by special assignment, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This - is an appeal from a ruling of the Superior Court of Baltimore City granting the appellee’s motion for summary judgment in a suit by the appellant alleging that the appellee improperly charged against the appellant’s account the amounts of six checks on which the payee’s indorsements were forged. All the facts upon which the motion for summary judgment was granted are set forth in the pleadings, and the correctness of those facts is not here questioned. No oral testimony was taken.
The nominal plaintiff-appellant (the Martin Company) is a depositor in the bank of the appellee (the Bank), in which it maintains a regular checking account. The suit involves a series of six checks, the first of which was dated in May of 1956, and the last in September of the same year, in the aggregate sum of $33,611.55. Each of the checks was made payable on its face to “The Nelson Company, 1110 Division Street, Baltimore 1, Maryland”, and each was mailed to The Nelson Company at the Division Street address. The checks were all indorsed by that company, deposited in the Second National Bank of Towson, and forwarded for collection through the First National Bank of Baltimore to the drawee, the Bank, which charged them to the Martin Company’s account.
In fact, all the checks here involved were intended by the Martin Company to be in payment for work performed for it by another company, also called The Nelson Company, which is located in the Standard Oil Building in Baltimore. The Martin Company had done business with each of the two concerns. In October, 1955, it had drawn a check in the amount of $1,184.00 to The Nelson Company of the Division Street address (The Nelson Company #1) against the Martin Company’s account with the Bank. This check was mailed to The Nelson Company #1, indorsed by it, and duly charged by the Bank against the Martin Company’s account. The series of six checks, beginning in May of 1956, involved in this litigation were intended by the Martin Company to be in payment for work done for it by The Nelson Company of *31 the Standard Oil Building (The Nelson Company #2), but through some unexplained error of the Martin Company, these checks bore on their face the address of The Nelson Company %l, which indorsed and cashed them. The last of the six checks was dated September 13, 1956. The Martin Company did not discover its error until October and notified the Bank early in that month. At that time all the six checks had been paid to The Nelson Company #1. With each of the checks sent by the Martin Company to The Nelson Company #1, there was enclosed an invoice showing that the check was in payment for work done for the Martin Company by The Nelson Company #2. The Martin Company had a contract of insurance issued by the American Mutual Liability Insurance Company, the equitable plaintiff-appellant, covering the loss herein complained of, and the insurance company paid the Martin Company the total sum of the checks. Two of the six checks were indorsed “The Nelson-Fox Co.”, with the name “Fox” blocked out, and were paid by the Bank in the same manner as the other checks.
The appellant contends that the duty of the drawee bank to a drawer depositor is contractual and absolute; that the assertion of forgery is precluded only if the drawer’s acts affirmatively induced or were the proximate cause of the drawee bank’s breach of contract, and that there are no such facts in the record. The Bank contends that on the facts the Martin Company is estopped from asserting the forged indorsements of the checks, and that, in any case, the equitable appellant, because in its policy of insurance it indemnified the Bank, has no right to maintain this suit.
Section 44 of Article 13 of the Code (1957) provides as follows:
“44. Forged signature; effect of.
“Where a signature is forged, or made without authority of the person whose signature it purports to be, it is wholly inoperative, and no right to retain the instrument, or to give a discharge therefor, or to enforce payment thereof against any party thereto, can be acquired through or under such signature, *32 unless the party, against whom it is sought to enforce such right, is precluded from setting up the forgery or want of authority.”
Under this section of the Code, which enacts Section 23 of the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law, the liability of a bank improperly charging forged items to an account of a depositor is absolute, unless the depositor is precluded from setting up the forgery. In
Union Trust Co. v. Soble,
As between the Martin Company and The Nelson Company #1, it is clear on the record before us that the latter knew when it indorsed the checks that it was not entitled to the proceeds thereof. The invoices mailed with the checks showed that the work for which the checks were given in payment had been done for the Martin Company by The Nelson Company %2. Section 44 of Article 13 of the Code is applicable whether the signatures were forged or whether they were made without the authority of the person whose signatures they purported to be. For the purpose of this decision, we assume, without deciding, that the signatures were forged. On this assumption, the question before us is whether the Martin Company is precluded, i. e., estopped, from asserting the forgery as a defense.
There are many cases construing and applying the preclusion provisions of the Negotiable Instruments Law here involved in actions by drawers against the drawee banks in which a variety of factual situations are involved. $ee Annotation 39 A. L. R. 2d 641. However, there are relatively few cases in which the question before the Court was whether the drawer of a check is precluded from recovering against the drawee bank which paid the check, notwithstanding a forged indorsement thereon, because of the drawer’s negli *33 gence in mailing the check to a person of the same name as the payee but at a different address.
