121 Misc. 547 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1923
This is a motion under rule 113 of the Rules of Civil Practice for summary judgment. Plaintiff, a depositor in defendant’s bank, sues to recover the amount of three checks drawn by it upon the bank payable to the attorneys of plaintiff’s landlord for rent of the premises occupied by it. The indorsement of the payee’s name on the checks was forged by plaintiff’s vice-president, who deposited the same to his personal account in the Bank of America. The latter credited the amount to the vice-president’s account and transmitted the checks with the “ indorsement guaranteed ” to the defendant, which in turn charged the same to plaintiff. The main defense relied on is that plaintiff was negligent in not discovering the forgeries earlier than it did and in not notifying the defendant thereof with the implied possibility of defendant thereby recouping a part of the loss. There is a further defense to the effect that the guilty vice-president paid part of the amount of one of the checks to the attorneys of the landlord. The claim of plaintiff’s negligence is based upon the contention that it did not conduct its business properly and exercise sufficient supervision over the same, otherwise it would have learned that the landlord’s attorneys had not acknowledged receipt of the checks, although it had been their custom to do so in the past, and that, indeed, it failed to note that these attorneys had written a number of letters giving notice of the non-payment of these very items. It is not urged that plaintiff had any actual knowledge of the potential or actual dishonesty of its vice-president, nor is it questioned that the vice-president was in active charge of all the business of plaintiff, and in that capacity received the notices in question and actually suppressed the same as part of his scheme of wrongdoing. On the other hand, it is shown that plaintiff had periodic audits of its account made, but that these did not disclose the facts which gave lise to the present action. The duty of a depositor to examine checks drawn by him upon his own bank upon their return with a statement of account from the latter has been the subject of repeated adjudications by the courts, and the responsibility of the depositor in that regard, so far as forgery of his signature or raising of the amount or other alteration in the check is concerned, has apparently been increased by the course of adjudication from Weiser v. Denison, 10 N. Y. 68; Frank v. Chemical Nat. Bank of N. Y., 84 id. 209, in which Judge Andrews speaks of it as the “ alleged duty,” through Critten v. Chemical
Ordered accordingly.