146 N.Y.S. 720 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
Lead Opinion
In addition to the facts set forth in the opinion of Mr. Justice Hotchkiss, it should be stated that for some time prior to August 1, 1907, and during all of the time covered by the transactions here involved, the defendant, by the course of dealings between the parties, kept an account of all moneys received and paid out on checks, and on or about the first day of each month made a detailed statement of all deposits and payments during the preceding month and delivered it, with the checks and pass book, to the plaintiff. The checks in question here were paid between the 1st of September, 1907, and the 15th of September, 1910. The first bogus check, for $44.99, was dated the 24th of August, 1907. It was paid by the defendant about that time, the amount charged to plaintiff’s account, and a statement to that effect, together with the check, returned to the plaintiff about the first of September. The next one was in September, for $55.01; two in October, aggregating $41.77; two in November, aggregating $60.05; two in December, amounting to $34.03, and all amounting to $235.85.
Under such circumstances, I am of the opinion that a question was presented which should have been submitted to the jury, whether the plaintiff ought to recover upon any of the checks. The relation between a depositor and a bank is well understood. It is that of debtor and creditor. By reason of this relation a reciprocal duty is imposed. A bank is bound to know the signature of its depositors and pay out the money only on their orders. If it does otherwise, the bank, primarily, and not the depositor, must stand the loss. A bank, however, is permitted to escape liability for repayment of amounts paid out on forged, raised or fictitious checks, by establishing that it made the payment in good faith, without negligence upon its part, and that the payment was brought about or contributed to by the negligence of the depositor; in other words, that the payment was made by reason of the neglect of the depositor to do “ those things dictated by ordinary business customs and prudence and fair dealing toward the bank, which Ü done would have prevented the wrongdoing which resulted from their omission.” (Morgan v. U. S. Mortgage & Trust Co., 208 N. Y. 218.) The facts here presented demonstrate veiy clearly the reasonableness of this rule. Commercial transactions are now carried on largely by means of checks. The plaintiff, as indicated, used in its business at least 600 each month, aggregating in amount something like $200,000. It, therefore, owed a duty not only to the defendant but, I think,to the public generally, to exercise at least reasonable care that the checks which it signed were genuine and not fictitious transactions. If it failed to do this, then it ought not to be permitted to assert their invalidity against either the bank upon which they were drawn or any one else taking them in good faith and for value. When the first fictitious check was returned, and it is not here sought to recover on that one, if
In connection with the duty imposed on the plaintiff to examine the returned canceled vouchers, so that any irregularity in their issue could be at once corrected, both for the protection of the defendant and the banking community in general, the defendant, in August, 1909. submitted to the
The plaintiff was resorting to the use of checks for the purpose of doing its business and every one of those in question bore its genuine signature. The bank, of course, was bound to know that the maker’s signature was genuine, and it is possible it was also bound to know that the indorsement on the first check was genuine, but when no objection was made to it when' returned, it had a right to treat other checks coming in as it had that one; in any event, after the statement and vouchers had been returned and no objection made within a reasonable time, then it seems to me it certainly was a ques
If the plaintiff knew of the fraud, then it was bound to inform the defendant of it. It did, in legal effect, know of it, because its own records showed it, as the slightest examination of them disclosed. Fair dealings require, under such circumstances, that it should be held to the statements as rendered, on the ground that it adopted the payments made and impliedly ratified them. (Leather Manufacturers’ Bank v. Morgan, 117 U. S. 96; Myers v. Southwestern Nat. Bank, 193 Penn. St. 1.)
But, it is said, the defendant ought not to escape liability because it received the checks for payment from other banks which are solvent, for which reason it will not be damaged. I do not think this conclusion follows. Defendant has paid the checks once, and plaintiff having called upon it again to pay them, it has a right to resist the payment, irrespective of whether or not it may, in case it does pay, be reimbursed by someone else. A loss has been sustained which, if occasioned solely by plaintiff’s negligence, should be borne by it, and the defendant is in position to assert such defense — this upon the theory that one who, by his own neglect, is responsible for or the cause of a loss, should bear it instead of an innocent party. (First Nat. Bank v. American Exchange Nat. Bank, 49 App. Div. 349; affd., 170 N. Y. 88.)
I am of the opinion that there was at least a question for the jury as to the negligence of the plaintiff that would prevent a recovery. The judgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Ingraham, P. J., and Laughlin, J., concurred; Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
The plaintiff was a depositor with the defendant and brought this action for a balance of account. What if any balance exists depends upon certain checks which plaintiff claims were improperly paid by the defendant because of the alleged forgeries of the indorsements of the payees. The num
“New York, , 190 .
