These actions in contract or tort are before us upon exceptions claimed by the plaintiff to orders directing verdicts for the defendant. They were brought by the payee of certain checks against the bank on which the checks were drawn, which had made payment upon forged unauthorized indorsements and had returned the checks to the makers. The evidence in substance was as follows: In 1924 and until his death in May, 1926, one Barker was vice-president and a director of the plaintiff, and owner of one hundred ninety-eight of the eight hundred shares of its capital stock. The by-laws conferred on the vice-president authority to “prove claims in bankruptcy or insolvency, for the company, and shall have such further powers and perform such other duties as the board of directors may require.” A vote of the directors passed on February 27, 1922, provided that Barker be empowered so long as he continued to hold office as vice-president “to assign, to discharge, to foreclose by entry or by sale and to make partial releases of any mortgages held by the company, and further to affix the corporate seal and to sign, acknowledge and deliver in the name of and on behalf
The declarations contained a count in contract for each
There is no claim that Barker was not authorized to receive the checks from the makers in reduction of their several debts to the plaintiff, or that the makers did not deliver them to him as the representative of the plaintiff, duly authorized to receive them. In those circumstances the checks became the property of the plaintiff. Its property was stolen by Barker. It seeks, by this action at law, to shift its loss upon the defendant bank. The practical question for decision is, can it do so?
It is clear law, we think, that there is no such relation of contract between the bank and the plaintiff as the contract counts of the declaration assert. The bank has not made, by implication, any promise to the payee to pay only upon the payee’s authorized indorsement. Carr v. National Security Bank,
We need not consider the vexed question whether there is a liability in indebitatus assumpsit on a count for money had and received, as no such count is declared upon. (See for discussions and collection of cases, 38 Harv. Law Rev. 864, et seq.; 5 R. C. L. 566, § 89, et seq.; California Stucco Co. of Washington v. Marine National Bank,
Recovery, if any is possible, under the declaration must be had upon the counts in tort. No case directly in point is called to our attention and we find none in our decisions; but the principles acted upon in A. Blum Jr.’s Sons v. Whipple,
In Shepard & Morse Lumber Co. v. Eldridge,
Exceptions sustained.
