This action was commenced in May, 1963,. on behalf of the State of Oklahoma, by its Attorney General, as plaintiff, to recover the face amount of certain state warrants from the Liberty National Bank & Trust Company of Oklahoma City, as defendant. The defendant entered a demurrer to the plaintiff’s amended petition which was sustained by tiie trial court on October 11, 1963. The plaintiff declined to plead further and appealed to this court on the original record asserting that its amended petition alleged a cause of action. The parties will be referred to in this opinion by their trial court designations, with the exception that the plaintiff will also be referred to as “the State”.
The original petition of the plaintiff alleged that defendant paid certain state warrants bearing a forged endorsement of the payee’s signature and transmitted these warrants to the State for payment with an express guarantee that prior endorsements were genuine; that the State paid these warrants relying on the defendant’s guarantee; and that the State was entitled to *283 recover upon defendant’s guarantee of the genuineness of the payee’s signature.
In September, 1963, the plaintiff, with permission of the court, voluntarily amended its petition to allege the evidentiary facts that gave rise to this dispute. This amended petition alleges in substance that prior to August S, 1959, Max Genet, Jr., then Director of the Department of Commerce ■and Industry of the State of Oklahoma, ■and Dan Savage entered into a “scheme, understanding, and agreement, whereby ■claims would be filed by Dan Savage .against the Department of Commerce and Industry for purported professional services not actually performed by him.” These claims were to be approved by Max Genet, Jr. as the Director of this Department and transmitted by him to the Budget Department for payment. This scheme to defraud the state was implemented in January, 1960, and continued through October, 1962. During this thirty-four month period, thirty-■one monthly claims were submitted by Dan 'Savage which purported to be for “consultant and professional services” rendered to the Department of Commerce and Industry. These claims ranged in amount from $550.00 to $725.00. Upon approval of the claims by Max Genet, Jr., state warrants were prepared and issued in the usual manner, bearing the signature of the State Auditor, as •drawer, directing the State Treasurer, as ■drawee, to pay the face amount to the order of Dan Savage, as payee. The warrants were then delivered to Max Genet, Jr. to be distributed to the payee. The amended petition further alleges that each ■of the warrants was presented to, and cashed by, the defendant and was then submitted to the State Treasurer for payment by the defendant bearing the following guarantee stamped beneath the signature of the payee: “prior endorsements guaranteed”. It is then alleged that the defendant is liable to the plaintiff for the face amount of each of these warrants because the name of Dan Savage had been “forged” to each of these warrants by Max Genet, Jr. or by someone at his direction. Both the claims forms and the warrants were attached to the petition and made a part thereof by reference. The total amount involved is $19,125.00.
The transactions in question occurred prior to the effective date of the Uniform Commercial Code, and its provisions are therefore not applicable. 12A O.S.1961, Section 10-101. Further, the provisions of the Negotiable Instruments Law, 48 O.S.1961, Sections 1-406, do not apply as state warrants are not negotiable instruments, even though they may be transferred by delivery or assignment. Sebring v. Fagin,
We recognize at the outset that if the amended petition properly alleges that the signature of the payee was a forgery the defendant is liable upon its express guarantee of prior endorsements. In McEwen v. Black,
“ ‘ * * * There can be no indorsement in the strict legal and commercial sense of that term on a note not negotiable or any other instrument of writing, except negotiable paper, unless he who indorses his name upon the nonnegotiable instrument undertakes by his written or oral agreement to become responsible as an indorser. Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, par. 709. Nonnegotiable instruments do not fall within the pale of the law merchant; and the law therefore writes no contract over a blank indorsement on a nonnegotiable instrument as it does over a blank indorsement on a negotiable instrument.’” (Italics ours).
In Steele v. Hudson,
The plaintiff first contends that the amended petition alleges a forgery by virtue of an unauthorized endorsement of the payee’s name upon the state warrants. The defendant argues that the facts alleged in the amended petition are incompatible with the conclusion that the payee did not approve of the signing of his name to the warrants.
In reviewing an order of the trial court sustaining a demurrer to a petition, all the facts well pleaded in the petition must be taken as admitted to be true. Henrie v. Griffith, Okl.,
“While appellant relies on the rule that respondent, by her demurrer, admitted the truth of the allegations in her petition, it is well settled that such pleading does not admit conclusions unattended by allegations of fact to support them. Duncan v. Golden, Okl.,316 P.2d 1116 , 1119. * * *»
With this in mind we turn now to an examination of the plaintiff’s amended petition.