“Received from the Merchants National Bank of the City of New York, Pass-book for the account of the undersigned, showing balance $ ' at the close of business,
This blank card was by the messenger delivered to Ketcham, an employee of the plaintiff with the title of cashier, and among whose duties was the making up of the daily deposits with defendant and the receipt and custody of all returned vouchers when the same were brought to plaintiff’s office by the messenger. Ketcham was not an officer of the plaintiff and his duties were clerical only. Without calling the attention of any of plaintiff’s responsible officers to the receipt of the card or to the new system of receipting for canceled vouchers which the terms of the card suggested, Ketcham filled in the name of the messenger, Thomas Baxter, as the one authorized in the future to receive from defendant and receipt for canceled vouchers, and so filled in, Ketcham signed the card in the name of the plaintiff, per UD. B. Ketcham, cashier.” The-signed card was on August second returned to the defendant, from which date all of plaintiff’s canceled vouchers were receipted for in the foregoing form. The fact that Ketcham had signed the card and authorized the giving of the form of receipt evidenced thereby was never brought to the knowledge of any representative of plaintiff authorized to contract in its behalf. On the trial much testimony was given both by plaintiff and defendant on the subject of plaintiff’s alleged negligence in uttering the checks and as well in failing to adopt and enforce such a system of examination or audit as was adapted to disclose the fraudulent practices of its clerks.
At the conclusion of the trial both sides moved to direct a verdict. Defendant’s motion having been denied, it asked to go to the jury on a variety of questions including those raised on this appeal.
An analysis of the checks as they appear in the record shows that they were drawn to the order of payees and bore indorsements which are divisible into the following classes: (a) Checks to the order of existing persons; (b) checks to the order of non-existing persons; (c) checks of class “a” indorsed by the iden
The plaintiff recovered on all the checks of the several classes, on the theory that the payees’ indorsements were forgeries, and counsel so argues on this appeal. In the case of checks to the order of and indorsed by existing payees, the theory is that, as to plaintiff, they are to be regarded as forgeries because plaintiff never intended to draw checks to such payees. The bank has thus been held liable not only in the case of non-existing payees, but also in cases of existing payees whose indorsements were genuine.
(1) No argument is necessary to show that the court erred in cases of the latter class. As to these, the bank paid according to its instructions. If plaintiff was led by fraud or mistake into unintentionally giving to the bank orders to pay to persons to whom it owed nothing, the loss should fall on plaintiff, whose error caused the payments to be made.
(2) The case of non-existent payees is apparently covered by Hartford v. Greenwich Bank (157 App. Div. 448), decided by this court in June last. In that case an employee of a tea company, a depositor in defendant bank, fraudulently induced his employer to sign checks to the order of a non-existent person, in payment of bills which the employee led his employer to believe were owing by him to such pretended creditor. In fact, the name of such payee was one assumed by the employee himself and under which he had rented an office and received his mail in a distant part of the city. Under his assumed name the employee opened an account with the Greenwich Bank. Having thus fraudulently procured the checks from his employ er, the employee indorsed the same in his assumed name, and, so indorsed, deposited them with the defendant bank, from which he drew the proceeds. By a divided court the bank was held not liable to the tea company for the loss. The reasoning of the court is summed up in the following sentences (p. 451): “This is not strictly speaking the case of a check drawn to a fictitious or non-existent person. * * * What we have here is a successful fraud perpetrated upon the tea company by one of its own employees, by which it was induced to believe that it owed that employee certain sums of money. The checks in suit
It has been suggested that the Seaboard Bank case is to be distinguished from that of the Greenwich Bank, because in the former the check of Babcock & Co., in exchange for which the Federal Bank issued its draft, was a forgery, but this fact the court took pains to point out (pp. 31, 32) was quite immaterial. The case of the Seaboard Bank was neither cited by counsel nor referred to in either of the opinions in the Greenwich Bank case, and seems to have wholly escaped attention. If, however, it is, as I deem it to be, a controlling authority binding upon and which it was the duty of this court to follow when deciding the Greenwich Bank case, then I conceive it is no less our duty to accept it, now. I conclude, therefore, that the defendant prima facie is liable on the class of checks in question.
(3) We have remaining, checks drawn to the order of existing payees whose indorsements were forged. This among other points brings directly up the question of plaintiff’s negligence, to which subject the testimony at the trial was largely directed. The bank claims that, notwithstanding it may be liable prima facie on this class of checks and as well on any of the other classes on which, as I have hereinbefore pointed out, it is similarly liable, nevertheless, it was error to direct a verdict against it, because
(1) As to all the checks in dispute, the question of plaintiff’s negligence should have gone to the jury.
(2) Defendant was released by the ten days’ limitation contained in the returned voucher agreement signed by Ketcham.
