207 Misc. 130 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1954
The plaintiff sues as the assignee of the Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company (hereinafter referred to as Manufacturers) to recover the funds which Manufacturers paid out, upon the presentation to it of a check dated January
It appears that the indorsement of the payee’s name had been forged by one of Wood’s employees and the check had been cashed for him by the defendant Szymanski, who had thereafter indorsed it and deposited it in his account in the State Trust Company of North Tonawanda. (State Trust Co. was subsequently merged into the defendant Marine Trust Co. and will hereinafter be referred to as Marine.) On March 6, 1950, Marine indorsed the check by a rubber stamp containing, among other things, the legend “ Prior endorsements guaranteed ” and transmitted the check to the defendant Federal Reserve Bank (hereinafter referred to as Reserve) which in turn placed a similar stamp upon the back of the check and forwarded it to Manufacturers for payment. Manufacturers paid the amount of the check to Reserve and Reserve in turn paid over the funds to Marine.
Manufacturers in regular course debited the amount of the check to the checking account maintained by Wood and thereafter returned the check to Wood. Wood apparently did not discover the forgery for more than two years after the return of the check; at any rate, it did not notify Manufacturers of the forgery within two years and its claim against Manufacturers was therefore barred by section 43 of the Negotiable Instruments Law. This section reads as follows: “§ 43. Forged or unauthorised endorsements. No national bank or banking organization as defined in the banking law shall be liable to a depositor for the payment by it of a check bearing a forged or unauthorized endorsement unless, within two years after the return to the depositor of the voucher of such payment, such depositor shall notify the bank that the check so paid bore such forged or unauthorized endorsement. ’ ’
When Wood discovered the facts, it presented its claim to the plaintiff, the Travelers Indemnity Company, which had issued a fidelity bond covering the employee who had forged the indorsement and the indemnity company paid the loss and thereupon became subrogated to Wood’s rights. It brought an action against all three banks and against Szymanski. The plaintiff’s action against Szymanski, Marine and Reserve was abortive, because, under the settled New York rule, Wood, to whose position the plaintiff had succeeded, had no right as the drawer of the check to maintain an action against the indorsers of the check (General Fire Assur. Co. v. State Bank,
When these authorities were brought to the plaintiff’s attention, the plaintiff entered into negotiations with Manufacturers and procured from it an assignment of its cause of action as the drawee of the check against the indorsers. This assignment was set up in a supplemental complaint and is now the basis of the action. Manufacturers was dropped as a defendant in the supplemental complaint.
Szymanski, Reserve and Marine have interposed answers setting up two affirmative defenses: the first in substance alleges that, in view of the fact that Wood had failed to give notice to Manufacturers within two years, Manufacturers was no longer liable to Wood and therefore it had suffered no loss by reason of the payment of the check and hence it had no cause of action which it could assign to the plaintiff. The second affirmative defense is in substance that the drawer of the check intended it to be payable to a fictitious person and, as a result, it was in effect payable to bearer and the genuineness or lack of genuineness of the indorsement of the payee’s name was therefore immaterial.
The plaintiff has moved to strike out the two affirmative defenses on the ground that they are insufficient in law. I have concluded that the motion must be denied.
The first defense must be held to be sufficient on its face upon the present state of the pleadings. So far as appears from the pleadings, the situation at the time of the assignment by Manufacturers to the plaintiff was this: Manufacturers had reimbursed itself for the amount paid on the check from the account of its depositor and the depositor had lost the right to compel a restoration of the funds by the lapse of the two-year period under section 43 of the Negotiable Instruments Law. So far as appears, Manufacturers had never waived the bar of this section. The assignment to the plaintiff did not constitute a waiver of section 43. The assignment only transferred whatever cause of action Manufacturers may have had and, if it had no cause of action, the assignee took nothing.
If Manufacturers had elected to waive section 43 and to recredit Wood’s account with the amount of the check, a different situation would have been presented. There is authority that in that event Manufacturers, or its assignee, could have recovered against the collecting banks (and Szymanski). It has been held that, if the drawee bank voluntarily elects to
For the purpose of this decision, I shall assume that the National Surety case is sound. Under the holding of that case, the drawee bank may, if it wishes, elect to waive the defense under section 43, and recredit its depositor’s account or allow the depositor to obtain a judgment against it for the amount of the check or, in some other way, recognize a definitive liability to its depositor for the amount of the check, and then proceed against the collecting banks. It may elect to pursue this course in order to retain the good will of its customer, or to maintain friendly business relations with it, or for any other reason satisfactory to it, and the collecting banks have no right to question the drawee bank’s decision or the motives which prompted it. This does not amount to the making of a gift by the drawee bank, at the expense of the collecting banks. Despite the fact that the two-year statute has run, the fact still remains that the charge to the depositor’s account was an improper one and the drawee bank’s election voluntarily to rectify the wrong cannot properly be characterized as a gift. The drawee bank has the right to refuse to avail itself of the bar of section 43 and to recognize its moral obligation to restore what had been wrongfully taken from the depositor’s account (cf. 1 Williston on Contracts, §§ 150, 160-163, and Restatement, Contracts, §§ 85-88).
If this were not insisted upon as a condition precedent, the drawee bank might obtain a windfall by recovering from the collecting banks and then avoiding repayment to its depositor by taking advantage of the defense available to it under section 43 of the Negotiable Instruments Law.
