22 Or. 202 | Or. | 1892
This is an action to recover eight hundred dollars on a certificate of deposit issued by defendants as bankers on the thirteenth day of April, 1891, in the name of Saverio Fiore, which, as plaintiff claims, defendants afterwards wrongfully paid and cancelled. There was á judgment below for plaintiff, from which defendants appeal. The facts are these: On April 13,1891, plaintiff, who is an Italian, and can neither read nor write, and only speak the English language with difficulty, having on deposit with the Portland Savings Bank the sum of eight hundred dollars, was advised by a fellow countryman named Antone to withdraw his money from this bank and deposit it with
The teller testifies, that on the day named, the man the plaintiff calls Antone and plaintiff, both of whom were entire strangers to him, came to the bank together. Antone «had possession of and delivered to him the money, saying he wanted to desposit it for three months, giving his name as Saverio Fiore, and wrote this name in the signature book, which is used as a means of identifying depositors. The certificate of deposit described in the complaint was thereupon issued and delivered to Antone, and the two men left the bank together. Two or three hours after-wards, Antone, with whom he had all the dealings, and whom he supposed owned the money, returned, saying he
It is also in evidence, and about which there is no dispute, that it is the general custom of banks in the city of Portland, where a person unknown to the bank brings money for deposit, gives a name as his own, and asks for a certificate of deposit, there being no suspicious circumstances, to issue to him such certificate in the name given, upon his signing the signature book, if he can write, without further inquiry, and to pay the money upon the return of the certificate endorsed with the name as written in the signature book; but where the depositor cannot write, it is the custom to ask certain questions, the answers to which are entered in the signature book as a means of identification.
The errors relied on here are in the giving and refusal. of certain instructions by the trial court. The defendants requested the court to instruct the jury among other things as follows: 1. If the jury find from the evidence that the money was delivered to the receiving teller by a person other than the plaintiff, and that he deposited the same and signed the signature book, and thereafter returned the certificate of deposit properly endorsed, and received the money therefor, and the bank or the paying teller had no
Each of these instructions being refused, an exception was duly noted and the ruling of the court thereon is now assigned as error. These instructions were designed to state the law as applicable to the facts as contended for by defendants, and we think should have been given. If, as defendants claim, the money in dispute was deposited in the bank by Antone, who represented his name to be Saverio Fiore, which the bank supposed to be true, and the certificate of deposit was issued and delivered to him intending thereby to make it payable to the person to whom delivered, and that he wrote the name Saverio Fiore in the signature book of the bank as and for his genuine signature, and afterwards, upon return of the certificate endorsed with the name appearing in the signature book, the money was paid
The question in this case is, with whom did the bank deal, and who was intended as the payee of the certificate? The name is only one means of determining that fact. The name used in a transaction is only one means of identifying the person, and is often not the safest and best. As was said in Robertson v. Coleman, supra, “ The name of a person is the verbal designation by which he is known, but the visible presence of the person affords surer means of identifying him than his name.” This is not a case where a person known to the bank represented a third person; but according to the defendants’ contention is one in which the bank was dealing with a person under the
There is ¡.yet another reason why it seems to us these questions should have been submitted to the jury. If, as defendants contend, the money was in the possession of Antone, and by him deposited in the bank, it was with the knowledge and consent of plaintiff, who was present at the time, and who thereby, either negligently or intentionally, placed Antone in a position to perpetrate a fraud upon the bank; and in such case the loss should fall upon the one who has been the occasion of it. Allowing that plaintiff intended no wrong by suffering Antone to deal with the money as his own, and that neither he nor the bank was at fault in the matter, the loss should fall upon him, because by his act he facilitated the fraud. (Stout v. Benoist, 39 Mo. 277; 90 Am. Dec. 466.)
In the language of Lord Mansfield, in Price v. Neal, 3 Burrows, 1357, “It is a misfortune which has happened without the defendant’s fault or neglect. If there were no neglect in the plaintiff, yet there is no reason to throw off the loss from one innocent man upon another innocent man. But in this case, if there were any fault or negligence of any one, it certainly was in the plaintiff and not in the defendant.”
That portion of the instruction of the court, that the man who controlled the money, whether he was accompanied by other persons or not when he went into the bank, and who negotiated with and delivered the money to the teller, might properly be deemed by the bank the owner of the money, and if the bank people, notwithstanding this fact, accepted and acted upon the statements of Antone, it was a question for the jury, whether in so doing they exercised reasonable diligence, was, we think, when viewed in the light of the entire charge and plaintiff’s
At the argument we were urged to affirm the judgment in this case for informality in the bill of exceptions, in stating all the evidence given on the trial as extended from the stenographer’s notes in place of only so much thereof as is necessary to explain the exceptions taken; but as the errors relied on are in the giving and refusal of certain instructions, which are so stated in the bill of exceptions as to be easily understood, we do not feel justified in refusing to examine them, but cannot refrain from condemning the practice which seems to be frequently adopted, of making a part of the bill of exceptions all the evidence given on the trial when no questions are presented for review calling for an examination of the evidence. This practice is in disregard of the plain provisions of the statute, Code, § 232, as well as all rules governing the preparation of bills of exceptions. (State v. Brake, 11 Or. 396; Janeway v. Holston, 19 Or. 97.) It is unnecessarily expensive to litigants, and imposes the arduous task upon this court of examining a vast amount of irrelevant and immaterial matters. The bill of exceptions in this case contains of evidence over sixty type-written pages, while the facts upon which the questions sought to be <> y-ved are founded could have been more clearly end intelligibly stated in two or three. Such apractic cif _,oi fo I:»;, encouraged; and in taxing costs in thlj eccii the terk
The judgment is reversed and a new trial ordered.