We recognize, as the plaintiff asserts, that the amended petition avers that “the name of Dan Savage was then forged to each of these warrants by Max Genet, Jr., or by someone at his direction.” (Italics ours). Yet it is clear that the use of the term “forged” in the foregoing quotation reflects the conclusion of the plaintiff as to' the legal significance of the evidentiary facts previously detailed in its amended petition. This is particularly apparent in the instant case as the plaintiff’s original petition merely alleged that the payee’s-signature was forged; but prior to trial, plaintiff, on its own motion, amended its petition to set forth the basic facts involved in this dispute. The fact that the plaintiff concludes that a forgery has been committed is not admitted by defendant’s demurrer, under the authorities cited above. The question which must be resolved is whether the basic facts recited in the amended petition, together with the logical inferences to be drawn therefrom, establish the purported forgery.
The amended petition, as seen above, alleged that Max Genet, Jr. and Dan Savage entered into a scheme to defraud the State
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of Oklahoma. They agreed that Savage would submit a false claim for services rendered which would be approved by Genet and submitted to the State for payment. The state warrants were then regularly prepared and returned to Genet who signed the name of Savage to the warrants or directed another to do so and cashed them at the defendant bank. The fact that there is no indication on the warrants that the payee’s name was signed by an agent does not affect the validity of the signature if the agent in fact possessed authority to sign for the payee. Elliott v. Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
If the plaintiff intended to allege that, after causing the warrants to be issued, Genet withdrew from the original joint undertaking and committed a separate fraud upon Savage by signing his name without consent, as is alluded to in plaintiff’s brief, its amended petition should have set forth such facts. But the amended petition is devoid of any allegation that when Genet cashed these checks he did so acting on his own, or for his own purposes, rather than in furtherance of the alleged joint scheme to defraud the State. As no such facts are alleged, or reasonably inferable, we must presume that such facts do not exist in passing on this demurrer to the amended petition. Harrison v. Commander Mills, Inc., Okl.,
The plaintiff next argues that
even if Genet was authorized,
to endorse the payee’s name to these documents, such endorsement is nevertheless a forgery citing Jordan Marsh Co. v. National Shawmut Bank,
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It lias also been brought to the attention of the court that in Cornelius v. State,
“ ‘To constitute forgery, there must be the making of a writing which ■ falsely purports to be the writing of another. A false statement of fact in the body of the instrument, or a false assertion of authority to write another’s name, or to sign his name as agent, by which a person is deceived and defrauded, is not forgery. To make it such there must be a design to pass as the genuine writing of another person, that which is not his writing.’ ”
This language is in accord with the rule prevailing in the vast majority of jurisdictions in this country that the crime of forgery requires the false making of a document, but is not committed by the genuine making of a false document. 23 Am.Jur. Forgery, Section 7; 37 C.J.S. Forgery § 5; and see Annotation in
We do not agree with the alternate theory expressed in the Cornelius case and this theory does not appear to retain vitality today even in criminal cases. In any event, it is not in point in the present case. The state warrants are not false documents. They were properly prepared, executed and issued by the State. They bear the genuine signature of the State Auditor as drawer and were properly countersigned by the State Treasurer. Even though fraudulently procured, the warrants are exactly what they purport to be. State v. Corfield,
In our opinion the authorized endorsement of the payee’s name to the state warrants was not forgery. This view is consonant with the holding of the Court of Criminal Appeals of this State that it is a complete defense to a charge of forging another’s name to a document that the person affixing the signature possessed the authority to do so. Bradley v. State, 63 Okl. Cr. 203,
The act of the defendant in cashing these state warrants did not occasion the loss of which the State complains. The State issued these warrants intending that they should be paid when properly presented to the State Treasurer for payment. This is what occurred. The loss results not from any act of the defendant but from the submission of the false claims to the State. The State voluntarily issued and redeemed these warrants, and in our opinion has alleged no basis in law or equity for shifting this loss to the defendant. See Lincoln Bldg. & Loan Ass’n v. Liberty Nat. Bank & Trust Co.,
In summary we hold that the amended petition of the plaintiff alleges that the payee’s signature was affixed to the state warrants with the consent and approval of the payee and that this authorized signing did not constitute a forged endorsement of the payee’s signature. The plaintiff’s amended petition does not allege a cause of action against the defendant and the defendant’s demurrer was properly sustained.
Judgment affirmed.
