were March 16, 1991 (for the first sales invoice)
and May 11, 1991 (for the others). The invoices provided that Interco would pay interest at the
rate of 36% per annum in case of delay. In payment for the above welding electrodes, Interco
issued three checks payable to the order of SSPI on July 10, 1991, July 16, 1991, and July 29,
1991. Each check was crossed with the notation “account payee only” and was drawn against
Equitable. The records do not identify the signatory for these three checks, or explain how Uy,
Interco’s purchasing officer, came into possession of these checks. The records only disclose that
Uy presented each crossed check to Equitable on the day of its issuance and claimed that he had
good title thereto. He demanded the deposit of the checks in his personal accounts in Equitable,
Account No. 188412 and Account No. 03474-0.

ISSUE:
Is the payment made by Equitable to Uy proper?

RULING:
No. The checks that Interco issued in favor of SSPI were all crossed, made payable to SSPI’s
order, and contained the notation “account payee only.” This creates a reasonable expectation
that the payee alone would receive the proceeds of the checks and that diversion of the checks
would be averted. This expectation arises from the accepted banking practice that crossed checks
are intended for deposit in the named payee’s account only and no other. At the very least, the
nature of crossed checks should place a bank on notice that it should exercise more caution or
expend more than a cursory inquiry, to ascertain whether the payee on the check has authorized
the holder to deposit the same in a different account. It is well to remember that “[t]he banking
system has become an indispensable institution in the modern world and plays a vital role in the
economic life of every civilized society. Whether as mere passive entities for the safe-keeping
and saving of money or as active instruments of business and commerce, banks have attained an
[sic] ubiquitous presence among the people, who have come to regard them with respect and
even gratitude and, above all, trust and confidence. In this connection, it is important that banks
should guard against injury attributable to negligence or bad faith on its part. As repeatedly
emphasized, since the banking business is impressed with public interest, the trust and
confidence of the public in it is of paramount importance. Consequently, the highest degree of
diligence is expected, and high standards of integrity and performance are required of it.”

Equitable did not observe the required degree of diligence expected of a banking institution
under the existing factual circumstances.

Equitable’s pretension that there is nothing under the circumstances that rendered Uy’s title to
the checks questionable is outrageous. These are crossed checks, whose manner of discharge, in
banking practice, is restrictive and specific. Uy’s name does not appear anywhere on the crossed
checks. Equitable, not knowing the named payee on the check, had no way of verifying for itself
the alleged genuineness of the indorsement to Uy. The checks bear nothing on their face that
supports the belief that the drawer gave the checks to Uy. Uy’s relationship to Interco’s majority
stockholder will not justify disregarding what is clearly ordered on the checks.

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