112 N.Y.S. 84 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
This is a controversy submitted to the court upon an agreed statement of facts under section 1279 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The controversy relates to four checks for $500 each, drawn upon the plaintiff, a trust company doing a banking business, and signed “ Estate of Kate M. Wallace, Arthur B. Wallace, Admr.” At the.time the checks were ■ presented to the plaintiff for payment the estate of Kate M. Wallace was one of its depositors, having to its credit an amount in excess of all the checks, which could be drawn out on checks signed by Arthur B. Wallace, administrator, when countersigned by the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company. The Wallace estate had then been practically settled and the amount on deposit was ready for distribution among the next of kin of the decedent. The four checks in question were drawn without the knowledge or authority of the administrator, his signature being forged, and in each there was inserted as payee the name, of some one of the next of kin whose distiibutable share of the amount on deposit with the plaintiff was greater than the amount of the check or checks thus apparently payable to such person.' The first check was dated September 25, 1905, and was presented on that .day to the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company by a person unnamed, without the knowledge of plaintiff or defendant. The United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, relying upon the apparent genuineness of the check, countersigned the same, and it was then, by some person unknown, presented to the plaintiff for a.cceptance and by it accepted, in writing. The name of the payee was then forged upon the back of the check as first indorser and it
Hpon discovering the forgeries the plaintiff at once notified the defendant, tendered back the checks and demanded repayment. In the meantime both Kerby and Conkey had withdrawn the proceeds of the checks, and the defendant, relying oh plaintiff’s acceptance and payment of thém, had paid out the same in good faith. The defendant has refused to repay plaintiff the • amount of the checks, or any of them, and the question presented is whether plaintiff is entitled thereto.
The general rule is that payments made under a mistake of fact may be recovered, although negligently made, but it is also settled that if the drawee of a bill of exchange to which the drawer’s name has been forged accepts or pays the same, he can neither repudiate the acceptance nor recover the money paid,.since he is bound to know the drawer’s signature. (Price v. Neal, 3 Burr. 1354; Bank of United States v. Bank of Georgia, 10 Wheat. 333; National Park Bank v. Ninth National Bank, 46 N. Y. 77; Goddard v. Merchants' Bank, 4 id. 147.) It is also settled that where the indorsement of the payee of a bill, of exchange has been forged, subsequent holders obtain no title to it and payments made to one who holds under such forged indorsements may be recovered. (Corn Exchange Bank v. Nassau Bank, 91 N. Y. 74; Holt v. Ross, 54 id. 472; Canal Bank v. Bank of Albany, 1 Hill, 287.)
A leading authority on the subject is Bank of England v. Vagliano Bros. (L. R. 1891 App. Cas. 107), which reversed Vagliano Bros. v. Bank of England (23 Q. B. Div. 243, and 22 id. 103). This authority has been frequently cited and is directly in point. There Yagliano Brothers were foreign bankers doing a large business in various' parts of the world. One of their clerks, G-lyka, forged a large number of bills of exchange purporting to be drawn on the - firm by one of its foreign correspondents, payable to another well-known firm. He also forged letters of advice to accompany them and caused them to be presented, the same as genuine bills, to Yagliano Brothers in the regular course of business. Yagliano Brothers, deceived by the cleverness of the forgeries, accepted from time to time bills aggregating over $350,000, which they directed the Bank of England, their general banker, to pay when presented. After bills had been accepted, Glyka would obtain possession of . them, indorse thereon the name of the payee and collect the money from the bank, which charged the amounts so paid to the account of Yagliano Brothers. The latter, on discovering the forgeries, sued the bank to recover the amounts so paid out on the forged bills. The House of Lords held, reversing the decisions of the lower courts, that this amount could not be recovered. The decision is
Sumé doubt was expressed in the Bank of England case as to whether the statute warranted such construction, since the effect was to make the fictitiousness of the payeee depend upon the maker’s intention, but under our own statute no such question can be raised. The Negotiable Instruments Law provides (Laws of 1897, chap, 612, § 28) : “ The instrument is payable to bearer * * * 3. When it is payable to the order of a fictitious or non-existing person, and such fact was known to. the person.making it so payable.”
