67 P.2d 55 | Okla. | 1937
This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Caddo county. The parties occupy the same positions in this court as they did in the trial court and will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant. The plaintiff in its petition alleged in substance that it had delivered certain travelers' cheques to the defendant in trust for the purpose of sale and remittance; that the defendant had sold certain of said cheques and had failed to remit in payment therefor. Wherefore plaintiff prayed judgment for the amount due on said sale. The defendant in its answer admitted the trust relation and the sale of the cheques as claimed by the plaintiff, but averred that it had subsequently cashed other travelers' cheques of the plaintiff which had been presented to the defendant in due course of business, and that plaintiff had refused to honor said cheques and defendant thereupon tendered said cheques, together with the sum of $24.90, the difference between the amount of the cheques cashed by it and the amount claimed by the plaintiff, in full payment of plaintiff's claim. Reply of plaintiff alleged that the tendered cheques had been stolen from one of its agents and were incomplete instruments when the asportation took place, and that consequently the plaintiff was not liable thereon. The defendant thereupon pleaded that it was a bona fide holder in due course and for full value of said cheque and that the plaintiff was estopped to deny their validity. The plaintiff by further reply denied all material allegations of new matter set up in the pleadings of the defendant. The cause was tried, upon the issues thus framed, to the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff appeals from the judgment thus rendered and the order overruling its motion for new trial. The essential facts are not in serious dispute. The plaintiff does a world-wide business in certain instruments which they denominate travelers' cheques. These instruments are similar in size and shape to the national currency and are designed to take the place of currency and to pass current as money. In order to promote and facilitate such business, the plaintiff maintains and operates offices and agencies in principal cities and towns throughout the civilized world. It furnishes such offices and agencies with supplies of said travelers' cheques; these vary only in the denomination and the identifying numbers placed thereon, but are of the same general pattern and form, and are ordinarily in the following language: *607
"U.S. Dollar Travelers Cheque
"When countersigned below with this signature ________________________
NO. 000 000 cipher, cipher, cipher cipher, cipher, cipher ________________ ________ ________
"Before cashing write here city and date.
"Pay this cheque from our balance to the order of _______________________ $10.00
"In United States: Ten Dollars.
"In all other countries at current buying rate for bankers' cheque on New York.
"Geo. Weston, Treasurer.
"Countersign here in presence of person cashing
__________________________________
"'This cheque is redeemable only at the company's offices and bankers in United States."
These cheques are engraved and lithographed in large quantities and sent out to the respective offices and agencies in the above form, with directions to the office or agent to guard and protect the same as they would other bearer securities. During the year 1931, the plaintiff furnished its agent, Gorham State Bank at Gorham, Kan., with a number of travelers' cheques in substantially the form above set forth. This bank was held up and robbed on October 8, 1931. The robbers took everything in the safe, including all the travelers' cheques therein which belonged to the plaintiff. On December 31, 1931, the defendant cashed for E.A. Dunn, one of its customers, certain travelers' cheques which bore the signature of Roy Bison in the space designated for that purpose in the upper left-hand corner of each instrument and the countersignature of the same party in the lower left-hand corner of each instrument. It developed that these cheques were a part of those which the plaintiff had previously delivered to the State Bank of Gorham, and the evidence supports the contention of the plaintiff that they were stolen from said bank and that the name Roy Bison was written in the spaces provided for signatures and countersignatures, and that they were then negotiated to the defendant. It is conceded that the defendant was an innocent purchaser of said cheques for full value and in due course of business. The plaintiff contends, however, that it is not liable on said cheques to the defendant for the reason that the cheques as delivered to the State Bank of Gorham were incomplete instruments within the Negotiable Instruments Law, and that there was never any delivery of said instruments within the contemplation of the Negotiable Instruments Law. We will discuss these contentions in their inverse order. Under the Negotiable Instruments Law, where an instrument is in the hands of a holder in due course, a valid delivery thereof by all parties prior to him so as to make them liable to him is conclusively presumed. Section 11315, O. S. 1931. The fact that a complete instrument is stolen from its maker prior to its delivery does not constitute a defense against a bona fide holder for value. Angus v. Downs,
"Both at common law * * * and under the Negotiable Instruments Law a holder in due course of negotiable paper takes good title even from a thief."
If the travelers' cheques were complete instruments within the meaning of the Negotiable Instruments Law at the time they were stolen from the Gorham State Bank, any question of delivery is eliminated from further consideration.
On the other hand, the Negotiable Instruments Law (section 11314, O. S. 1931), provides:
"Where an incomplete instrument has not been delivered it will not, if completed and negotiated without authority, be a valid contract in the hands of any holder, as against any person whose signature was placed thereon before delivery."
In the case of City National Bank of Galveston v. American Express Co. (Tex. Com. App.) 16 S. So.2d 278 (affirming American Express Co. v. City National Bank Tex. Civ. App.]
In Cooke v. United States,
In the case before us, we find that the defendant accepted the travelers' cheques of the plaintiff as money, and that the defendant was without any knowledge or possible knowledge of any infirmity therein. The instruments on their face were genuine, and under these circumstances the plaintiff was precluded from denying liability. The judgment of the trial court was in all respects proper.
Judgment affirmed.
OSBORN, C. J., BAYLESS, V. C. J., and BUSBY, PHELPS, and GIBSON, JJ., concur.