BROWN, Chief Judge.
Plaintiffs, Charles M. and Carol Costello, doing business as Charles M. Costello Farms, sued to recoup from defendant banks and creditors funds stolen from plaintiffs by their employee/bookkeeper, who wrote company checks to pay her personal debts. The trial court found that plaintiffs' action against defendant banks had prescribed and sustained defendants' exceptions of prescription. Plaintiffs appealed. We affirm.
From 1971 to November 11, 2006, Maria LaForge worked as the bookkeeper for the Costellos and their farming operations. During this time, LaForge became close to the Costello family, and she was entrusted with control of their financial matters. In the late 1970s or early 1980s Charles Costello signed the necessary documents authorizing LaForge to sign checks drawn on his farm account which he maintained at Capital One Bank, N.A.
On or about November 8, 2006, Costello visited the Capital One branch in Bastrop. While there, he noticed images on the teller's computer monitor of checks drawn from his farm account that were payable to creditors with which he had no account. He obtained copies of these checks and confronted LaForge the following day. LaForge admitted that she had written and signed checks on the Costello farm account to pay her bills. Two days later, LaForge committed suicide.
Following LaForge's death, Costello located the bank statements that Capital One had sent him and had his CPA review those statements. The CPA determined that from 2000 to 2006 LaForge had embezzled or converted funds in Costello's account in the amount of approximately $280,437.33. In testimony, Charles Costello acknowledged that had he examined the bank statements, he would have realized that checks had been issued to entities which were not his creditors. Also, he admitted that he had given LaForge the opportunity to misappropriate funds from his account by allowing her to receive and have exclusive possession of his bank statements from Capital One.
The present suit was filed on October 2, 2007.
The trial court granted the exceptions and dismissed all prescribed claims against defendants Citibank, N.A., Citifinancial, Inc., Regions Bank Inc., and Capital One Bank, N.A. The other named defendants have either settled or taken no action and are not involved in this appeal. In response to plaintiffs' request for written reasons for judgment, the trial court, on December 17, 2009, entered per curiam a order stating in part that:
Plaintiffs filed a timely appeal.
Plaintiffs alleged that LaForge issued some 618 checks to the different defendants. Specifically, plaintiffs alleged that Citibank, Citifinancial, and Regions Bank were personal creditors of LaForge and accepted checks written by her on the Costello farm account with actual or constructive knowledge of LaForge's breach of her fiduciary duty.
It is clear that LaForge was guilty of conversion. A conversion claim is delictual and subject to a one-year prescriptive period. La. R.S. 10:3-420(f).
The Uniform Fiduciaries Law, La. R.S. 9:3805, provides:
Louisiana courts have examined claims similar to those made by plaintiffs and have applied a one-year liberative prescription. See Quality Gas Products v. Bank One Corporation, 03-1859 (La.App. 1st Cir.06/25/04), 885 So.2d 1179 (the plaintiff's/employer's suit against defendant/employee for indorsing check payable to plaintiff and depositing the funds in a personal account amounted to conversion which was subject to a one-year prescriptive period); Peak Performance Physical Therapy and Fitness, LLC v. Hibernia Corporation, 07-2206 (La.App. 1st Cir.06/06/08), 992 So.2d 527, writ denied, 08-1478 (La.10/3/08), 992 So.2d 1018 (a one-year prescriptive period applied to a bank's actions in accepting misappropriated checks, where a bookkeeper deposited checks made payable to the LLC and its members into a personal account); Matthews v. Bank One Corp., 44,818 (La. App.2d Cir. 10/28/09), 25 So.3d 952 (despite the contention of plaintiffs, the underlying conduct by the defendant was the unauthorized withdrawal of funds from plaintiffs' account, and that such an action was in conversion or breach of fiduciary duty, both of which were subject to a one-year prescriptive period); Daube v. Bruno, 493 So.2d 606 (La.1986) (an action by a true owner and payee of check against payor for payment on a forged indorsement is a tort action, subject to a one-year prescriptive period).
The conduct underlying plaintiffs' claims against defendant creditors is LaForge's conversion of checks from plaintiffs' farm account and defendants' acceptance of those check in satisfaction of LaForge's personal debt. Regardless of how plaintiffs classify their claims against defendants, Louisiana jurisprudence holds that they are conversion claims and such claims against financial institutions are subject to a one-year prescriptive period.