The correctness of the decision in First National Bank v. Northwestern Bank (supra) may well be questioned, since the decision of the lower court — which was reversed by the House of Lords — in the Bank of England case was cited at length and relied upon. Whether this be so or not the decisions in our own State are entirely in harmony with the views expressed by the House of Lords. Thus in Coggill v. American Exchange Bank (1 N. Y. 113) a partner drew a bill of exchange in the name of the partnership, payable to one Truman Billings, and forged thereon the indorsement of the latter. The bill subsequently came into the hands of the defendant bank, and the plaintiff, upon whom it was drawn,' accepted and paid it. It was held that the plaintiff, on discovering the forgery, could not recover the amount paid from the defendant, since the bill was in effect payable to bearer, and defendant had good title. Judge Bronson, who delivered the opinion of the court, distinguished the case of Canal Bank v. Bank of Albany (supra) and said: “ As the payee had no interest, and it was not intended that he should ever become a party to the transac
And in Phillips v. Mercantile National Bank (140 N. Y. 556) the cashier of the ¡National Bank of Sumter, S. 0., drew checks in the name of the bank, inserting as payees the names of customers of the bank, whose indorsements he forged. The checks thus drawn were sent to various firms in-¡New York, and subsequently came into the hands of the defendant, which received them in good faith and charged them to the account of the Sumter bank.. The receiver of the Sumter bank thereafter brought an action to recover the amount of these cheeks, and it was held that the same could not be maintained, since in legal effect the payees were fictitious and the checks payable to bearer, and for that reason the defendant obtained good title. The court — Judge QbaY delivering the opinion — said: “ The names he used were, for his purposes, fictitious, because he never intended that the paper should reach the persons whose names were upon them. The transaction was one solely for the fraudulent purpose of appropriating his bank’s moneys by a trick which his position enabled him to perform. Ooncédedly, if the names of the payees were of fictitious persons, the Sumter bank * would have had no claim upon the defendant; how, then, can the' transaction be said to assume a different aspect because the names adopted were of known persons % That the intention was to treat them as being of fictitious persons is manifest. ' * * * The fictitiousness of the maker’s direction to pay does not depend upon the identification of the name of the payee with some existent person, but upon the intention underlying the act of the maker in inserting the name.”
Hnder the ¡Negotiable Instruments Law and the cases cited, I am of the opinion the checks in question, as between plaintiff and defendant, were payable to bearer. It does not appear who forged the
Hor is this view at all in conflict with Shipman v. Bank of the State of New York (126 N. Y. 318). There the plaintiffs’ firm signed a large number of checks, relying on the false statements of an employee, the names of the payees being in some instances fictitious and in others the names of existing persons. The employee upon whose false statements the checks were made then indorsed upon them the names of the respective payees, and the checks were thereafter paid in good faith by the bank upon which they were drawn: The court held that the plaintiffs could recover from the bank the amount paid, distinguishing the Bank of England case, and the distinction is obvious. . In the former case the member of the firm who signed the checks in the firm name believed that in every instance the payee was a real person to whom alone the check was payable, while in the latter case the person who wrote the maker’s signature was a forger, who knew that, so far as the bills of exchange were concerned, the payee was fictitious. The court expressly recognized the rule that the maker’s intention was controlling, saying: “ The maker’s intention is the controlling consideration which determines the character of such paper.”
It is true that in many of the authorities cited the person guilty of the fraud was connected in some way with one of the parties, which may have affected the equities of the case, as was suggested in Shipman v. Bank of the State of New York (supra) concerning the decision in the Bank of England case, while here, so far as appeal's, the guilty party was a stranger to both plaintiff and
I am of the opinion that the plaintiff has no legal claim against the defendant, and for that reason the latter is entitled to judgment upon the merits, with costs.
. Ingraham, Clarke, Houghton and Scott, JJ., concurred.
judgment ordered for defendant, with costs. Settle order ón notice.
See 45 and 46 Viet. chap. 61, § 7, suhd. 3.— [Rep.