Jones v. Miners & Merchants Bank

144 Mo. App. 428 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910

COX, J.

Action for money had and received, trial by jury, and, at the close of plaintiff’s testimony, the court offered to give a peremptory instruction to find for the defendant, and plaintiff took a nonsuit with leave to move to set same aside, filed his motion for that purpose, which was overruled and he has appealed to this court.

*431The facts disclosed by tbe record in this' case are as follows: In November, 1903, G. A. Paul was in Jonesboro, Arkansas, and sold a span of horses to tbe plaintiff, E.'L. Jones, and received from Jones bis promissory note wbicb was in tbe following form:

“$200.00. Jonesboro, Arkansas,
“November 17, 1903.
“Twelve months after date I promise to pay to the order of G. A. Paul, two hundred 00-100 dollars. For value received negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount and with interest from date at tbe rate of 10 per cent per annum, and if interest be not paid annually to become as principal, and bear the same rate of interest. E. L. Jones.”
“No. -due Nov. 16, 1904.”
“This note is endorsed on the back as follows, ‘G. A. Paul/ ”
“It is also stamped on tbe face as follows: ‘Received payment in sum of one hundred and fifty-nine and 18-100 dollars. Wm. Cooley/ ”

About tbe time that this note became due plaintiff received word from defendant that it held bis Paul note for two hundred dollars and plaintiff then bad tbe cashier of tbe Bank of Jonesboro notify tbe defendant to send tbe note there and be would pay it. They sent the note to tbe Bank of Jonesboro, as requested, wbicb plaintiff paid, but wbicb, it afterwards developed, was a forgery but plaintiff did not discover this until in January after be bad paid it. Tbe forged note was in tbe following form.

“$200.00 11-18-1903.
“Twelve months after date I promise to pay to tbe order of G. A. Paul, two hundred dollars for value received, negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount, and with interest from date at tbe rate of ten per cent per annum, and if interest be not paid annually to become as principal and bear tbe same rate of interest. E. ,L. Jones.
*432“Jonesboro, Ark.,
“No.-Due Nov. 19, 1904.”

This note is stamped on the face as follows: “Paid November 30th, 1904, Bank of Jonesboro, Ark.”

The note is endorsed on the back as follows: “Waiving protest, demand, notice and notice of nonpayment, for value received, I hereby assign, transfer and endorse the within note to D. B. Loy, Cashier - G. A. Paul.”

And it is further endorsed as follows: “Without recourse, D. B. Loy, Cashier.”

In January, 1905, Mr. McKinley, who owned the genuine note, sent it to an attorney at Jonesboro for collection. He notified the plaintiff. On the 8th or 9th of January, 1905, plaintiff went to his office, taking with him the forged note which he had paid in November, and on a comparison with the note which the attorney held, discovered for the first time that hé had paid a forged note. Plaintiff did not notify defendant bank of the fact that the note which he had paid to them was a forgery, and demand a return of the money until April 8, 1905. Paul, the payee in the original note and from whom defendant bank claimed to have purchased the forged note, failed and absconded on January 5, 1905. The defendant refused to return the money upon plaintiff’s demand, and this suit followed.

It is clear in this case that the money paid by plaintiff to defendant was paid under the mistaken belief that he was paying a genuine note, and were this forged instrument, in form, not a negotiable note, there could be no question that plaintiff could recover for the general rule is that money paid without consideration and under mistake as to the facts may be recovered. [Lisle v. Shinnebarger, 17 Mo. App. 66; Dodson v. Winner, 26 Mo. App. 335; Thompson v. The Bank, 132 Mo. App. 225, 110 S. W. 681; Koontz v. Central National Bank, 51 Mo. 275; Beland v. Brewing Ass’n, 157 Mo. 503, 58 S. W. 1.]

