156 N.Y.S. 298 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1915
The action is to recover from the defendant savings bank $900 paid by the bank out of a deposit of $1,000 to a person claimed to be other than the depositor.
In March, 1912, one Jehkab Krishkan (plaintiff’s name) deposited $1,000 in the bank and received a pass-book containing the entry of said deposit. At the time the account was opened the depositor signed what appears to be said name in defendant’s signature book and on a signature card, and he also wrote the address “ 60 Charlton str ” on the card, and an attendant of the bank wrote on the same card answers given to questions printed thereon as to the depositor’s occupation, where and when born, the names of his parents, brothers and sisters. The occupation was stated to be longshoreman, and the nationality Russian.
On October 15, 1912, a person representing himself to be the depositor called at the bank, presented said pass-book to Mr. Humphries, one of its tellers, and requested payment of $900. The teller filled in upon one of the usual blank receipts of the bank the number of the pass-book and the amount to be drawn and handed the receipt to the person presenting the book, who thereupon signed the plaintiff’s name with the address “ 47 King str.” The teller asked the drawer to sign his name again, which he did several times, both on the face and on the back of the receipt. As the address given was different from that on the bank record the teller asked the drawer to sign his old address, whereupon he wrote “ 60 Charlton str ” the same address given by the depositor when the account was opened, and from which place plaintiff testified he had moved to King street. The teller compared all the signatures with those on the signature book and the signature card, and he asked the drawer the question put to the depositor at the time of the open
On or about January 10, 1913, plaintiff, with his brother, went to the bank, presented the pass-book, and demanded payment. of the full amount of the deposit, with interest, which was refused. At that time the entry of $900 which had been made in the passbook on the withdrawal of that sum had been erased. On January seventeenth following, plaintiff signed an order on the defendant to pay his attorney, Victor E. Gartz, the balance of the account, $100. The bank refused to honor this draft for the reason that the signature on the order was not the signature of the depositor, but finally, upon Gartz guarantying the signature, paid over the balance by check to his order.
During the time in question the bank had more than 46,000 depositors of all nationalities, and only a small percentage of them were known to its officers and employees; the daily drafts averaged about 160, and the
Defendant’s by-laws provided that the defendant would endeavor to prevent frauds on its depositors, but also provided that all payments to persons producing the pass-books should be deemed good and valid payments to the depositors.
The degree of care required by savings banks differs from that required of discount banks. The defendant was bound to exercise only ordinary care in paying out its depositors’ funds, and, if in the exercise of such care it paid the $900' to the wrong person in this case, it is not liable. Appleby v. Erie County Savings Bank, 62 N. Y. 12; Mahon v. South Brooklyn Sav. Institution, 175 id. 69; Kelley v. Buffalo Savings Bank, 180 id. 171.
In Kelley v. Buffalo Savings Bank, supra, the court said (p. 177): “ If it were the duty of savings banks to establish at all hazards the identity of every person presenting a depositor’s bank book and draft, it would be quite as impossible for them to continue business as it would be for some persons to avail themselves of the best known and most generally approved method of investing and accumulating the fruits of frugal and patient economy.” And (p. 178) “ It would be utterly impracticable to do business if each application for a withdrawal of money had to be delayed until a searching inquiry could be made as to the regularity of the transaction.”
Did the defendant’s employees exercise ordinary care in making the $900 payment in October, 1912? There are differences between some of the drawer’s signatures and the signatures of the depositor and these are relied upon by the respondent as justifying the submission of the case to the jury. The plaintiff claims to have signed his name in the signature book
Several of defendant’s witnesses, experts on the subject, testified in detail as to the reasons which convinced them that the. signatures of the drawer were and are the same as those of the depositor. The plaintiff denied that he signed the receipt for $900, but furnished no other evidence on that subject. A consider
Page, and Philbin, JJ., concur.
The judgment should be reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs.