85 N.Y. 207 | NY | 1881
The issues were tried by a judge without a jury, and exceptions to his conclusions of law permit the inquiry whether the facts found will support the judgment.
It appears that on the 5th day of June, 1877, the First National Bank of Plamfield, N.J., made and issued its draft upon the First National Bank of New York, for $25, payable to the order of William A. Palmer, but prior to the 12th day of June, 1877, it was so altered by some unknown person that when on that day a stranger brought it to plaintiff's banking house, it bore date the 6th day of June, 1877, instead of the 5th, was for $1,200, instead of $25, payable to the order of William Brown instead of William A. Palmer, and upon it was indorsed the name of William Brown. The defendant's testator was then with the stranger and the latter asked for money on the draft. The plaintiff purchased it and paid the money to him. The defendant's signature was then on the draft as an indorser, but the money was not paid until after the defendant left the bank. From the order in which these events are stated by the trial judge and the particularity of detail, it may be fairly inferred that the indorsement by defendant was at the bank and intermediate the application and the purchase. This inference is strengthened by the fact that such indorsement does not appear upon the copy-draft set out in words and figures in the report and representing, as is found, its true condition when *210 taken to the bank and offered to its cashier. Thus plaintiff's case against Pickering rests solely on the draft and his indorsement, aided by no finding of collateral circumstances. That such existed, we might imply from the allegations in either pleading; but as to them no finding was made, nor, so far as the case shows, was any evidence given in their support. It is found, moreover, that he put his name upon the draft as "an indorser." He is bound then by no other obligation than is implied by law from that relation. It is obvious that he was an accommodation indorser, and it is not pretended that he received any portion of the avails of the draft. What then was his engagement? As indorser it was in general terms to pay the draft to any holder for value whose title was derived through the payee, provided it was duly presented to the drawee, payment refused by it and due notice of non-payment given to him. (Hall v. Newcomb, 7 Hill, 416; Spies v. Gilmore, 1 Comst. 321.)
It is clear that the judgment of the Special Term cannot stand upon the performance of any of these conditions. The draft was sent by the plaintiff to its correspondent, The National City Bank, for collection, and after the usual course through the clearing-house, was paid to it by drawee. It is contended by the defendant that the obligation of his testator was thus fulfilled. But, on the other hand, it is urged, "that by indorsing the draft he guaranteed its genuineness in all its particulars, including the amount of money for which it called;" and as the drawee afterward credited back to the Plainfield Bank the money which it had charged and the National Bank repaid the money it received to the drawee, and the plaintiff to the National Bank, that the testator as indorser is bound to pay to the plaintiff the money which it paid the stranger for the draft. It must be conceded that the Plainfield Bank was at least entitled to have refunded to it the difference between the true sum for which the draft was issued and that to which the check had been altered; and in like manner, that the plaintiff would be entitled to recover from the stranger to whom it was paid the same amount of *211
money (Hall v. Fuller, 5 B. C. 750; Merchants' Bank ofN.Y. v. Exchange Bank of N.O.,
It remains to consider the case of Turnbull v. Bowyer
(
There are no doubt cases in which an indorser is liable without notice of non-payment. Bickerdike v. Bollman (1 Term Rep. 405) is said by PARKE, B., in Carter v. Flower (16 M. W. 743), to have made the first exception to the general law which requires such notice. There the indorser knew the draft was not to be paid; and another is illustrated in The Mechanics' Bank ofN.Y. v. Griswold (7 Wend. 165), where the indorser had all the maker's property. But that any exception should be allowed has been many times regretted, because thereby nice distinctions were introduced into the law, and a plain and intelligible rule departed from. It has however been uniformly held that whoever will avail himself of an exception to the general rule must bring his case within it, either by some recognized authority, or the application of some legal principle. Such exceptions should not be multiplied. Turnbull v. Bowyer (supra) goes no farther than to make an indorser liable upon an implied warranty, that a prior indorsement, purporting to be that of the payee, was genuine; and upon the same principle it has been held that a bank certifying a check in the usual form simply certifies to the genuineness of the signature of the drawer, and that he has funds sufficient to meet it. It does not warrant the genuineness of the body of the check as to payee or amount. This was decided in TheMarine National Bank v. The National City Bank (
It may be that upon a new trial other facts might be established, but by this appeal the plaintiff has deprived itself of that opportunity; and as the above views lead to an affirmance of the order appealed from, the respondent will, by force of the stipulation which made the appeal possible, be also entitled to judgment absolute.
All concur; FOLGER, CH. J., and EARL, J., in result.
Judgment affirmed, and judgment absolute for the defendant.