139 N.Y.S. 890 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1913
The plaintiff carries on business as a banker under the name of Max Kobre’s Bank. On March twenty-
I fail to see any theory upon which these facts prove any defense to plaintiff’s cause of action.
The defendant urges that the real question in the case is not “ whether the indorsement on ■ the check of' the alleged payee was a forgery, but rather was it intended that Miller & Bonime were to receive the proceeds of the check or Bonomowitz.” I can find absolutely no evidence that the plaintiff ever intended that Bonomowitz should receive the proceeds of the check. The plaintiff did not make the check payable to Bonomowitz but to Miller & Bonime. It is shown that Miller & Bonime were an actual firm and their name inserted as payee was not intended to be a fictitious name. In this respect the case differs from the case of Phillips v. Mercantile National Bank, 140 N. Y. 556. The plaintiff did not know Bonomowitz and did not intend to make a check payable to him. He did not intend to give that check in discount of a note of which Bonomowitz was the actual owner, but he made that check payable to the firm who appeared on the note as the holders and last indorsers and, therefore, the parties who had the right to transfer title to him. In this respect the case differs from the cases of Sherman v. Corn Exchange Bank, 91 App. Div. 84, and First National Bank v. American Exchange Bank, 170 N. Y. 88. In both of these cases the drawer of the check was actually dealing with the payee named in the check and described as payee, though as a matter of fact the drawer had been deceived into believing that it was dealing with another person. The courts there held that the bank having paid the money to the person actually designated as payee has carried out the drawer’s directions. In this case, however, the plaintiff not' only thought that he was dealing with Miller & Bonime but he directed payment to the párties with whom he thought that
The governing fact in this case is that plaintiff delivered to Vladower a check which only Miller & Bonime were intended to use and which only Miller & Bonime could use, and no title to the check passed either to Vladower or Bonomowitz. In the case of Seaboard National Bank v. Bank of America, 193 N. Y. 26, an employee of a depositor known to the bank presented to the bank in Pittsburgh a forged check purporting to be drawn by the depositor, and requested the bank to give him a New York draft payable to the order of Carroll Brothers. Carroll Brothers were an actual firm with whom the depositor was doing business but to whom the depositor was not indebted. The bank gave the employee the draft as requested and the employee negotiated the draft,'forging Carroll Brothers’ signature. It was held that the bank making the check to Carroll Brothers could not be charged with the payment. The court there said: “ The secret intention of a criminal contrary to his express intention and the avowed purpose for which he obtains possession of a draft does not give the criminal ownership of the draft
“ There is nothing in this case to estop the plaintiff from controverting the genuineness of the indorsement of the draft in controversy as in Coggill v. American Exchange Bank (1 N. Y. 113) where one of the members of a partnership, the makers of a draft, put it into circulation with the forged indorsement of the payee upon it, or as in Phillips v. Mercantile National Bank (140 N. Y. 556) where the person who forged the name of the payee was the cashier of the defendant empowered to bind the bank by his checks.” So in this case the secret intention of Bonomowitz by fraud to obtain possession of a check for his own benefit contrary to his apparent intention and avowed purpose that the check should belong to Miller & Bonime does not give him any ownership inconsistent with the form and tenor of the check, and there is no presumption that the' name Miller & Bonime was intended as a fictitious or non-existing payee. On the contrary, it affirmatively appears that the name Miller & Bonime was intended to describe an actual payee, and there is nothing in the case that estops the plaintiff from control verting the genuineness of the indorsement.
The defendant claims that it was negligence on the part of the plaintiff to put in the hands of Vladower a check drawn to Miller & Bonime without investigating whether the indorsement of' Miller & Bonime on the note which the plaintiff was discounting was genuine. Obviously, of course, this argument must be based upon the premise that the plaintiff actually intended that the check should be payable to' Miller & Bonime and not to any owner óf the note' or to bearer, and that only Miller & Bonime could legally transfer title to the check. This alleged negligence, however, is immaterial because no act of the defendant was induced by the acts, representations or admissions of the plain
It follows that the verdict directed for the plaintiff was correct and should be reinstated.
.Order reversed with costs and verdict reinstated with costs.
Seabuby and Page, JJ., concur.
Order reversed with costs and a verdict reinstated with costs.