The words “Pay to the order of any Bank, Banker or Trust Company prior endorsements guaranteed” are an express warranty which cover a missing indorsement of a j oint payee.
The petition sets forth a cause of action on the express warranty.
Yatesville Banking Co. v. Fourth Nat.
Bank,
The court did not err in overruling the general demurrer to the petition.
Judgment affirmed.
Since this case raises a question that is of first impression in Georgia and with few exceptions is novel to the other forty-nine states, this writer, speaking for himself alone, feels compelled to delve deeper into the problem of a missing indorsement.
The defendant (collecting) bank contends that the above indorsement was not an unqualified guaranty, and that it was only liable for reimbursement to the plaintiff (drawee) bank in the event of a forged indorsement.
“Where an instrument is payable to the order of two or more payees or indorsees who are not partners, all must indorse, unless the one indorsing has authority to indorse for the others.”
Code
§ 14-412. We have held that it is “the inflexible dogma of the Code that a negotiable instrument payable to persons j ointly must be indorsed by them all. . .”
Fulton National Bank v. Didschuneit,
The question remains as to the liability of the defendant (collecting) bank to the plaintiff (drawee) bank based upon the former’s indorsement “prior indorsements guaranteed.” Do these words guarantee a missing indorsement? There is authority in Georgia on the question of a forged indorsement. A drawee’s suit upon a forged indorsement has been held to be based upon either a quasi-contractual duty of the collecting bank to repay money paid under mistake, or upon the collecting bank’s express agreement contained in the indorsement. See
Yatesville Banking Co. v. Fourth Nat. Bank,
As to a forged indorsement, Britton on Bills and Notes, § 139, p. 649, states: “. . . the drawee recovers from the party to whom payment was made on the quasi-contract theory to enforce restitution of money paid out under mistake of fact. The right of recovery is not based on a warranty of title by such party to the drawee. It is possible, however, for such party expressly to warrant to> the drawee, or rather it is possible for such party, by express contract to put upon himself a duty, equivalent to that of warranty, to refund to the drawee. And,
*294
this is frequently done. It is common for banks, in the collection chain, to add to their indorsements, usually in the form ‘pay any bank or banker’, the words: 'prior indorsements guaranteed.’ . . . such words, when added to an unqualified or to a qualified indorsement, may be construed as imposing a guaranty or a warranty to the drawee. . .” In such a case the drawee bank may recover from the collecting bank upon the guaranty, in lieu of its rights to recover quasi-contractually. Second Nat. Bank of Pittsburgh v. Guarantee Trust & Safe Deposit Co.,
Turning now to the question of the missing indorsement, 2 Paton’s Digest § 21:20, p. 2138, makes this rather uncertain comment: “Is the indorsement, ‘all prior indorsements guaranteed,’ stamped on a check by a collecting bank, sufficient to cover a missing indorsement of the payee or an indorsee? Opinion: It would be safer for the drawee bank to require an express guaranty against loss resulting from its payment of the check, although the indorsement referred to in the inquiry might be held to afford protection.”
City Trust Company v. Botting,
Nevertheless, the American National Bank case, supra, held that the collecting bank was liable to the drawee bank upon the ground that payment to the collecting bank was made without consideration and by mistake. In substance it allowed recovery in quasi-contract for money had and received. The opinion also refers to the negligence of the collecting bank which resulted
*296
in the mistake of the drawee bank. Accord, United States F. & G. Co. v. Peoples Nat. Bank,
I am of the opinion that the words “Pay to the order of any Bank, Banker or Trust Co., prior endorsements guaranteed” cover a missing indorsement of a joint payee upon the same theory of recovery as for a forged indorsement. It can be based upon either the quasi-contractual duty to repay money paid under mistake or upon the collecting bank’s express agreement Contained in the indorsement.
Yatesville Banking Co. v. Fourth Nat. Bank,
While the Uniform Bank Collection Code has not been adopted in Georgia, it (Section 4) represents the trend in banking law, and places the ultimate liability for defective indorsements on the collecting bank. Holding the collecting bank to its express guaranty or warranty will place liability with certainty and result in the predictability which bankers have sought to foster. Each citizen and bank then will know where he or it stands.
