91 Ky. 560 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1891
delivered the opinion oe the covrt.
The appellees drew their draft on Kenner, payable five days after sight, at Rogerville, Tenn., and placed it in the hands of the bank in Covington for collection; that bank sent the draft to a bank in Louisville ; that bank sent it to the appellant; the appellant sent it to the Knoxville Bank, and, on the second of September, that bank advised the appellant that the amount of the draft was credited to it subject to payment. The Knoxville Bank then forwarded the draft to the bank at Rogerville. That bank duly presented it to Kenner for acceptance, which was refused. The bank at Rogerville did not immediately give notice that acceptance had been refused, but kept the draft five days, the time fixed in the draft for its payment,.
It is well settled that money paid under a material mistake of fact may be recovered back, although there was negligence on the part of the person making the payment. (Major v. Major, 63 N. Y., 457.) If a negligent failure to ascertain the true state of case before payment constituted a bar to the right to recover back the payment, “it would be but rare that money paid by mistake could ever be recovered back.” The rule rests upon the principle that one person shall not be enriched by another’s payment to him of money under a mistake as to his legal or moral obligation to pay it. But this rule is subject to the qualification
The subsequent insolvency of Kenner not being established, the fact that the appellees gave Kenner a receipt against the debt does not bring their case within the rule stated, for the receipt, at best, creates only a presumption of payment, which may be rebutted as, well as any other presumption. And the fact furnished by Kenner himself, to wit: His refusal to accept the draft and to pay it, and the fact as to how the appellees received the money, all of which are easily obtained, almost conclusively establish the fact that the receipt was wrongfully obtained, which fact places the parties in statu quo. It can not be said that the position of the appellees toward their debtor has been changed to their prejudice.
The judgment is reversed, with direction for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.