67 N.Y. 458 | NY | 1876
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In the Marine National Bank v. The National City Bank
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Accordingly it was held that the plaintiff's bank which had certified and afterwards paid to the defendant's bank a forged check, altered before certification by raising the amount and changing the date and name of the payee, could recover back the amount paid as for money paid by mistake. The case is decisive of the present one, unless the court erred in rejecting the proof offered, to show that at the time of the certification of the checks in question, the word certified, when used in the certification of checks, was by the custom and common understanding of banks and merchants construed to import an obligation on the part of the certifying bank to pay the amount stated in the check notwithstanding the body of the check was forged or unless the plaintiff was estopped from alleging the forgery, by the circumstance that the teller of the plaintiff, when the check was presented for certification, was informed by the payee who presented it, that he did not like the looks of the messenger who brought the check and had a doubt about it, and wanted to be assured that it was right "in every particular," and that the teller then examined the check, and certified it, assuring the payee at the time that he need not have the slightest doubt about it, and that it was correct in every particular. We are of opinion that the offer to show by bankers and merchants the meaning *462 of the word "certified," and that when used in transactions like this it is understood to import an absolute obligation by the certifying bank to pay the check, although the amount had been fraudulently raised, was properly rejected. The only duty assumed by a bank on receiving the money of a depositor is to take care of the fund, and pay it over according to his direction. It owes no duty to the drawer or holder of a check except the duty to make present payment of the check out of the funds of the drawer on presentation.
Checks in theory are presented for payment and not for acceptance but the practice of certifying checks has grown up, and of late years has been largely extended, and the same effect has been given to the act of certification as to an acceptance of a bill of exchange. The manifest object of a certification is to indicate the assent of the certifying bank to the request of the drawer of the check that the drawee will pay to the holder the sum mentioned and this is what an acceptor does by his acceptance of a bill. As long ago as the case of Robson v. Bennett (2 Taunt., 388), it was said by Lord MANSFIELD that the marking of a check by the drawee on presentation was similar to the accepting of a bill and, he adds, "he admits hereby assets and makes himself liable to pay."
In Merchants' Bank v. State Bank (10 Wall, 604), the court say that "by the law merchant of this country, the certificate of the bank that the check is good is equivalent to acceptance," and the same language, in substance, is used by this court in TheMarine Bank v. The National City Bank. There are many points of resemblance between a check and a bill of exchange, and in our courts and the courts of England, checks are often spoken of as bills of exchange. (Harker v. Anderson, 21 Wend., 372;Little v. The Phœnix Bank, 2 Hill, 425; Keene v. Beard, 8 C.B. [N.S.], 372; 2 Pars. on Bills, 58.)
The nature and meaning of the contract, evidenced by the certification of a check, was clearly defined by law, when the plaintiff certified the check in question. By the law as thus declared, the plaintiff, upon the certification of the check, became liable for its payment with the obligation of an *463
acception of a bill; and this was the extent of the obligation into which he entered, according to the legal effect and interpretation of the contract. The offer to prove that the contract of certification by the understanding of the bankers and merchants, had a larger scope and meaning than it had by settled legal construction was inadmissible. (Bargett v. OrientalMutual Ins. Co., 3 Bos., 385; Higgins v. Moore,
The indorsement made by the plaintiff's bank was simply and exclusively a certification of the check, and it is bound only to such obligations as that act implies. In The Marine Bank v.The National City Bank, this court found no difficulty in interpreting the contract arising from a certification of a check without the aid of extrinsic evidence. That an acceptor of a bill of exchange which, after acceptance, was forged by raising the amount and changing the name of the payee, may recover back the money paid by him on the acceptance, was decided in The Bank ofCommerce v. The Union Bank(
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *464