106 Va. 347 | Va. | 1907
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The electric company, plaintiff, kept an active account with the defendant bank, and this action is to recover a balance of deposit alleged to be due it from the bank. This alleged balance was brought about by the bank having paid a number of checks, the amount of which had been raised after being signed by the plaintiff.
It appears that the plaintiff had in its employ a clerk named Woodall. Once a week the electric company issued its check for a sum sufficient to cover its weekly pay-roll payable “to the order of pay-roll.” Its clerk and cashier, Woodall, presented, these checks to the bank for payment. In July, 1903, the plaintiff discovered that Woodall had since December, 1901, a period of about eighteen months’ been defrauding it by raising twenty-six of these pay-roll checks by the sum of one hundred dollars each. Upon this discovery Woodall became a fugitive from justice and has not since been apprehended. The bank resisted a demand upon it for the amount of these fraudulent alterations, upon the ground that the account of the electric company with it had been settled monthly during the eighteen months, its pass book written up and the fraudulently altered checks returned with the book, and no report of the fraud had ever been made to the bank. Inquiry developed the fact that, after being returned, Woodall had destroyed all of the altered cheeks
That hanks, in their relations with depositors, are held to a rigid responsibility is a proposition established by practically an unbroken current of authority. National Bank v. Nolting, 94 Va. 263, 26 S. E. 826. Some of the earlier cases seemed to go to the extent of holding that a depositor was under no duty to the hank to examine periodical statements of his account, with the vouchers, and give notice to the hank within a reasonable time of errors discovered therein. Modern adjudications, however, of the highest authority, do not sanction this broad proposition. Bank v. Morgan, 117 U. S. 96, 29 L. Ed. 811, 6 Sup. Ct. 657; Bank of Birmingham v. Allen, 100 Ala. 476, 14 South. 335, 27 L. R. A. 426, 46 Am. St. Rep. 80; Dana v. Bank, 132 Mass. 156; Myers v. Bank, 193 Pa. St. 1, 44 Atl. 74; Scanlon-Gipson Co. v. Bank, 90 Minn. 478, 97 N. W. 380.
Mr. Justice Harlan, delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court in Bank v. Morgan, supra, says: “The court below, as shown by its opinion, proceeded upon the ground that Cooper was under no duty whatever to the bank to examine his pass book and the vouchers returned with it, in order to ascertain whether his account was correctly kept. For this reason, it is contended, the bank, even if without fault itself, has no legal cause of complaint, although it may have been misled to its prejudice by the failure of the depositor to give timely notice of the fact, which, by ordinary diligence, he might have discovered on the occasion of the several balancings of the account that the checks in question had been fraudulently altered. This view of his obligations does not seem to the court to be consistent with the relations of the parties, or with principles of justice.” This learned jurist further says: “While it is true that the relation of a bank and its depositor is one simply of debtor and creditor, and that the depositor is not chargeable with any payments except such as are made in conformity with his orders, it is within common knowledge that the object of a pass book is to inform the depositor from time to time of the condition of his account as it appears upon the books of the bank. It not only enables him to discover errors to his prejudice, but supplies evidence in his favor in the event of litigation or dispute with the bank. In this way it operates to protect him against the carelessness or fraud of the bank. The sending of his pass book to be written up and returned with the vouchers is, therefore, in effect, a demand to know what the bank claims to be the state of his account. And the return of the book, with the vouchers, is the answer to that demand, and, in effect, imports a request by the bank that the depositor will, in proper time, examine the account so rendered, and either sanction or repudiate it. . . . The depositor cannot, therefore, without injustice to the bank, omit all examination of
In Dana v. Bank, supra, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts says: “The plaintiffs owed to the defendant the duty of exercising due diligence to give it information that the payment was unauthorized; and this included not only due diligence in giving notice after knowledge of the forgery, but also due diligence in discovering it. If the plaintiffs knew of the mistake, or if they had that notice of it which consists in the knowledge of facts which, by the exercise of due care and diligence will disclose it, they failed in their duty; and adoption of the check and ratification of the payment will be implied. They cannot now require the defendant to correct a mistake to its injury, from which it might have protected itself but for their negligence.”
