145 Minn. 322 | Minn. | 1920
Defendant Merchants Bank was an active depository of state funds, that is, one in which a general checking account was carried. Defendant Exchange Bank was an inactive depository, that is, one in which state funds were deposited without intention of withdrawal by check.
On August 1, 1917, the state treasurer issued and mailed to all active depositories, including the Merchants Bank, a circular letter as follows:
“Beginning today the state will use the warrant voucher system for making disbursements. The voucher warrant will be issued by the state auditor, and when accepted by the state treasurer will become negotiable, and the holder thereof may deposit it in any bank in the same manner as a check. The voucher warrants are to be cleared through our active depository banks and will be redeemed by check upon presentation at the office of the state treasurer.”
In October, 1917, and thereafter, the state of Minnesota issued voucher warrants for sums due to enlisted members of the National Guard who served on the Mexican border. Save for variation in name, amount and number, they were all in the following form:
Auditor’s Oeeice
Auditor’s warrant No. 11755. $91.50
State Treasurer
Treasurer’s check No. 186. St. Paul, Oct. 15, 1917,
Pay to the order of Henry O. Moeloth. .
Ninety-one & 50/100 Dollars.
for Pay Roll.
App’n for 1918 for Public Safety Com. Revenue Fund.
J. A. O. Preus, State Auditor, by M. J. Desmond, Deputy.
Accepted, Henry Riñes, State Treasurer, by E. H. Walden, Deputy.
At the times mentioned, J. W. Edwards was a clerk in the office of the adjutant general, and was charged with the duty of receiving these voucher warrants from the state auditor and delivering them to the respective payees, personally, or by mail. While the same were in the office of the adjutant general awaiting such delivery, they were kept in a department vault to which Edwards had access.
While in possession of these voucher warrants, Edwards extracted certain of them, forged the indorsement of the payee thereon, indorsed them with his own name, and deposited them to the credit of his personal checking account in the Exchange Bank. The bank indorsed each of them as follows:
“National Exchange Bank of St. Paul
“St. Paul, Minn.
“A. L. Roth, Cashier,”
and presented them through the St. Paul Clearing House in the usual course of business to the Merchants Bank for payment. The Merchants Bank paid to the Exchange Bank the amount of the voucher warrants so indorsed, made its own indorsement in the following form, except as the date varied to correspond with time of payment:
“PAID
“April 9, 1918.
“Merchants National Bank
“St. Paul, Minn.”
and presented them to the state treasurer for redemption, and the same were redeemed by payment of the amount to the bank by the treasurer upon presentation thereof.
“No bank which has paid and charged to the account of a depositor any money on a forged or raised cheek issued in the name of said depositor shall be liable to said depositor for the amount paid thereon unless * * * within six months after the return of said depositor of the voucher representing such payment, said depositor shall notify the bank that the check so paid is forged or raised.”
In our opinion this statute has no application to the facts in this case. By its terms, it applies only to forgery of the name of the depositor to a cheek purporting to have been drawn on a bank by a depositor, and paid by the bank, and charged to the depositor’s account. These instruments were not cheeks upon either bank, nor were they charged to a depositor’s account.
Judgment affirmed.