59 Ga. App. 798 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
B. P. Stockdale, as transferee of a cashier’s cheek issued May 28, 1935, in the sum of $14.75, payable to the order of “ Salem China Company” as payee, on which appeared an indorsement in the name of “Salem China Company, by H. C. Eobinson,” brought suit in the justice’s court against Buena Yista Loan & Savings Bank, as maker. The case was appealed by consent to the superior court of Marion County. The defendant in its plea as amended pleaded non est factum as to the indorsement upon the check, denying that the indorsement of Salem China Company appearing on the check was genuine, but alleging that it was a forgery, and that H. C. Eobinson was at the time not the agent of Salem China Company and was without authority to sign the name of Salem China Company as indorser on the check and to deliver the check to another person, and that therefore the plaintiff, as the transferee under this indorsement, had no right, title, or interest whatsoever in the check. In the plea as amended the defendant further alleged that, prior to the defendant’s issuance of the check sued on, Hogg-Jackson Hardware Company of Buena Yista had issued a check in the sum of $14.85 to “Salem China Company” as the payee and delivered it to H. C. Eobinson as the representative of Salem China Company, in payment for a bill of chinaware which Eobinson stated the Salem China Company had shipped to a customer in McEae, Georgia, which had been refused, and which would be delivered to Hogg-Jackson Company; that H. C. Eobinson, to whom Hogg-Jackson Company had delivered this check, presented it to the defendant bank and had it exchanged for the defendant bank’s cashier’s check payable to Salem China Company, which check was delivered to H. 0. Eobinson “to be transmitted to said Salem China Company.”
On the trial of the case the check with the indorsement thereon was introduced in evidence. The cashier of the defendant bank testified that, at the time the check was issued, a person claiming to be H. C. Eobinson, and representing himself to be the representative of Salem China Company, presented to the defendant
The defendant moved for a new trial on the general grounds that the verdict was without evidence to support it, etc., and on several special grounds. It is alleged that the court erred in admitting the check in evidence. The defendant objected to the admission in evidence of the check on the ground that there was no proof of the genuineness of the indorsement thereon by Salem China Company, that, the defendant having filed a plea of non est factum denying the genuineness of the indorsement and alleging that it was a forgery, the burden was on the plaintiff to show the validity of the indorsement, and that, in the absence of such proof offered by the plaintiff, it did not appear that the plaintiff had any right, title, or interest whatsoever in the check. This objection was overruled and the check admitted. It also is alleged that the court erred in rejecting evidence offered by the defendant that, after the defendant liad issued the chock, the bank received a post card from Salem China Company advising that there was no such person as II. C. Robinson in its employ, and that H. C. Robinson had no authority to make sales or make any collections for same for Salem China Company. It is also alleged that the court erred in rejecting from evidence the post card referred to. The court also refused to allow Hogg-Jackson Hardware Company to intervene and claim the funds '“represented by the check sued upon.”
It appears from the evidence that the defendant bank, in issuing the check sued on, issued it to “Salem China Company” as the payee. If the check, although issued to Salem China Company as the payee, was in fact issued and made “payable to the order of a fictitious or nonexisting person and such fact was known to the person making it so payable,” as in this case the
In the absence of evidence that the payee, whose name purported ’ to be a legal entity, was a nonexisting or a fictitious person, the payee presumably was an existing and nonfictitious person. If H. C. Robinson, when he approached the bank and requested the issuance of the cheek in the name of Salem China Company as the payee, did not in fact represent Salem China Company but represented only himself, and the bank knew this, and with such knowledge issued the check to Robinson in the name of Salem China Company as the payee, and intended to issue the check to Robinson in the name of Salem China Company, then perhaps Salem China Company would have been a nonexisting or fictitious person in so far as the particular transaction was concerned. It does not appear from the evidence that the bank had any such knowledge of Robinson’s status, and it does not appear that the bank, in issuing the check, intended to issue it to H. C. Robinson passing
It appearing therefore conclusively and without dispute from the evidence that the check was issued to the payee purporting to be a legal entity, namely Salem China Company, and it not appearing that it was issued to a fictitious or nonexisting person with knowledge of the bank issuing the check, the evidence demands the inference that the check was not payable to a fictitious or non-existing person, and therefore not payable to bearer, but was paj'able to an existing payee, namely Salem China Company. Therefore, H. C. Kobinson, the person who had possession of the check, had no right or authority to transfer the check to the plaintiff transferee by indorsement thereon of the name of the payee Salem China Company unless he was so authorized by Salem China Company. There is no evidence that he was so authorized.
In Code, § 20-805, it is provided that “An indorsement or assignment of any bill, bond, or note, when the same is sued on by the indorsee, need not be proved unless denied on oath.” It follows therefore that since the defendant has in its plea denied the genuineness of the signature of the payee transferring the check to the plaintiff, and alleged that this signature was a forgery, the burden was placed on the plaintiff to prove the genuineness of the signature. Bruce v. Neal Bank, 134 Ga. 364 (67 S. E. 819); Federal Discount Co. v. Carter & Co., 14 Ga. App. 645 (82 S. E. 51); Ruby v. Boyett, 19 Ga. App. 516 (91 S. E. 939); Bank of Norwood v. Chapman, 19 Ga. App. 709 (92 S. E. 225). See also Jewell v. Walker, 109 Ga. 241 (34 S. E. 337), and Carter v. Haralson, 146 Ga. 282 (2a) (91 S. E. 88).
The plaintiff relies on the case of Supreme Kingdom Inc. v. Fourth National Bank, 174 Ga. 779 (164 S. E. 204), as authority for the proposition that the burden was upon the defendant, where it had filed a plea of non est factum as to the genuineness of the indorsement on the check, to sustain the plea, and was not upon the plaintiff to prove the genuineness of the indorsement. In that case it was held in the headnote that '“Where the answer of the defendant avers that its name indorsed upon a certain promissory note and check sued on is a forgery, the burden of proof is upon such party so affirming.” This was a case in equity where the Supreme Kingdom and the Fourth National Bank were defend
The burden of proof was upon the plaintiff Stockdale, as the transferee of the check, to show that the signature of the Salem China Company, the payee, was genuine, and was the act or deed of Salem China Company. There being no evidence to show this, the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict found for the plaintiff. In view of the rulings here made it is not necessary to pass upon the exception to the admissibility in evidence of the check.
The other evidence offered and to which objection was made by the defendant, was clearly hearsay and was properly rejected.
It was not essential to any right of the defendant bank that Hogg-Jackson Company be made a party to the case by intervention. The court did not err in refusing to allow Hogg-Jackson Company to intervene and claim the funds.
The court erred in overruling the motion for new trial.
Judgment reversed.