47 Pa. Super. 560 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1911
Opinion by
This case was commenced by the plaintiff filing a bill in equity to No. 554, December Term, 1908, in common pleas No. 1 of Allegheny county. A demurrer to the bill was sustained on the ground that the plaintiff had an adequate remedy at law. On motion of plaintiff’s counsel the case was subsequently certified to the law side of the court and there set down for trial as a case at law, against said Christopher Magee, Jr., the bill to stand as a statement of the plaintiff’s cause of action and the defendant again filed a demurrer which the court overruled and fifteen days was allowed for the defendant to file an affidavit of defense. See Act of June 7, 1907, P. L. 440.
On April 6, 1910, the defendant filed an affidavit of defense and on rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense the court discharged the rule to which order the plaintiff excepted and a bill was sealed.
The assignments of error only raise the question of the error of the court in discharging said rule.
It is conceded that Christopher Magee, Jr., defendant, was and is an attorney at law and that he brought an action
The plaintiff was an Italian woman who could neither speak nor write the English language, and in her interviews with the defendant she communicated with him through two persons, Domenico Forcucci and his wife, Mary, they acting as interpreters for the plaintiff. Considering the plaintiff’s averments in her declaration and the affidavit of defense, the conceded agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant, made through the interpreters, was that the defendant should, when he received the money, send it to her at such address as should thereafter be furnished him by the Forcucci’s, in the care of the latter.
On or about January, 1908, defendant made his check on his said banker in Pittsburg, for $800, payable to the order of Fiori Falconi, and mailed the same to her at Chicago, Illinois, in care of Domenico Forcucci, at the latter’s proper address. It is practically conceded that the latter and his wife, or one of them, procured an Italian woman to impersonate Fiori Falconi, plaintiff, and one
But the learned court below, in discharging the rule, says: “The relation between the plaintiff and defendant is not that of'debtor and creditor but it is that of attorney
Again, there is nothing in this record to show that Forcucci was the agent of the plaintiff to such an extent that he could open her letter, take out the check and have it indorsed and procure the money thereon. Is'it possible that when a client directs his attorney to send his mail in care of a person named, that the latter becomes the agent of the former so that he can open the letters and use their contents? Where is the law to be found which imputes negligence to a man for having his letters directed to him in care of a person named? We are of opinion that the affidavit of defense is entirely insufficient to prevent judg
First, as to the agency of. Forcucci: The defendant, in his affidavit of defense, avers: “That the said plaintiff, through the said Forcucci, her agent as aforesaid, informed the defendant that she was about to leave the vicinity of Pittsburg in company with said Forcucci and his family, and that when said settlement was completed the defendant should forward the money accruing to her out of said settlement to such a place and address as he, the said Forcucci, acting as her agent, should direct the defendant by letter.” It is quite clear from defendant’s own version of. it in his affidavit of defense that Forcucci only had authority to direct that plaintiff’s letter should be sent to her in his care. Anything done by Forcucci beyond the mere receipt and care of her letter was entirely beyond the scope of the agency. The Negotiable Instrument Act of May 16,1901, P. L. 194, contains a pertinent provision, sec. 23, in regard to forged signatures: “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.”
How can the plaintiff be . bound by the unauthorized action of her agent, acting clearly outside the scope of his employment? In Welsh v. German American Bank, 73 N. Y. 424, the plaintiff’s own bookkeeper could not. bind him by presenting checks for his signature and then forging the payee’s nanie. And in our own case of Houser v. National Bank of Chambersburg, 27 Pa. Superior Ct. 613, the plaintiff was not precluded by the acts of his own attorney in forging the payee’s name on the check. In that case there is an interesting opinion by President Judge Rice which we think sustains the position we have
“The reason of the rule that when a bank pays a depositor’s check on a forged indorsement or raised check, it is held to have paid it out of its own funds and cannot charge the payment to the depositor’s account, is that there is an implied agreement by the bank with its depositor that it will not disburse the money standing to his credit except on his order.”
In United Security, Life Ins. and Trust Co. v. Bank, 185 Pa. 586, we find the law, which we think controls the present case, very clearly stated in an opinion by Mr. Justice Mitchell. We quote from the syllabus of that case. “The rule that knowledge or notice of fraud to an agent in the course of his employment is notice to the principal does not apply where the agent, through notice to whom knowledge is to be imputed to the plaintiff, is himself the author of the fraud.
“It is the duty of an agent to communicate all material information to his principal, and the presumption is that he has done so; but no agent who is acting in his own antagonistic interest, or has committed a fraud by which his principal is affected, can be presumed to have disclosed such fraud.
“A banker’s contract with his depositor is to pay the latter’s checks only to the payee, or one who claims through a genuine indorsement. . . .
“A depositor, on return by the bank of its paid checks, is not bound to examine them to see that the indorsements are correct.”
The above case seems to us to control the pivotal ques
While it is true that plaintiff’s own fault or negligence may be a good defense on the part of a bank for paying a forged check, we can discover in the present record no evidence of fault or negligence on the part of the plaintiff. Her course appears to have been above question and all of the trouble was caused by the criminal acts of the Forcuccis and their confederates. In our opinion, the decisions are conclusive that their criminal acts cannot be imputed to this plaintiff. She was not bound to infer that her agent appointed for a very simple and limited purpose, to wit, to simply receive and care for her letters, would turn forger and rob her of the contents of the letters. We have searched the record in vain for any act of the plaintiff which will estop her from looking to the defendant for her money. We believe that the law of Pennsylvania, as interpreted by the courts, entitles this plaintiff, upon the declaration and the affidavit of defense, to a judgment for the full amount of her claim, with interest and costs.
The assignments of error are sustained, the judgment is reversed, the rule is reinstated and the court below is directed to make it absolute and grant judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendant for the full amount of her claim, with interest and costs, unless sufficient equitable or legal reasons shall hereafter appear why the same should not be done.
Rice, P. J., and Head, J., dissent.