255 P. 907 | Idaho | 1927
George F. Barnes, now deceased, being indebted to appellant in the sum of $4,500, evidenced *170 by two promissory notes, delivered to it the promissory note of another, payable to Emma Barnes, as security for the payment of the indebtedness. This action was instituted for the purpose of effecting a foreclosure of the collateral note which bore the forged indorsement of Emma Barnes. The note had been entrusted by the mother, Emma Barnes, to her son, George Barnes, to be placed in a vault for safekeeping. The court found that "Emma Barnes in entrusting said note to her son was not guilty of such negligence" as would preclude her from setting up the forged indorsement, and entered judgment for defendants.
Appellant contends that Emma Barnes is precluded from setting up the forgery, as a defense, because she negligently entrusted the note to the custody of her son who, she knew, had been, at one time, convicted of the crime of forgery.
The most that can be charged against the mother is that she was careless in the custody of the note. This alone is not sufficient to preclude her from setting up the forgery, unless her carelessness was the cause of the bank's taking the note as security. (21 C. J. 1172; 3 R. C. L. 1006; Nash v. Moore,
Emma Barnes was not a depositor of the bank, and had no business of any character with it. It does not appear that she had any knowledge that her son was indebted to the bank, or that there was any occasion for him to use the note for his own purposes. The note was delivered to him to be placed in a vault for safekeeping, and was not delivered to be dealt with or transferred. Its delivery, for this purpose, involved no representation to the public *171 or to the bank that any transfer of the note was intended, invited or authorized. The transfer of the note by George Barnes could only be accomplished by means of the commission of a crime.
At the time the bank acquired the note George Barnes was about forty-five years of age. The evidence does not disclose when he was convicted of forgery. It had probably been several years previous, for he had lived in the community of Wilder nine years, long enough to establish such a credit at the bank as to borrow a large sum of money on his unsecured note. For all we know the crime for which he was convicted may have been committed when he was a young man, and he may have so lived since that time as to convince his mother that he had wholly reformed. Her entrustment of the note to him tends to show that she believed him honest and trustworthy. As stated inPeople's Trust Co. v. Smith, supra:
"Faith in the honesty of trusted friends and relatives is seldom negligence. If circumstances may make it negligence, this case does not show them. We may say with Bovill, Ch. J., in Societe Generale v. Metropolitan Bank, 27 L. T. 849; 'Persons are not to be supposed to commit forgery, and the protection against such a crime is the law of the land, not the vigilance of parties in excluding all possibility of committing it.' "
Conceding that the holder of an unindorsed note owes a duty not to commit its custody to one whom he knows, or has reason to believe, will use it for a dishonest purpose, it surely does not follow that one, who has committed a crime, may not reform and again become worthy of trust and confidence; that such a one, by years of upright living, may not again attain that position in society as to justify his friends and the business world in regarding him as though he had never been convicted of a crime.
"A party is under no obligation to the rest of the world, however it may be for his own protection, to suspect a clerk or other person appointed to represent him in his business, even though known to have been guilty of misconduct *172 on previous occasions." (Spencer Bower on Estoppel by Representation, sec. 91.)
See, also, Lewes Sanitary Steam Laundry Co. v. Barclay Co., 95 L. T. (Eng.) 444, 11 Com. Cas. 255, 22 T. L. R. 737; PatentSafety Gun Cotton Co. v. Wilson, 49 L. J. (Eng.) (Q. B.) 713, C. A.; First Nat. Bank of Montgomery v. Montgomery Cotton Co.,
The bank took the note on the forged indorsement and the representations of George Barnes that he was the owner. It made no inquiry of Emma Barnes and she made no representations. There is no question but that it was the intervening forgery, and not the carelessness of Emma Barnes in entrusting the note to her son, that caused the bank to take the note; that the forgery, and not her carelessness, was the proximate cause of the loss. There is, therefore, no occasion for the application of the rule, invoked by the bank, that, where one of two innocent persons must suffer loss by reason of the wrongful act of another, he must suffer who placed it in the power of such third person to do the wrong. This rule is not applicable to cases where the wrong is accomplished through a criminal act. In such case, the crime, and not the negligence, is the proximate cause of the loss. (21 C. J. 1172, and cases cited.)
Judgment affirmed. Costs to respondent.
Budge, Givens, Taylor and T. Bailey Lee, JJ., concur. *173