The relation existing between a bank and its depositor is, in a strict sense, that of debtor and creditor; but in discharging its obligation as a debtor, the bank must do so subject to the rules obtaining between principal and agent.
In disbursing the customer’s funds, it can pay them only in the usual course of business, and in conformity to his directions. In debiting his account it is not entitled to charge any payments except those made at the time when, to the person whom, and for the amount authorized by him. (
Wheeler
v.
Guild,
The liability of the banker, however, for a loss occasioned by neglect to exercise such vigilance, is confined to the maker alone. So far as other parties, through whose hands an altered check passes, are concerned, they have the same opportunity for detecting fraudulent alterations in the body of the check that the" banker has, and as to them, after payment, he is responsible only for the genuineness of the maker’s signature.
(Bank of Commerce
v.
Union Bank,
3 N.
Y.
230.) The principle stated in
White
v.
Continental Bank
(
The questions arising on such paper between drawee and drawer, however, always relate to what the one has authorized the other to do. They are not questions of negligence or of liability of parties upon commercial paper, but are those of authority solely. In this view it has been held when the check of a depositor was fraudulently altered from £3 to £200 after issue, and was paid by the bank at the latter amount, that the bank was entitled to charge only £3 to the depositor. Hall v. Fuller, 5 B. & C. 750. Bailey, J., said: “ If the banker unfortunately pays money belonging to the customer upon an order not genuine he must suffer, and to justify the payment he must show that the order was genuine, not in the signature only, but in every respect.”
The question of negligence cannot arise unless the depositor has, in drawing his check, left blanks unfilled, or by some affirmative act of negligence has facilitated the commission of a fraud by those into whose hands the check may come. (Young v. Grote, 4 Bing. 253; Dan. on Neg. Inst., § 1659.)
The theory that a party who makes and issues commercial paper, properly and carefully drawn, to express the liability which he intends to assume, is chargeable with negligence on account of the criminal act of another in altering it after its issue, would render him a warrantor against such acts and is repugnant to justice and reason.
In the present ease the plaintiff, on. the 20th of April, intending to be absent from his place of business for a few days? drew his check on the defendant, dated April 22, for $700, payable to his clerk, one Morgan, for the purpose of enabling him to obtain funds to pay wages becoming due to the drawer’s employes on the 22d. The check was left in the drawer’s check-book in his safe, with directions to Morgan, who had a key to the safe, to take the check on the 22d, draw the money and deliver it to his foreman to pay out to the employes in case the drawer did not return before noon upon that day. *56 The plaintiff did not return until after the time appointed, but on the 21st Morgan took the check and having altered the date to the 21st drew the money from the bank and absconded with the funds on the same day.
The check as drawn conferred no authority on the bank to pay it before its date.
(Godin
v.
Bank of Commonwealth,
Whenever the legal rights and liabilities, of a maker of commercial paper, are changed in a material respect by a fraudulent alteration of the obligation, such alteration vitiates the instrument, and the question whether it is material or not is one of law for the court. (2 Pars, on Motes and Bills, 582 ; 2 Pars, on Cont. 721; Dan. on Neg. Inst., §§ 1373, 1658;
Booth
v. Powers,
The absence of a date upon a negotiable instrument at its inception, or the fact that it is post or antedated, may not be material upon the question of its validity ; but when a date has been once inserted, and its time of payment has been thus fixed, such date is material and cannot be altered without the consent of the maker. (Dan. on Neg. Inst., 1376-77, 15-77-78; *57 2 Pars, on Notes, 552; Stephens v. Graham, 7 Serg. & R. 505.)
In the present case the check was never a valid instrument for any purpose, because it had become vitiated by a fraudulent alteration before it had any inception. It never came into the hands of any person, entitled to enforce it for any amount, or for any purpose, as against its maker. The whole object of the check had failed, before the legally appointed time for its payment, by reason of the unauthorized act of the bank in paying it, and thereby enabling the fraudulent holder to abscond with its proceeds. The check was never, therefore, a legal obligation enforceable against the drawer by its owner and holder.
It is claimed by the appellant that even if it be held that the defendant had no authority to pay this check on the 21st, that having become its owner and having kept it until after its true date, it was then entitled to charge it to the plaintiff, because it then coresponded not only as to amount, but as to the time of payment, with the obligation which the plaintiff intended to, and did, in fact, assume. There is some authority for the proposition that a banker after payment, has the right to hold an altered check for its correct amount as against the maker.
(Hall
v. Fuller,
supra
;
Susquehanna Bk.
v.
Loomis,
The transfer of the check by Morgan, under the circumstances, could not, therefore, carry to another a right founded either upon the vitiated check, or upon an original liability which never in fact existed.
When a negotiable instrument constitutes in itself the only obligation existing against its maker, all remedies thereon are lost by its fraudulent alteration, and the law refuses to create a new contract to supply the place of the one destroyed.
(Booth
v. Powers,
It follows that there is no principle upon which the defendant has the right to charge the check in question for any amount to the plaintiff.
The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.