Additionally, regarding any claim of a fiduciary duty owed by these banks, La. R.S. 6:1124 provides, in pertinent part:
Defendants, Citibank, Citifinancial, and Regions, as creditors of LaForge, had no contractual, employment, or mandate relationship with the plaintiffs upon which to base a personal action subject to a ten-year prescriptive period.
A similar holding is compelled on the companion claim of plaintiffs for the unauthorized payment of checks drawn on the farm account at Capital One Bank. First, LaForge was an authorized signatory party for the farm account. Therefore, under La. R.S. 10:4-401(a), "[a]n item is properly payable if it is authorized by the customer and is in accordance with any agreement between the customer and bank."
Next, although these claims sound in breach of contract that arise from the payment of negotiable instruments, plaintiffs breached their duty to examine and reconcile bank statements sent to them by Capital One Bank. Therefore, their claims have prescribed under La. R.S. 10:4-406(f) which provides:
Plaintiffs' failure to review the statements which were sent to them has caused their claims to prescribe.
Plaintiffs' argument in favor of applying the doctrine of contra non valentem is likewise without merit. The supreme court discussed the doctrine of contra non valentem in Wimberly v. Gatch, 93-2361 (La.04/11/94), 635 So.2d 206. The courts created the doctrine of contra non valentem as an exception to the general rules of prescription. The doctrine is contrary to the express provisions of the Civil Code. The principles of equity and justice which form the mainstay of the doctrine, however, demand that under certain circumstances prescription be suspended because the plaintiff was effectually prevented from enforcing his rights for reasons external to his own will.
Generally, the doctrine of contra non valentem suspends prescription where some cause of action is not known or reasonably knowable by the plaintiff, even though his ignorance is not induced by the defendant. Rajnowski v. St. Patrick's Hospital, 564 So.2d 671 (La.1990).
Had Costello merely glanced at the farm account bank statement at any time, he would have determined the embezzlement by LaForge. In fact, when he had a quick glimpse of the computer screen at the bank he immediately knew something was wrong.
The use of negotiable instruments was intended to facilitate the rapid flow of commerce by providing certainty and finality in commercial transactions. Strict application of the limitation period serves this purpose. LaForge's conversion did not become unlawful after she issued a series of Costello Farms' checks to her personal creditors; rather, each conversion was unlawful when it occurred. This was not tortious conduct that manifested itself over time. Each time LaForge issued a check on the Costello account to pay one of her bills, she committed a separate wrong and a finite ascertainable amount of damages was sustained.
In Peak Performance, supra at 533, the First Circuit quoted Pero's Steak House v. Lee, 90 S.W.3d 614 (Tenn.2002), where the Tennessee Supreme Court stated:
We find that the doctrine of contra non valentem does not apply to suspend prescription of a cause of action for the conversion of a negotiable instrument under La. R.S. 10:3-420(f), except in the event of fraudulent concealment. Peak Performance, supra.
Plaintiffs assert that the actions of defendants constituted a continuing tort, and thus prescription did not begin to run until the date of the last cashed check. This argument lacks merit. Each deposited check written by LaForge constituted a separate conversion with separate damages. The operating cause of the injury was not a continuous one giving rise to successive damages. There was neither a continuous action on the part of the payees nor a continuous damage suffered by the Costellos, both of which are necessary to find a continuing tort. Metro Electric Maintenance, Inc. v. Bank One Corp., 05-1045 (La.App. 3d Cir. 03/01/06), 924 So.2d 446; Ready v. State, 95-1564 (La.App. 3d Cir.06/25/97), 707 So.2d 1250, writ denied, 98-1125 (La.06/05/98), 720 So.2d 687.
We find no merit in plaintiffs' second and fourth issues presented for review. The prescriptive period of five years provided for in La. C.C. art. 3498 for actions on negotiable and nonnegotiable instruments is not applicable to the present appeal because the action brought by plaintiffs is not an action on a negotiable instrument, but an action under the Uniform Fiduciaries Law. Also, the prescriptive period of ten years for actions to recover for the payment of things not owed is not applicable to the present case because it is undisputed that the defendants were owed the debts that were paid by LaForge.
Based on the foregoing reasons, we affirm the granting of the exceptions of prescription and dismiss those claims that have prescribed, (there are some claims that have not prescribed; i.e. the checks that were cashed within one year of the suit being instituted), against Citibank N.A., Citifinancial Inc., Regions Bank Inc., and Capital One Bank N.A. and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Plaintiffs are assessed the cost of appeal.