7 Ind. App. 685 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1893
This action was brought in the court below by appellee against appellant, to recover judgment on three certificates of deposit, issued by appellant to the appellee, the first, dated July 8, 1888, for $150; the second, dated September 4, 1889, for $50, and the third, dated May 18, 1889, for $60.
, The complaint contains three paragraphs, each certificate of deposit forming the foundation for the separate paragraphs. The facts set out in each paragraph are substantially the same, stating that appellee deposited with appellant, a duly and legally incorporated bank, the respective sums of money above set out; that on the 10th day of July, 1890, the certificates were, without fault of appellee, stolen, and his name forged by way of indorsement on each of said certificates, by some one to him
The only errors relied on are that the court erred in overruling demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint.
The objections to the complaint, as we understand counsel for appellant, may be summarized as follows:
1. That the complaint does not state that the appellee notified the appellant, or that the appellant had notice from any other source, of the fact that the certificates had been stolen, before the payment of the certificates by the appellant. Further, that the complaint does not state the date of the notice to the appellant of the fact that the certificates had been stolen, nor how long it was after the certificates had been stolen that the appellee notified the appellant of the fact.
2. That on the facts stated, the appellant is not liable, for the reason that, as a matter of law, it had the right to rely upon the indorsement of the bank who first cashed the certificates, and the subsequent indorsements of the
3. That this action should have been brought against the bank that first cashed the certificates on the forged indorsement, and not against appellant.
4. That the complaint does not show due diligence on the part of the appellee in making demand for payment of the certificates after he became cognizant of the fact that they had been stolen from him.
On careful examination and mature consideration, we have reached the conclusion that each paragraph of the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
The appellee was a creditor of the appellant bank. The appellant was, under the contract, required to pay to him, or to his order, the several amounts specified, on the surrender of the certificates. On the facts pleaded, and which the demurrer admits to be true, appellee was not in any respect in fault. He was in no manner responsible for the action of appellant in paying the amounts evidenced by the certificates on the forged indorsement to some other bank or person. The loss of the certificates was occasioned by no act of negligence on his part. Immediately, on the discovery of the theft, he gave appellant notice, in the speediest possible manner, of the fact. He did nothing, so far as appears, that he ought not to have done, and he did not fail to do anything that he. ought to have done. In making the payments on such forged indorsements, appellant parted with its own money, and not with appellee’s money, and the loss thereon was its own, and should not be transferred to appellee, under the circumstances!
If it appeared reasonably probable that but for. some negligence on the part of appellee, the appellant could have in some manner protected itself, a different ques
If the certificates in question had originated, not with the appellant, but had come to the appellant for the first time for its acceptance, and the appellee stood in the position, not of the original payee of the certificates, but the payee, holder or presenter of a forged paper, and prior to the payment thereof by the bank had been guilty of negligence contributing to induce such payment, then, under such circumstances, the rule ehunciated in the authorities cited by counsel for appellant could properly be invoked. But here, the appellee was not guilty of any negligence contributing to induce the appellant to pay on a forged indorsement. He in no manner, either by active or tacit consent, permitted the papers to leave his possession, or to receive the indorsement of the banks, which the appellant insists it had the right to rely upon. In other words, the relation of the parties and the obligation of appellant to appellee could not be changed
The appellant has been imposed upon. It paid the certificates of deposit, in the usual course of banking business,-in doing whiqh the bank no doubt acted in good faith, in the honest belief that appellee had indorsed the certificates. But how can this act, on the part of appellant, affect the rights of appellee under the circumstances stated in the complaint?
As we have before stated, the contention that such payment should be charged against the deposit account of appellee, is not sustained either by reason or authority. It may be conceded to be true that this is, as insisted by counsel for appellant, an important question affecting every bank doing business, but a bank is not authorized, as against a customer and depositor, to pay the money due such depositor or creditor on certificates of deposit duly issued by it, which have been stolen and bear the forged indorsement of the payee, in reliance solely on the indorsements of other banks that have prior thereto accepted and paid the certificates. What the rights may be as between the respective banks and indorsee in such cases we are not required to consider or determine. It is sufficient to say that the debt owing the payee of the certificates has not been discharged by such payment. ,
Judgment affirmed, at costs of appellant.