31 App. D.C. 391 | D.C. Cir. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the Court:
1. The first assignment of error is founded on an exception taken to the admission of the evidence of the witness Marshall relating to the facts and circumstances surrounding the execution and delivery of the check to the supposed Mrs. McKnight, and the receipt of the money by her from the Washington Loan & Trust Company. Nor reasons that will be apparent in the discussion of the main question in the case, we think this evidence was competent. It is true that Lester was not a party to the action, but the plaintiff, having recognized his right to the return of the money, as having been improperly paid to the party receiving the check from him, has taken his place, and is bound by whatever would bind him had it refused his demand for repayment and the action had been by him against it to recover money paid under a forged indorsement of his check.
2. The motion to reopen the case for the purpose of introducing evidence was addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court. While it would have been more satisfactory to have had evidence from Lester regarding the circumstances under which the check had been given, under our view of the point on which the case must be made to turn, we are not prepared to say that, under the circumstances disclosed in the bill of exceptions, there was an abuse of discretion by the court.
3. Unquestionably it is the duty of a bank to pay the money of its depositors to the person named in his check, and payment to a different person upon a forgery of the payee’s name will not bind the drawer. It is also true that the indorsement of a check or draft is a guaranty of the genuineness of prior indorsements thereof.
In our opinion, however, these principles, on which the appellant relies, are not sufficient for the determination of the question raised by the evidence in this case. Nor is there any provision of the negotiable securities act, contained in our Code, which is intended to apply to and govern the particular facts and circumstances here disclosed.
Tolman v. American Nat. Bank, 22 R. I. 462, 463, 52 L.R.A. 877, 84 Am. St. Rep. 850, 48 Atl. 480, is directly in point. Louis Potter, representing himself to be Ernest A. Haskell, obtained a loan from the plaintiff giving him a note signed under his pretended name of Haskell, and receiving a check on defend
It was further said that the negotiable securities act also covered the question of defendant’s liability for paying the money to the imposter upon forgery of the name of Haskell.
Beattie v. National Bank, 174 Ill. 571, 43 L.R.A. 654, 66 Am. St. Rep. 318, 51 N. E. 602, is not directly in point, but analogous. In that case a draft was made payable to George A. Bent when it should have been made to George P. Bent. It was mailed to George A. Bent, and came into the bands of a party by that name, who knew that the draft was not intended for him. He presented it at the bank, indorsed it, and obtained the money. This was held to constitute a forgery, and the bank was declared liable for payment to the wrong person.
Atlanta Nat. Bank v. Burke, 81 Ga. 597, 2 L.R.A. 96, 7 S. E. 738. In that case one Knapp forged bis wife’s name to a trust deed, and took a check payable to her on wbieb he procured the money by forging her name. Tbe case does not decide the question here, because the check was not payable to Knapp, but to bis wife. He, at least, was not the person intended to have the money.
Shipman v. Bank of State, 126 N. Y. 318, 12 L.R.A. 791, 22 Am. St. Rep. 821, 27 N. E. 371. One Bedell was a confidential employee in charge of the money-lending department of Shipman’s business. Dodge, the bookkeeper of Shipman, kept the account with the bank, in wbieb they kept their money. Bedell made out a number of statements, as was bis custom, showing money needed to advance on certain loans, for which
Armstrong v. Pomeroy Nat. Bank, 46 Ohio St. 512, 6 L.R.A. 625, 15 Am. St. Rep. 655, 22 N. E. 866. There Grimes, professing to act for one Brown, obtained a check payable to Brown, and, indorsing Brown’s name, obtained the money. It seems there was no such person as Brown. The check was not intended for Grimes, and he obtained the money by forging the name of the person for whom it was intended.
Dodge v. National Exch. Bank, 20 Ohio St. 234, 5 Am. Rep. 648. Dodge, holding a certificate of indebtedness issued by a paymaster of the United States Army, indorsed the same in blank, and mailed it to Paymaster Bonister, in Cincinnati, for payment. The letter was stolen and the certificate was presented to Bonister for payment. He required indentification and the party did not return. Thereafter it was presented to one Stryker, another paymaster, who asked for proof of identity. The party told him that he could have himself identified at the bank on which the check was to be drawn. Stryker made out a check on a blank form, striking out the words “or bearer” and making the same payable to Frederick B. Dodge or order. Inducing someone to identify him as Dodge, the party indorsed the check in the name of Dodge and received the money. In an ac
The following cases answer the question in a different manner: Robertson v. Coleman, 141 Mass. 231, 232, 55 Am. Rep. 471, 4 N. E. 619. In that case a person registered at a hotel in Boston by the name of Charles Barney. On the next day he took a stolen wagon and team to Coleman, who was an auctioneer, to sell for him, representing himself to be named Charles Barney. Before selling the property, Coleman learned by telegraph that Charles Barney, of Swanzey, was a reliable man, but took no other steps to ascertain that the seller was really Charles Barney. Having made the sale, he gave the party a check drawn to the order of Charles Barney. The hotel keeper took the check indorsed by the party as Charles Barney, paying him the amount of the same, less the bill due by him. It was held that payment to the party who was intended to receive the money on the check bound the drawer.
