4 N.Y.S. 627 | The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo | 1889
The plaintiff had been a depositor with defendant. A thief stole the plaintiff’s pass-book, and presented it and a check, with the forged signature of plaintiff upon it, for the sum of $175 to the hank. The bank paid the money upon the check. The action was to recover this amount. The defendant did not dispute the existence of these facts. When the plaintiff opened his account with the bank, he wrote his name upon the signature book of the bank. A clerk of the bank testified that he paid the money after comparing the signature upon the book with the signature upon the check. The court instructed the jury that the plaintiff, to recover, should show to their satisfaction that the servant of the bank had been negligent in making the comparison between the signatures; that if there were dissimilarities, the jury should say whether they were such as would lead a person of reasonable prudence to refuse to act upon the check as genuine, .and whether the bank’s servant could, by ordinary observation, have appreciated the differences. There was no objection to the charge of the court. But the learned counsel on the trial, and by a motion for a new trial, took the position that the preponderance of testimony was that there was no negligence on the part of the bank. The exhibits marked in the ease consisted of the genuine signature on the book and the forged check. Photographs of these are in the appeal-book. Other exhibits are photographic copies of genuine signatures of plaintiff. The learned counsel for the defendant maintains that the preponderance of
Trtjax, J., concurred.