267 P. 560 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1928
A demurrer to the original complaint was sustained and plaintiff filed an amended complaint. To this pleading a demurrer was likewise interposed. It was sustained by the court without leave to amend, and judgment went for defendant. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment.
There is no contention that plaintiff desired further to amend, and the briefs respond to the one question only: Does the complaint state a cause of action? This is the sole question to be considered here.
[1] The facts as alleged in the complaint are concisely put in appellant's opening brief as follows: "The complaint alleges that Lynch drew his check to the order of Vanderbilt and gave it to Allen, who had no authority to receive or endorse the same; that the drawee bank accepted and certified the check; that Allen thereupon forged the payee's name and passed the check to Cohen; that Cohen collected the amount thereof from the defendant bank; and defendant in turn collected the amount from the drawee bank; that the payee has demanded the amount from defendant, who refuses to pay." Plaintiff is the assignee of the payee.
It seems that the exact point here presented has never been presented to the reviewing courts of this state, but it has been very thoroughly presented to the courts of last resort of several sister states, and the great weight of authority *710 unquestionably is that the facts alleged in this case do state a cause of action.
The supreme court of Colorado had a case before it in all essentials the same as the instant one, and the opinion so well expresses the prevailing view that we shall quote therefrom extensively:
"In this case the payee in the checks seeks to recover from another bank who accepted and paid these checks upon forged endorsements, and thereafter collected the amounts upon the checks from the bank upon which they were drawn. In such case the rule in Tennessee, New Jersey, Ohio, New York and Indiana is that the payee can recover from a bank which accepted them from the forger and collected them from the drawee bank, as for moneys had and received, even though it has fully paid over and accounted for the same to the forger without knowledge or suspicion of the forgery. Farmer v. People's Bank,
The leading case taking the opposite view is Tibby, etc., v.Farmers etc. Bank,
Respondent claims that the decisions cited by appellant were all prior to the adoption of the uniform negotiable instruments laws and comments upon the old case of Talbot v. Bank ofRochester, 1 Hill (N.Y.), 295, referred to and quoted from in several of the later decisions. He then proceeds to argue that the weight of authority, and particularly since the adoption of the uniform negotiable instruments laws is that the holder of a check cannot maintain an action against the drawee bank unless and until the check has been accepted by the drawee bank. For the sake of argument this may be conceded, but we do not appreciate the relevancy *712 of this statement to the instant set of facts, nor do we see any applied importance in the statement in the brief immediately following this argument: "and that the acts of an intermediary bank do not constitute an acceptance." We confess we do not see that any great importance should be given to the fact that the drawee bank certified the check. Appellant in his reply brief asserts that the Portland Cement Company case and the cases cited therein were decided since the adoption of the uniform negotiable instrument laws in those jurisdictions. Whether this is so or not, we do not believe the doctrine in those cases is contrary to any section thereof. We think the better reasoning is with the theory of ratification as stated in the Portland Cement Company case, and the great weight of authority being that way, we adopt it in this case.
Respondent further contends that the matter of ratification should be alleged, but that would be alleging a conclusion. There are allegations in the complaint as to the facts, and whether or not there was a ratification is to be drawn from the proof adduced upon those allegations.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to the trial court to overrule the demurrer to the amended complaint.
Works, P.J., and Craig, J., concurred.