This controversy concerns the liability of a bank for honoring checks of its customer, where the endorsements are challenged as not being those of the intended payee. The case comes before this court on appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, which on motion of the depository bank dismissed the customer’s complaint on the ground that it set forth no claim upon which relief could be granted. 1 Rule 12(b)(6), Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. 28 U.S. C.A.
The District Court had before it, in addition to the complaint, an affidavit submitted by plaintiff, and a stipulation between the parties by which certain documents were included in the record for all purposes, including those of the motion. The defendant Hamilton Bank served no answer and disputed none of the allegations contained in plaintiff’s complaint and affidavit. It filed no papers laying a factual foundation for its defense. Instead, it chose to rely on .plaintiff’s own. assertions, attempting on the basis of them to show that the purported cause of action was defective and to establish affirmative defenses which must usually be pleaded and proved. Thus there is no factual dispute on the face of the record.
Normally, Rule 12(b) requires that where “matters outside the pleading are presented to and not excluded by the court, the motion [to dismiss for failure to state a cause of action] shall be treated as one for summary judgment and disposed of as provided in Rule 56, and all parties shall be given reasonable opportunity to present all material made pertinent to [a summary judgment] motion by Rule 56.” Rule 12 (b), Fed.R.Civ.P. The District Court did not purport to follow the mandate of Rule 12(b); after argument, it entered an order dismissing the complaint. However, the extrinsic material presented was evidently considered by the District Court in reaching its decision, and both parties ask us to consider it. We think we may properly do so. Before the adoption of the quoted provisions of Rule 12(b) in 1948, material extrinsic to the pleadings was often considered on motions to dismiss, by both trial and appellate courts. E.g., Farrall v. District of Columbia A.A. U.,
In dealing with the record on this appeal, however, we must observe the usual rule that on a motion to dismiss, the plaintiff’s allegations are to be taken as true and all reasonable favorable inferences arising therefrom are to be indulged. Dioguardi v. Durning, 2 Cir.,
Viewed in this light, thé complaint and affidavit disclose that during September, 1947, appellant, a resident of Alexandria, Virginia, decided to invest in a home furnishings business then being carried on in Lansing, Illinois, by Peter and Bernice Hoeksema. At that time, he entered into an oral agreement with the Hoeksemas whereby a corporation would be formed under the title “Peter Hoeksema, Inc.,” to which the Hoeksemas would transfer the assets and good will of their business, valued at $20,000. Appellant undertook to contribute $10,000 in cash, and stock was to be issued to the three incorporators in proportion to their respective contributions. The articles of incorporation were drawn and signed by the parties, and Peter Hoek-sema was instructed to take the necessary further steps to complete the organization of the company under Illinois law.
Late in October of 1947, Peter Hoeksema advised appellant that the corporation would be formed and placed in operation about November 1. Relying on this information, appellant on October 25 (from his residence in Virginia) mailed Hoek-sema a check drawn on the Hamilton Bank (doing business in the District of Columbia) in the amount of $1,000, payable to the order of “Peter Hoeksema, Inc.,” and *560 intended as the first payment toward his $10,000 contribution. In the belief that the corporation had been formed and that the Hoeksemas’ furniture business had been transferred to it, appellant subsequently sent Hoeksema four more checks to complete his contribution to the corporation. These checks, each of which was payable to the order of “Peter Hoeksema, Inc.,” were as follows: November 1, 1947, $4,000; November 20, 1947, $3,000; January 1, 1948, $500; and March 1, 1948, $1,500. On the back of each of the five checks is the hand-written endorsement “Peter Hoeksema, Inc.,” as well as the stamped endorsements of various banks and trust companies. The first bank to handle the checks was the First National Bank of Dyer, Dyer, Indiana. All were honored by the defendant Hamilton Bank.
No directors’ or stockholders’ meetings were held by the new corporation and no stock certificates were issued. As time went on, appellant became anxious as to the affairs of the business, demanded that he be shown a financial statement, and' requested that stock certificates be issued to him. Under various pretexts Peter Hoek-sema put him off until finally, late in November, 1949, appellant sent a lawyer out to Illinois to investigate. As a result of the investigation, appellant learned on December 6, 1949, that Peter Hoeksema had not filed the articles of incorporation until December 6, 1947 (after three of the five checks had been issued), that he had not transferred any assets to the corporation or opened a bank account for it, and that the corporation had carried on no business and had received none of the proceeds of the checks. Appellant alleges on information and belief that the funds derived from the checks were in fact appropriated by the Hoeksemas for their own benefit and that their assets have 'been dissipated to the point where neither of them has sufficient funds to reimburse appellant for the checks.
The crucial allegation of the complaint is to the effect that “The name ‘Peter Hoeksema, Inc.’ purporting to be an endorsement on the back of each of said checks, is not the endorsement of the payee thereof. * *
*”
Appellant bases his action on the undisputed premise that a depository bank must pay checks in strictest accordance with the direction of its depositor. National Metropolitan Bank v. Realty Appraisal & Title Co.,
*561 Appellee does not challenge the validity of this legal theory. But it contends that, for reasons to be considered, a cause of action is not stated despite the allegation of forgery, or, if stated, is defeated by defenses disclosed in the record. We must determine whether appellee’s contentions are sustainable as a matter of law on the facts alleged by appellant.
Appellee argues, first of all, that the validity of the endorsements is immaterial because, it says, the checks were knowingly drawn to a nonexistent payee and were consequently payable to bearer under section 9(3) of the Negotiable Instruments Law. The principle relied on— the so called “fictitious payee” rule — is clearly inapplicable to the fourth and fifth checks, for at the time of their issuance the organization of Peter Hoeksema, Inc., had proceeded to a point where, by Illinois law, its corporate existence was beyond challenge except by the state. Smith-Hurd Ill.Stat., c. 32, § 157.49 (Perm.Ed.). Under the usual form of the cited section of the Negotiable Instruments Law,
5
checks two and three also were not within the “fictitious payee” rule, because the nonexistence of the corporation was not known to the “person making [the checks] payable” to it. That person was appellant, the drawer and actual writer of the checks,
6
and even if, as urged by appellee, Hoeksema be considered appellant’s agent in the premises, Hoeksema’s knowledge of the payee’s nonexistence is not imputable to appellant.
7
It is true that under the peculiar Illinois form of the statute, Smith-Hurd Ill.Stat., c. 98, § 29 (Perm.Ed.), the result might be altered if it were established that Hoeksema was the “agent” of appellant and that he “supplied the name” of the payee. But neither fact appears from appellant’s allegations; and in any event we doubt that Illinois law is determinative here. See Brabston v. Gibson,
As to the first check, however, the situation is altogether different. Appellant’s affidavit concedes that at the time he drew this instrument, he knew there was no “Peter Hoeksema, Inc.” To avoid the conclusion that the first check was therefore bearer paper, appellant argues that his intent to have the named payee take the proceeds, rather than his knowledge that the payee had not yet been formed, should govern. The courts do recognize a converse rule: a drawer’s intent that the payee he names shall have no interest in the check makes the check payable to bearer although the drawer knows the payee to be an existing person. Norton v. City Bank & Trust Co., 4 Cir.,
In another group of contentions, appellee takes the position that the corporation was at all pertinent times in being,
de facto
if not
de jure,
or at least that appellant is estopped from denying its existence. We need not consider the first assertion, because it is clear in any event that appellant, as drawer of the checks, is precluded from challenging the payee’s existence. Negotiable Instruments Law § 61;
8
Goodrich v. Reynolds, Wilder & Co.,
But appellees say that even if the endorsements were unauthorized, appellant is in no position to challenge them.
11
It seeks to make out from the present record elements of apparent authority, estoppel, and laches. But these are matters which the bank will have to plead and prove. As the record now stands, contentions that appellant is precluded on the issue of want of authority depend at best on inferences of fact, which we are forbidden to make. For example, there is nothing before us which shows that ap-
*563
pellee relied in any way on the facts which it says estop appellant.
12
Board of Trustees of town of Auburn v. Chyle,
A final argument merits brief attention. It is that appellant has no complaint here because the proceeds of the checks, said to be appropriated by the Hoeksemas, went to the very persons intended to receive them. This contention, of course, overlooks the fact that appellant chose to surround the transaction with the protections of the corporate form and consciously made the corporation his payee. His intent was that the corporation receive the funds and his object was that they benefit the furniture business. Both purposes were frustrated. The case would be different had the proceeds, or part of them, actually been spent for business purposes. Compare International Aircraft Trading Co. v. Manufacturers Trust Co.,
We are not in this opinion endeavoring to pass upon the factual aspects of appellant’s claim or of the defenses which the bank has made or may make against it. Resolution of many of the issues raised here will depend upon the views taken by the trier of the facts. We do not intend to pre-judge those issues.
For the reasons stated, the order of the District 'Court, as to both the original and the third-party complaints, will be
Reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The District Court at the same time dismissed third-party complaints seeking reimbursement from forwarding banks, and the third-party defendants are also appellees here. However, the claims against the impleaded banks were based solely on asserted rights to recover over should the original defendant be found liable. Therefore, for the sake of simplicity, we will deal only with plaintiff - appellant and his bank (the Hamilton National Bank of Washington), and will refer to the latter as defendant or appellee,
. The courts must, of course, take care to see that neither party is surprised or suffers prejudice when extrinsic material is considered on a motion to dismiss or when such a motion is converted into one for summary judgment. Cf. Sardo v. McGrath, 90 U.S.App.D.C. —,
. It should be emphasized that the only liability at issue is that of the Hamilton Bank to its depositor. The complaint does not bring in question the possible liability of forwarding banks to appellant or of anyone to Peter Hoeksema, Ine.
. It would seem that even the bank which initially honored the chocks would not bo accountable for the misappropriation of their proceeds, in the absence of knowledge or actual bad faith on its part, neither of which is alleged here. Gate City Bldg. & Loan Ass’n v. National Bank of Commerce,
. D.C.Code, § 28-110 (1940); Va.Code, § 5571 (1942); Burns’ Ind.Stat. § 19-109 (1950).
. United States v. National Bank of Commerce, 9 Cir.,
. Robertson Banking Co. v. Brasfield,
. D.C.Code § 28-502 (1940); Ya.Code, § 5623 (1942); Burns’ Ind.Stat. § 19-502 (1950); Smith-Hurd Ill.Stat., c. 98, § 81 (Perm.Ed.).
. Robertson Banking Co. v. Brasfield,
. Where authority to sign exists, however, the endorsement’s effectiveness is not destroyed by the fact that the authority was abused and funds misappropriated. Dexter Savings Bank v. Friend, C.C.S.D.Ohio,
. 'See Negotiable Instruments Law § 23: “When a signature is forged or made without the authority of the person whose signature it purports to be, it is wholly inoperative, and no right to retain the instrument, or to give a discharge therefor, or to enforce payment thereof against any party thereto, can be acquired through or under such signature, unless the party against whom it is sought to enforce such right is precluded from setting up the forgery or want of authority.” (Italics supplied). D.C.Code § 28-124 (1940); Smith-Hurd Ill Stat., c. 98, § 43 (Perm.Ed.); Burns’ Ind.Stat. § 19-123 (1950); Va.Code, § 5585 (1942).
. Reliance is also integral to the concept of “apparent authority.” North Alabama Grocery Co. v. J. C. Lysle Milling Co.,
