Lead Opinion
Tbis is a bill in equity to recover the sum of $600, which complainant charges is due to him from either the People’s National Bank or John T. Muse, both of whom are made defendants. The bill, in substance, alleges that Muse, being indebted to complainant in the sum of $600, claims, on March 26, 1887, to have paid the debt in a check drawn by himself against his account with the defendant. bank, payable to complainant, or his order, and that the check has been paid by the bank and charged up against his account. The defendant bank claims that the check was presented to it for payment by complainant in person, and that it was paid to him. Complainant charges that the check has never been paid to him or to his order, or to any one authorized by him. Upon these facts he prays for a decree against the defendants, or either of them, as the law and facts may justify.
The defendant, Muse, in his answer admits the indebtedness as charged, but insists that he has fully paid same by drawing and delivering his check for the sum of $600 to complainant, and that this check has been paid by the drawee to Thomas Pickle, and charged up to the account of the drawer.
The possession of an order by the person upon whom it is drawn is prima facie evidence that the articles or money specified therein were delivered or paid according to the order. Kincaid v. Kincaid, 8 Hum., 17; 2 Daniel on negotiable Instruments, Sec. 1647.
This presumption is, however, rebutted by the
The almost universal custom of business is to make checks payable to the payee or order, for the purpose of making the check a voucher for the payment. So the indorsement by the payee would furnish the banker very high evidence of payment in accordance with the direction of the drawer.
A check drawn in favor of a particular payee or order is payable only to the actual payee, or upon his genuine indorsement; and if the bank mistake the identity of the payee, or pay upon a
This brings us to the question as to whether complainant can recover upon this check as against the bank. While the authorities are not agreed, yet the decided weight of opinion is that the holder of a bank check cannot sue the bank for refusing payment, in the absence of proof that it was accepted by the bank, or that it has done some other act equivalent to and implying acceptance. This has been the uniform view of this Court. Planters’ Bank v. Merritt, 7 Heis., 177; Planters’ Bank v. Keesee, 7 Heis., 200; Imboden v. Perrie, 13 Lea, 504.
In the latter case the reasons for this doctrine are forcibly stated and the authorities collated by Judge Turney. We are unable to see any reason for disturbing the rule as heretofore declared by this Court, especially as the decided weight of authority is in accord with our decisions. Bank of Republic v. Millard, 10 Wall., 152; First National Bank of Washington v. Whitmore, 94 U. S., 343; Carr v. National Security Bank, 107 Mass., 45; Ætna National Bank v. Fourth National Bank, 46 N. Y., 82; Seventh National Bank v. Cook, 73 Penn. St., 485; Saylor v. Bushong, 100 Penn. St., 23 (S. C., 45 Am. Rep., 353); Purcell v. Allemong, 22 Gratt., 742.
In the subsequent' case of Bank v. Whitmore this very question arose, when the Court, through Mr. Justice Hunt, held that such a charge, having been made through mistake and upon the assumption that it had in fact paid the check to one authorized to collect it, would not authorize the presumption of an acceptance and promise to pay it again. 94 U. S., 347.
So Mr. Daniel, in his very learned work upon Negotiable Instruments, lends the support of his name to the view we have taken, saying: “There is no doubt that if the bank pays a check upon the forged indorsement of the payee’s or special indorsee’s name, the payee, or such indorsee, may recover back the amount, if the check had been delivered to him, and the drawer may recover it back if he had not issued it.” 2 Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, Sec. 1663.
This brings us to the question as to whether this check was ever delivered to the complainant, for it is insisted that if there has been no delivery to him, that he has no such title to the , instrument as will enable him to maintain a suit against the bank. "Whether this check was sent to complainant and miscarried, and fell into the hands of a stranger, or whether it was left with the bank, to be credited to the complainant, who kept his account there, and by oversight this credit was not given, is all matter of conjecture. How this check ever reached the bank we are
“ This is a rule,” says Mr. Broom, “ of very wide application.”
“Ro maxim,” remarks Mr. Justice Story, “is better settled in reason or law than this maxim; * * at all events, when it does not prejudice the rights of strangers.”
As illustrative of the application of the rule, the author cites the case where the goods of A are wrongfully taken and sold. The owner may either bring trover against the wrong-doer, or may elect to consider him as his agent and adopt the sale and bring • an action for the price. Smith v. Hudson, 4 T. R., 211.
So in another case it was said “ that air act done for another by a person not assuming to act for himself, but for such other person, though without any precedent authority whatever, becomes the act of the principal if subsequently ratified by him, is the known aud well-established rule of
The bank is not prejudiced by this subsequent ratification, for it dealt with the check as the property of the complainant, and undertook to pay to him or his order. The effect of this ratification is simply to make the check the property of the complainant. It does not ratify the collection of the check by one whose act in receiving it is subsequently ratified. An agency to receive a check payable to order implies no authority to indorse it in the name of the payee, or to collect it without such indorsement. In the case of Dodge v. The National Exchange Bank a certificate of indebtedness by the Government to Bodge was remitted by' mail to the Paymaster for a check. The mail was robbed and the certificate presented by the thief to the Paymaster, and a check demanded. The latter, without requiring proof of the identity of the holder of the certificate, issued a check payable to Bodge or order, and took up the certificate. The indorsement of Bodge was forged, and the check paid. Subsequently Bodge sued the bank and recovered, the Court holding that he might ratify the taking of the check for the certificate, and sue upon it as an accepted check. 20 Ohio St., 234 (S. C., 5 Am. Rep., 648).
The decree of the Chancellor is revei-sed, and judgment for complainant against the bank for the amount of the check and interest from filing of bill, and all the costs of the cause.
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING OPINION.
Disagreeing with the majority upon the merits of the question decided, and strongly opposed to the policy of refusing to follow the Supreme Court of the United States on this important banking and commercial question, I am constrained to briefly express my dissent.
The exact question before us, as shown in the majority opinion, was decided adversely to it in Bank v. Whitman, in 1877, by the Supreme Court of the United States, without dissent by any member of the Court. In that case the Millard .case, in which Judge Davis had doubtfully intimated that the bank might be liable to the payee of a check which it had improperly paid off to an unauthorized holder and charged to account of the drawer, not, as the majority holds here, because such payment to an unauthorized holder is an acceptance and implied promise to pay the real owner or payee (for this doctrine he repudiated), but, because of the charge to the drawer, the bank might be liable to the payee for money had
The decision commands my most earnest approval; but there are additional reasons why I think it should be followed by this Court.
First. — It is the judgment of the highest Court in the country on a general banking and commercial question, where the decision should be treated as conclusive, as on such questions the Supreme Court of the United States follows no State construction. It is not “ rather a question of the weight of evidence,” as put by the majority, because we all agree that the check in the case before us was not paid to the payee, and, having determined that, we come to settle the question whether upon this conceded condition of affairs the payee can maintain suit against the bank.
Second. — The decision should be followed, be
Many reasons could be added, but they will suggest themselves. These are sufficient to indicate them and outline the grounds of dissent.
Judge Caldwell joins in this dissent.