In
Citizens’ Union National Bank v. Terrell,
In
Weisberger Co. v. Barberton Savings Bank,
*34
In several cases not directly involving the liability of the drawee bank to the drawer, there are dicta that the drawer is precluded from setting up the forgery of the indorsement of the check when it was mailed, not to the intended payee, but to another person of the same name, at a different address. See
Jones v. Citizens’ Nat. Bank of Okmulgee,
Unlike the case before us, in none of these cases, except in Fulton Nat. Bk. of Atlanta v. U. S., supra, which had distinguishing features, was the address of the erroneous payee set forth on the face of the check. Each of the checks here involved was made payable to “The Nelson Company, 1110 Division Street, Baltimore 1, Maryland”, which was the correct address of The Nelson Company #1. The checks, through the address which followed the name of the payee on the face of each instrument, identified The Nelson Company #1 as the person to whom payment was to be made and directed the drawee bank to make payments to The Nelson Company of that address. While the Martin Company, as a matter of internal decision, intended to make payment to The Nelson Company #2, the action which it took, insofar as the Bank was concerned, was directly contrary to that intent. That action was more than the negligence considered by the courts in the cases above referred to, for in each of those cases (other than in Fulton Nat. Bk. of Atlanta v. U. S., supra) the payee was designated only by name and not by address. In those cases it was only the mismailing of the checks which was erroneous; but in the present case the payee was designated by address, and the address was that of the person who, indorsed the checks and received the proceeds. In the cases above cited, inquiry by the drawee bank might have disclosed *35 that the person who indorsed the check, while bearing the same name as the intended payee, was not in fact the person whom the drawer intended to be paid. In this case, payment by the Bank to any person other than The Nelson Company %i would have been inconsistent and in conflict with the designation of the payee on the face of the checks. Each of the checks was indorsed by The Nelson Company #1 in the manner in which the check was made payable, that is, with the Division Street address included as part of the indorsement. A similar check to that company had been drawn by the Martin Company on the Bank in the preceding year, properly indorsed and duly charged to the Martin Company’s account. In honoring the indorsements made, the Bank was only complying with the direction given to it on the face of the checks themselves.
The facts here are far stronger on behalf of the drawee Bank than were the facts in Citizens’ Union National Bank v. Terrell, supra, and Weisberger Co. v. Barberton Savings Bank, supra. We do not decide whether we would follow the holding in those cases if the checks here involved had been made payable only to “The Nelson Company”, and mailed to the Division Street address, without that address having been incorporated on the face of the checks in the designation of the payee. The facts before us, in our judgment, preclude the setting up of the forgery, because of the identification of the payee by address as well as by name.
The appellant contends that even though the Martin Company were negligent, its negligence does not preclude recovery because the negligence was not the proximate cause of the loss, citing
Home Indemnity Co. v. State Bank of Fort Dodge,
The appellant further contends that the lower court should have submitted to a jury the question of whether or not, on the facts, the Martin Company’s conduct amounts to estoppel. It argues that in cashing the checks, the Bank may have relied, not upon the payee’s indorsements, but upon the subsequent guaranteeing indorsements of the forwarding banks, .and that if the jury should so find, the appellant would not be precluded from setting up the forgery. This contention would have weight were it not for the fact that the Martin Company, by the form it used in designating the payee, directed the Bank to pay that payee, The Nelson Company #1, .and that because of the specific direction, the _ Bank was ■obligated to pay the checks upon the indorsements.
It is true that estoppel is based upon reliance upon the con
*37
duct or silence of the person estopped.
Fitch v. Double “U” Sales Corp.,
The appellant refers to the fact that two of the checks which the Bank honored were indorsed “The Nelson-Fox Co.”, with the name “Fox” blocked out. It does not, and could not, contend that the rectified indorsement was improper. Inquiry by the Bank only would have disclosed that the designated payee was The Nelson Company, as the corrected indorsement set forth, that it was located at the address given on the face of the check, and that a previous check of the Martin Company to that payee had been indorsed and charged to the Martin Company’s account without question.
In view of our holding that the appellant is precluded from setting up the forgery because of the manner in which the checks were made out, it is unnecessary to consider the additional holding of the lower court that the appellant is also precluded by its failure promptly to call the forgeries to the *38 Bank’s attention. Nor, in view of our holding, do we reach the contention of the Bank, made both below and in the argument before us, that the insurance policy under which the appellant paid the Bank also indemnifies the Bank, and that therefore the appellant, by its contract of insurance, has deprived itself of any right it might otherwise have to bring this suit.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