There are two basic theories upon which a drawee bank may recover from those who have received the proceeds of a check bearing a forged indorsement. Under neither theory may a recovery be had, after the running of the two-year period under section 43, without a prior recredit of the depositor’s account or its equivalent. One theory is that the money had been paid by the drawee bank under a mistake of fact, in misreliance upon the representation by the one presenting the check, that he had good title to it. This is a quasi-contractual theory, which allows a recovery in order to prevent the unjust enrichment of the defendants (Britton on Bills and Notes, § 139, pp. 641-645). Certainly a recovery will not be allowed on that theory, if the recovery will itself result in an unjust enrichment of the plaintiff (cf. Matter of Rousos, 195 Misc. 451 ; 195 Misc. 959). The other theory upon which a drawee bank may recover is that the collecting bank guaranteed the prior indorsements and should
In this case, it may be argued that no windfall to the drawee bank would result from a recovery against the defendants because the drawee bank has assigned its cause of action to the Indemnity Company, which has succeeded to the rights of the depositor, and which is justly entitled to the proceeds of any recovery. But the assignment cannot be given the effect of creating a cause of action, if the assignor had none. The fact that there are strong equities in favor of the person who happens to be the assignee does not alter the legal situation. The crucial question is whether the assignor had a valid cause of action in its own favor at the time it made the assignment and the drawee bank had none, in the absence of a recredit to the depositor’s account or its equivalent.
It is possible that, by an involved series of transactions, the plaintiff could have acquired a good cause of action in this case. The drawee could have recredited its depositor’s account and then assigned its cause of action against the defendants to the plaintiff indemnity company in consideration of the repayment to it of the amount which it had recredited to its depositor’s account. This would have left the parties in the same situation financially as they now are, but the legal situation would have been a very different one. We cannot read into the simple assignment pleaded in this case, the whole series of steps which the parties would have had to take in order to vest in the plaintiff a valid cause of action against the defendants.
Upon analysis, it will be found that the holding in the National Surety case (supra), is entirely consistent with the conclusion here reached, although that may not appear upon a first reading of the case. The Surety Company in that case had insured both the depositor, the City of New York, and “ any bank in which
Professor Simpson of the New York University Law School has commented upon the National Surety case as follows: “ The objection that the rule may result in unjust enrichment of a drawee in the case where the latter has already recovered from the holder and thereafter resists the drawer’s claim for recredit by pleading the two year statute, is removed by the fact that prior recredit of the drawer’s account is a condition precedent to the right of the drawee to recover substantial damages from the holder for breach of the guaranty of prior indorsements ” (23 N. Y. U. L. Q. Rev., 735). See generally, ‘ ‘ Allocation of Losses from Check Forgeries ’ ’ (62 Yale L. J., 417).
The plaintiff also relies upon the statement in Fallick v. Amalgamated Bank of N. Y. (232 App. Div. 127, 130), to the effect that “ The liability of the collecting bank to repay the moneys paid out on forged indorsements which were guaranteed by the collecting bank to the depositary bank is absolute, and not in any wise dependent upon the liability of the depositary bank to its depositor ’ ’. But this statement must be read in the context of the facts of the Fallick case. In that case, the depositor brought an action against the drawee bank to recover for checks bearing forged indorsements improperly charged to its account. The drawee bank brought in the collecting banks, asserting that
(See, also, Halsey v. Bank, of New York & Trust Co., 270 N. Y. 134, and Bank of New York v. Public Nat. Bank & Trust Co., 195 Misc. 812, 821, affd. without opinion 275 App. Div. 932, affd. without opinion 301 N. Y. 503.)
The defendants urge this court to go further and to reject the doctrine of the National Surety case and to hold that even if Manufacturers had elected to waive section 43 and had recredited its depositor’s account, it or its assignee still could not recover against the defendants. I do not agree with the defendants ’ contention but, upon my analysis of this case, it is unnecessary for me to deal with it. Even upon the assumption that the holding of the National Surety case is sound, I find that the plain
The second affirmative defense must also be held to be sufficient in law. That defense rests upon the claim that the check was in effect payable to bearer and that therefore the forgery of the indorsement was of no materiality.
It is well settled that where the maker of a check makes it payable to one who has no interest in the check and who is not intended by the maker to have any interest, the check is payable to bearer within the meaning of subdivision 3 of section 28 of the Negotiable Instruments Law. The knowledge and intent of the person authorized to sign is controlling (Phillips v. Mercantile Nat. Bank of City of N. Y., 140 N. Y. 556 ; Trust Co. of Amer. v. Hamilton Bank of N. Y. City, 127 App. Div. 515 ; Hackensack Trust Co. v. Hudson Trust Co., 119 Misc. 689, affd. 207 App. Div. 897 ; National Sur. Corp. v. Federal Reserve Bank of N. Y., 161 Misc. 304, affd. 250 App. Div. 754).
It is alleged by the defendants in the second affirmative defense that the officer who drew the check on behalf of the drawer did not intend that the named payee should have any interest in the check or the proceeds thereof. If this is true, the check would in effect be one payable to bearer. The plaintiff counters with the assertion that the check required two signatures and that it was not only signed by the faithless officer who subsequently forged the indorsement, but it was also signed by another officer who, it is claimed, was unaware of the intention of his fellow officer, and that therefore the check is not to be deemed one payable to bearer (United States Fidelity & Guar. Co. v. National City Bank of N. Y., 284 N. Y. 651). This raises a question of fact which can be resolved only upon the trial.
The motion to strike out the affirmative defense is denied, without costs.
Submit order accordingly.