142 F.2d 474 | D.C. Cir. | 1944
National Metropolitan Bank appeals from a judgment of the District Court in favor of the United States in the sum of $18,060.83. Judgment was entered summarily by the District Court on the authority of Washington Loan & Trust Co. v. United States, 77 U.S. App.D.C. 284, 134 F.2d 59. The facts here are these:
James H. Foley was a civilian clerk in the Headquarters office of the Paymaster of the United States Marine Corps in Washington City. He was assigned to prepare officers’ pay and mileage vouchers, to prepare checks in payment thereof, to present the checks for signature by the Paymaster or other
The Paymaster who signed the checks was unaware of the fraud, having relied upon Foley’s reputation for honesty.
In the Washington Loan & Trust Co. case, relied upon by the lower court, the facts were these:
In 1933 Civilian Conservation Camps were, by order of the President, established throughout the United States. The Chief of Finance of the United States Army was made disbursing officer of the funds allocated to the camps. Stitely, the person responsible for the forgeries, was chief of the voucher unit of the accounts section of the Park Service, whose duty it was to prepare bi-monthly payroll vouchers in the names of employees of the Service, present them to the disbursing officers and receive and distribute the checks payable to such employees. For four years Stitely made up-fraudulent payroll vouchers for fictitious and nonexistent employees of an imaginary camp. These he took to the office of the Chief of Finance each pay day and received checks payable to the persons on the legitimate and also on the fraudulent payrolls. The checks on the fraudulent payrolls he retained, forged the signatures of the payees and cashed or deposited them to his account in one of the hanks, defendants in the suit. After four years his frauds were discovered and suit was brought by the United States to recover the amounts paid to the banks on account of the forged checks.
From these statements of facts it will be seen that in both cases the checks were drawn by one agency of Government on another, were issued on fraudulent vouchers to payees to whom the United States owed nothing; in each the names of the payees were forged by a dishonest employee of the United States; in each the United States was negligent in not sooner discovering the frauds; and in each the checks were cashed or deposited in banks and the sum of the checks thereafter paid on demand by the United States on the faith of the Banks’ guarantee of all endorsements. This we said in the Washington Loan & Trust Co. case was enough to entitle the United States to recover, notwithstanding the negligence in the issuance of the checks or the unreasonable length of time before discovery of the forgeries, since the Government as drawer and drawee owed no duty to the banks with reference to the endorsements, whereas it was the obligation of the banks, at their peril, to be sure the endorsements which they guaranteed were genuine.
“In other words, the failure of the Government to detect the fraud, though due to negligence, was not the cause of the loss, since in the whole transaction the Government and the bank dealt at arm’s length, and the primary obligation of the bank to see to the genuineness of the endorsements continued throughout.” 77 U.S.App.D.C. at page 287, 134 F.2d at page 62.
And though we noticed and referred to a number of exceptions to the rule which in particular circumstances would bar the drawer or drawee from recovery, we found in that case no facts to bring it within any of the exceptions. We
Affirmed.
D.C.Code 1940, § 28—124.