92 N.J. Eq. 639 | N.J. | 1921
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The motion below was to dismiss the bill; and ten grounds weie stated, the Erst of which that it does not make out a case entitling complainants to equitable relief is sufficient for present purposes. Such a motion, under the chancery rules of 1917, like a motion to strike out under the rules of 1910, appears to be the equivalent of a general demurrer. By rule 51, attached to the Chancery act of 1915 (P. L. 1915 pp. 184, 195). appearing as rule 67 in'the rules of 1917, demurrers are abolished, and any pleading “may be objected to, on motion, on the ground that it discloses no cause of action,” &c. Schulz v. Ziegler, 80 N. J. Eq. 199; Weidmann Silk Dyeing Co. v. Water Co., 88 N. J. Eq. 397. Whether the motion is to dismiss a bill as insufficient on its face, or to strike it out, seems now immaterial, as each is an “objection.”
The question, then, is whether the bill shows any ground of equitable relief. It prays that certain banks, in which the corporation of Swift & Company is a depositor, may be restrained from repaying to Swift & Company the amount of certain cheeks charged up to the Swift account and paid by such banks on for’ged endorsement, “until a court of competent jurisdiction has determined that said defendant banks are legally liable thereon.” Several banks are involved and a number of different checks; hut the joinder of these different matters is evidently within the rule of chancery relating to causes of action having a common question of law or fact, &c. P. L. 1915 p. 190 rule 24.
The case made by the bill is this: Complainants are a mercantile firm doing business in Newark. One of their customers
This performance was repeated six times during the months of March, April and June, 1920, with other checks of Swift & Company, three of which were made out to another payee, but the other circumstances were the same. The amounts varied, but in all the complainants innocently accepted checks of Swift & Company aggregating about $13,000, all of which bore false endorsements, and in exchange for them gave Bissell this money which complainants obtained by endorsing the checks and cashing them at their own bank, without any indemnity from any one, but merely the oral statement of Keoskie that Bissell was “all right,” as noted above.
The explanation of the fraud was that Bissell, a former employe of Swift, in combination with one Martin, then in their emplo3r, got possession of Swift checks to parties to whom Swift owed mone3r, forged the endorsements, and negotiated those in question through Keoskie and complainants. Ultimately, the forgeries were discovered, as they had to be, upon checking up accounts with the banks; and upon such discovery, Swift & Company, in the usual course, made demand on the banks for reimbursement, and the matter was in process of adjustment when the complainants intervened with their bill of complaint,
We are quite unable to see any equity in favor of complainants. It is true that Swift & Company owed it to their bank, after return of their paid checks, to exercise reasonable diligence and care to examine the vouchers and the account as stated by the bank, and inform it of any errors thus discoverable. Harter v. Mechanics National Bank, 63 N. J. Law 578, 580. But we have never heard that this duty extended to others than the bank. Persons into whose hands a check may come before payment take the risk of forged signatures and forged endorsements, preceding their own. These complainants did not even receive the checks in the ordinary course of business. On the contrary, they went gratuitously out of their way to enable a stranger to get money, by themselves guaranteeing to their own bank by their own endorsement, that the check was good and that the prior endorsements were genuine. There was no privity between them and Swift & Company; all that the latter were interested in was that their bank should not pay out money on their account improperly; and if it did so, the question whether it should respond to Swift & Company is one in which complainants would seem to have no legal or equitable interest. We have seen that a bank which has paid on a forged endorsement may in some case de
The claim of estoppel set up in the brief rests on the notion that Swift & Company owed the public, including complainants, some duty of care in examining their own accounts and returned vouchers. We know of no such rule, especially in a case where, with absolutely no interest in the matter, the complainants gratuitously put their name on the back of these checks to let a stranger receive the money.
The order will be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to dismiss the bill.