Emporia Nat. Bank v. Shotwell, 35 Kan. 360, 57 Am. Rep. 171, 11 Pac. 141. Application was made by mail for a loan on certain land the title to which was in one Daniel Guernsey, who formerly lived in Kansas, but had removed to Iowa. The application was signed “Daniel Guernsey.” The title was passed, a note and mortgage were executed by the pretended Daniel Guernsey, and a check was sent to him for the amount of the loan. He indorsed it as “Daniel Guernsey” and obtained the money from the bank before the fraud was discovered. For the reason that the payment was made to the person for whom it was intended, the bank was held not to be liable as for the pay
Land Title & T. Co. v. Northwestern Nat. Bank, 196 Pa. 230, 50 L.R.A. 75, 79 Am. St. Rep. 717, 46 Atl. 420. A party giving his name as Ashley obtained the title papers of one Bissey, who owned a lot which he wished to sell, by pretending that he wanted to purchase the same. He went to a conveyancer, represented himself to be Bissey, showed the title paprs, and applied for a loan of $5,000 on the property. The conveyancer, believing him to be Bissey, negotiated a loan. The mortgagee, wishing title insurance from the Land Title & Trust Company, deposited the amount of the loan with it to be paid to the mortgagor when the mortgage should be executed. When ready for settlement, Ashley went to the office of the company with the conveyancer, who introduced him as Bissey. He executed the mortgage in that name, and received the company’s check drawn on itself to the order of Herman S. Bissey. This check indorsed “Herman S. Bissey,” was deposited in the North Western National Bank by a person who opened an account as C. B. Rogers, and was collected by the bank in due course of business and paid to Rogers. Whether Ashley and Rogers were the same person did not appear. The fraud, was not discovered until about six months later, when the real Bissey received a notice to pay interest. All of the parties, save Ashley, and possibly Rogers who got the money, acted in good faith. The Title & Trust Company sued the bank, claiming that there had been a forgery by Ashley of the name of Bissey, and that it had paid the money on the guaranty of genuineness given by the bank’s indorsement. The court, in denying the liability of the bank, gave its reasons as follows: “Generally a bank is not bound to know the signature of the indorser of a check, and, if it pays a check on a forged indorsement, it can recover the money of the party to whom it was paid, if it proceeds promptly on discovery of the fraud. This is upon the principle that the indorsement of a check is an implied warranty of the genuineness of the previous indorsements. But, in order that a bank may recover, it must appear that it has sustained a loss. If it can charge the payment to the account of
United States v. National Exch. Bank, 45 Fed. 163. In that case an impostor had come into possession of postoffice money orders payable to another person. By fraudulent representations, he induced a person to believe that he was the payee of the orders, and to identify him at the postoffice. The orders were taken up and a check given him on the bank payable to the payee named in the orders. The same person identified him at the bank, which cashed the-check that was indorsed with the same name, and charged the same to the account of the United States. In giving reasons for refusing recovery in an action by the United States against the bank, the court said: “The question for the bank is, Tor whom was this money intended by the drawer? — and the name is but one means of determining that question. * * * It was the duty of the department to ascertain the true individual, and to pay to no one else. Without doubt the postmaster would have paid currency instead of a cheek, if he had had it in hand, rather than in bank. If he would not, it would be very good evidence of neglect to deliver a check to a party, and put it in his power to draw the money on a forged indorsement in circumstances where the postmaster would not have been satisfied to part with the cash. Allowing the drawer and drawee to be equally innocent, the loss should fall upon the one who, by his act, has been the occasion of the loss, which in this case, I think, was the department. Though there may have been no express negligence on the part of the officials of the postoffice, it was a mistake to deliver the check to a person not entitled to it, and that mistake has been the occasion of the loss.
“The postoffice officials had every reason to believe that the bank would pay upon the identification and proofs which had actually induced them to deliver the check. The fraud — the imposition — had been mainly accomplished when a check for the money was delivered to Sehuman as the true payee named in
We are of the opinion that the cases last mentioned express the true doctrine that should govern in such cases as this. It is a principle of natural justice that, as between two innocent persons, the one whose act was the cause of the loss should bear the consequences. As the transaction in this case began with Lester, it was his duty to use diligence to ascertain the identity of the party with whom he dealt. Failing to make this discovery, he became the victim of a fraud. The impostor having succeeded in this first and essential step in the practice of the fraud, the next was comparatively an easy one. The bank had a right to believe that Lester had acted with full knowledge of the party to whom he gave the check for the money, and its duty to him was discharged when it satisfied itself that the payment was intended to be made to the party who presented it. This information it obtained from Marshall, who was connected with the transaction in some way, and to whom Lester delivered the check, not for the real Mrs. McKnight, who had nothing to do with the transaction and with whom Lester was not acquainted, but for the perpetrator of the fraud, who he believed bore that name. Marshall, in apparent good faith, knowing that the money was intended to be paid to her, and believing that her true name was given in the check, introduced her to the officers of the bank and enabled her to obtain the money. What further inquiry was it reasonable for the bank to make under such circumstances ? Lester, having delivered the check to her in per-
Treating this case, as we must under the facts proved, as if the action was one by Lester to recover the money as paid to the wrong person, we think it would be unreasonable and unjust to permit him to escape the natural consequences of his own neglect or mistake, by holding the bank at fault for not making the complete inquiry that he ought to have made primarily to ascertain if the person to whom he gave the check was, in fact, the person whom he believed, and thus represented her to be.
We think the court was right in directing the verdict for the defendant, and the judgment will therefore be affirmed with costs. Affirmed.