*433But when the payment is made upon a supposed negotiable instrument an exception to the general rule prevails. In Price v. Neal, 3 Burrows 1354, decided in 1762, it was held that the drawee of a negotiable instrument was bound to know the signature of the drawer, and if the drawee in a forged bill accepted and paid it upon the mistaken belief that it was a genuine bill, he could not, upon discovery of his mistake, recover the money so- paid from one who was a holder in due course of the instrument, even though it were a forgery. This rule, harsh and unjust as it may seem, has been adhered to since that time by many courts of high standing, and we might say that by the great weight of authority it has, until a comparatively modern date, been considered the established rule in all transactions involving commercial paper. Our own Supreme Court has adhered to this rule. [Bank v. Bank, 107 Mo. 402, 17 S. W. 982.]

In all these years no court has ever tried to justify this harsh rule upon any other ground than that of necessity. Its promulgation was based upon the existence of a supposed necessity to protect the holders of commercial paper, but in its application it has often resulted in the protection and encouragement of the forger as well, and the disposition of the courts of recent years has been to restrict rather than to enlarge its application. Many courts of high standing have repudiated it entirely, and while recognizing the necessity of protecting the innocent holder of commercial paper, have not forgotten that the principles- of right and justice should characterize transactions involving commercial paper as well as those growing out of the other affairs of life; and as a result a more equitable rule has been promulgated and the tendency of the later decisions is to permit one who has paid money upon forged commercial paper to recover it, if, by doing so, no injury will result to the one required to repay. If, *434however, to require a repayment of the money will place the party in a worse position than he would have been if the forgery had been discovered before payment and payment refused, then, by reason of the fact that to require a repayment of the money in such case would result in injury to a party who was a bona fide holder in due course of the forged instrument, the loss must be borne by the party paying the money, and it cannot be recovered. See notes under First National Bank of Lisbon v. Bank of Windmere, 10 L. R. A. N. S. 1 to 74, and the conclusion as.therein expressed on pages 73 and 74.

This later rule has in it the element of equity and justice that was entirely wanting in the former, for upon no principle of equity or justice can it be said that if a party, whose name has been forged to an obligation purporting to bind him to pay a sum of money, discovers the forgery and refuses to pay, the money cannot be recovered in a suit at law and at the same time say that if he was deceived by the forgery and paid over the money under mistake and in the honest belief that the signature was bis own he cannot recover it back if the man he paid it to was a bona fide holder of the forged paper.

Had the same transaction occurred in relation to any other business matter between the same parties the one receiving the money would be required to repay and look to the man who had deceived him for reimbursement, as in equity and good conscience he ought to do; but when the transaction relates to commercial paper the desire to protect a bona fide holder of such paper has caused the courts to brush aside the salutary rules that govern in other matters and upon the false premise of the existence of a necessity to protect the holders of commercial paper have established a rule that often, in effect, protects the forger who may be expert enough to perform his nefarious work with such nicety as to deceive the ordinary business man. Under this rule the *435forger and Ms accomplices run no risk in the forgery itself. The only risk they incur is the risk of detection before the forged instrument can be gotten into the hands of an innocent holder. This done his work is complete and there is no recourse.

We cannot give our sanction to such a rule and should not hesitate to repudiate it as many other courts have done but for the fact that this rule has come to be the settled law of this State in a way that will control our action until a different rule shall be adopted by a power that is superior to us.

Applying this rule to this ea.se the only question, left is whether or not this rule applies to the maker of a negotiable promissory note. The weight of authority is that it does. [Cooke v. U. S., 91 U. S. 389; Bank of U. S. v. Bank of Georgia, 10 Wheat 333; Johnston v. Commercial Bank, 27 W. Va. 343; 55 Amer. Rep. 315.]

If a bank is bound to know the signature of its> depositors and on payment of a forged check to a holder in due course cannot recover it hack, then, on principle, the maker of a check or promissory note should be held to know his own signature and if he pays it to a holder in due course should be in no better position than the drawee in a check. Therefore, the plaintiff cannot recover .this money if defendant was, at the time the money was paid, a holder in due course of the forged note.

This, however, does not result in the affirmance of this judgment. When payment of the money by mistake and the forgery were shown by plaintiff he made a prima-facie case and the burden of showing that defendant was a holder in due course rested upon defendant. Session Acts, 1905, page 250, sections "54 to 59, and upon this question plaintiff was entitled to take the judgment of a jury. For’ the failure of the court to set aside the nonsuit the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.

All concur.
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