(3) As to all checks on which a claim was not made within one year after the return of the vouchers, defendant is released by section 326 of the Negotiable Instruments Law.
I take these questions up in inverse order.
(3) The statute says: “No bank shall be liable .to a depositor for the payment by it of a forged or raised check, unless
(2) Prior to August 2, 1909, plaintiff had been doing business with defendant under a system by which returned vouchers were simply receipted for. Shortly after the decision in the Critten case there was a general movement among banks to protect themselves. This led to the adopting of a more stringent form of receipt for returned vouchers. Thus, this defendant adopted a form of receipt which, after acknowledging the return of the pass book with canceled vouchers as per list attached, said that the same “ are hereby accepted as correct and genuine and the amount approved as stated, unless written notice to the contrary is given within ten days from this date. ” • This new agreement was on August 2, 1909, signed in plaintiff’s behalf by Ketcham, its cashier. The original seems to have been retained by defendant and no copy was kept by or delivered to plaintiff. Although Ketcham held the title of cashier he was in fact no more than a clerk whose duties included caring for the current cash, making deposits and receiving returned vouchers. He never had actual authority to sign the new and modified returned voucher contract, and he never informed any one in authority that he had done so. Previous to the adopting of this new form as above stated it was plaintiff’s custom to give a simple receipt for the returned vouchers. I do not think that any express contract can be predicated of these facts. Ketcham had no authority to make such a contract. But do not the facts raise an implied agreement on plaintiff’s part identical with the terms of the paper signed by Ketcham ? I think so. When defendant sent to plaintiff, by Baxter, plaintiff’s messenger,. the
(1) The negligence asserted is of two kinds: Negligence in signing and uttering the checks, in that plaintiff failed so to safeguard its system for their issuance as to afford reasonable protection from such frauds as those by which it was victimized, and as well, negligence in failing to take any reasonably adequate means to discover the extensive and long-continued frauds after they had begun. If, in any view of the case, either of these questions was material, I should advise reversal on this ground, because I think, in that event, the evidence of negligence was such as to require the facts (except as to the checks which bore genuine indorsements of existing payees on which I deem defendant not liable in any event) to be submitted to the jury.
But in my opinion any negligence on plaintiff’s part is quite immaterial. In the Shipman case Judge O’Brien said (p. 327): “ Payments made upon forged indorsements are at the peril of the bank, unless it can claim protection upon some principle of estoppel or by reason of some negligence chargeable to the depositor.” To hold plaintiff responsible for negligence in failing to discover and notify defendant of the frauds, would present difficulties, the mere suggestion of which at once discloses their importance. (See Knox v. Eden Musee Co., 148 N. Y. 441, 456 et seq.; People v. Bank of North America, 75 id. 547, 561, 562; Big. Estop. [6th ed.] 710-716.) But for other reasons, I think the question of any negligence on plain
The answer contains no allegation that the defendant has suffered or that it will eventually suffer any loss in case it is forced to respond to its prima facie liability on any of the checks. On the contrary, it was conceded that in each and every instance plaintiff is protected from loss by the prior indorsement of a solvent bank through which the checks passed in the course of their collection from defendant. Critten v. Chemical Nat. Bank (171 N. Y. 219, 229) is express authority for the proposition that, under such circumstances, a bank which has paid checks to which the maker’s name has been forged is not relieved from liability, even though the drawee of the check is chargeable with negligence in the transaction. In such case the bank may only recoup for its damages, if any; this because the rule in all cases where negligence is asserted is that to be an effective basis of legal right damage must have resulted. This is equally true where negligence is alleged as ground of estoppel, for the only basis of estoppel is injury of some kind. Having suffered no injury and anticipating none, any negligence on plaintiff’s part is quite beside the case. Nor may we speculate as to whether, in the case of some prior indorser, near or remote, the defense of plaintiff’s negligence may not be good^ No such indorser is now before the court, and our judgment should be based solely on the rights of the parties to the cause in hand.
If the foregoing views are correct, they lead to the following result: Defendant is in no event liable on checks to the order of existing payees and indorsed by them; defendant is prima facie liable on checks to the order of non-existing payees; it is likewise so liable on checks to the order of existing payees whose indorsements were forged; but, because of the returned voucher agreement, it is not liable on any checks drawn after the date of that agreement and returned to plaintiff more than ten days before defendant was notified of the frauds.
See 45 & 46 Vict. chap. 61, § 7.—[Rep.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Hotchkiss, except in so far as it holds that the defendant is not liable on
For these reasons I do not concur in the dissenting opinion in so far as it holds the defendant not liable on any checks drawn after the date referred to.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event. Order to be settled on notice.