The other cases cited are equally conclusive upon the proposition that the depositor is under obligations to the bank to examine within a reasonable time and with ordinary care the account rendered in the pass book and the vouchers returned by the bank to the depositor, and to report any errors discovered without unreasonable delay. Hpon this point the conclusion reached by those cases is, in our judgment, both reasonable and just, and the principle announced should be applied in determining the rights of the parties in the present controversy.
“In their relations with depositors, banks are held, as they ought to be, to rigid responsibility. But the principles governing those relations ought not to be so extended as to invite or encourage such negligence by depositors in their examination of their bank accounts as is inconsistent with the relations of the parties or with those established rules and usages sanctioned by business men of ordinary prudence and sagacity, which are or ought to be known to depositors. We must not be understood as holding that the examination by the depositor of his ae
“Of course if the defendant’s officers, before paying the altered checks, could by proper care and skill have detected the forgeries, then it cannot receive a credit for the amount of those checks, even if the depositor omitted all examination of his account.” Bank v. Morgan, supra.
In the case at bar there was evidence tending to show that the plaintiff did not examine its pass book and the vouchers returned therewith with reasonable care and diligence; and did not exercise reasonable care and diligence in supervising the
We are of opinion that the Circuit Court erred in refusing the following instruction asked for by the defendant:
No. 3. “The jury are instructed that the plaintiff is charged with such knowledge as Woodall had in making the examination of its bank book and the inspection of returned checks, and comparison of the same with the stubbs of plaintiff’s check book.”
As already seen, such examination of its pass book as was made by the plaintiff was together with Woodall as its agent. Woodall had, at the time these examinations were made, full knowledge of the forgeries, as he had himself been guilty of the wrongdoing.
In the commission of a forgery the employee is not the agent of his principal, and his knowledge cannot be imputed to the principal. But after the forged checks have been paid and returned to the depositor as vouchers, with the bank account written up and balanced according to the usual business methods, if the depositor assigns the duty of examining such vouchers and account to this same clerk, who has had an opportunity of committing a fraud and has done so, then such employee in the discharge of this duty is the agent of the depositor, and such depositor is chargeable with his agent’s knowledge of the fraud. Dana v. Bank, supra; Bank of Birmingham v. Allen, supra; Myers v. Bank, supra; Critten v. Chemical Bank, 171 N. Y. 219, 63 N. E. 969, 57 L. R. A. 529; Bank v. Morgan, supra.
In Bank of Birmingham v. Allen, supra, it is said: “The evidence shows that on each occasion after the return of the pass book and checks, the plaintiff, with the assistance of his clerk, Tomlin, the forger, examined the account as rendered and the checks or vouchers. We may' conclude the evidence shows that the plaintiff himself personally was without fault in
In Critten v. Chemical Bank, supra, it is said: “Of course the knowledge of the forgeries that Davis possessed, from the fact that he was the forger, was in no respect to be attributed to the plaintiffs. But we see no reason why they were not chargeable with such information as a comparison of the checks with the check book would have imparted to an innocent party previously unaware of the forgeries. The plaintiffs’ position may be no worse because they intrusted the examination to Davis instead of to a third person; but they can be no better off on that account. If they would have been chargeable with the negligence or failure of another clerk in the verification of the accounts, they must be equally so for the default of Davis, so far as the examination itself would have disclosed the facts.”
In the case of Myers v. Bank, supra, it is said: “While the plaintiff was not chargeable with the knowledge of his clerk that the latter had committed the forgery, he was clearly responsible for the acts and omissions of his clerk in the course of the duties with which he was entrusted—viz: to receive the checks from the banlc, take them to his employer’s office, compare the amounts thereof with the amounts in the bank book, ■check book, etc.”
In the case at bar the instruction under consideration was
We are inclined to think there was no error in the action of the Circuit Court with respect to other instructions, but as its .judgment must be reversed for the error pointed out in refusing instruction 3STo. 3, asked for by the defendant, we will not comment upon the other instructions objected to, but will leave the court, upon the evidence adduced at another trial, to give such instructions as to it may seem proper in the light of the principles herein announced.
The judgment complained of must be reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside, and the case remanded for further proceedings not in conflict with the views herein expressed.
Reversed.