45 F. 163 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin | 1891
This action is brought to recover the sum of $1,259.05, the amount of a check drawn by the post-office department at Milwaukee on the defendant, in favor of one Anton Erben, and made payable to him or his order on December 3,1.889, and paid on that day by the bank to one Adolph Schuman upon a forged indorsement. The facts, about which there is no controversy, are substantially these: Borne time
The bank used due diligence in having the holder identified, and paid to the very person to whom the check was delivered with the intention that it should be so paid. The most cautious and conservative bank in the country would have paid upon the same evidence of identification. While I cannot say that the post-office officials were guilty of any distinct want of caution or diligence, still, as between it and the bank, the fault and misfortune in failing to discover the fraud were the government’s. The post-office officials, upon full inquiry as required by law, determined that Schuman, who had the orders in hand, was Anton Erben, the payee named in the orders, and delivered him the check by that name, intending and expecting that the bank should pay to him as the real Anton Erben. The case, in my judgment, should be ruled upon the same principles as those of Bank v. Shotwell, 11 Pac. Rep. 141; Robertson v. Coleman, (Mass.) 4 N. E. Rep. 619; and Maloney v. Clark, 6 Kan. 82. The name is only one means of identifying the payee, and is frequently not the safest and best. As said by the supreme judicial court of Massachusetts in Robertson v. Coleman, above cited:
“The name of a person is the verbal designation by which lie is known, but the visible presence of the person affords surer means of identifying him than his name. The defendants, for a valuable consideration, gave the check to a person who said his name was Charles Barney, and whose name they believed to be Charles Booney, and they made it payable to the order of Charles Booney, intending thereby the person to whom they gave the check.”
So here the plaintiff gave its check to a person who said his name was Anton Erben, who was identified as Anton Erben, and whose name it believed to be Anton Erben, and made it payable to the order of Anton Erben, intending thereby the person to whom it gave the check.
The question for the bank is, “ For whom was this money intended by the drawer?” And the name is but one means of determining that question. In London, where there are several thousand John Smiths, the identification of the name alone would be a poor guide, in a case where John Smith should present a check or bill for payment. But it is the duty of the bank in such a case to look for further identification of the person, and to make no mistake in paying to the person intended by the drawer. In this case, the knowledge of the delivery of this check to the bearer, after' the strict and searching inquiry which the law requires at the hands of its officials, was a much stronger means of identification than a mere identity of name. It was the duty of the department to ascertain the true individual, and to pay to no one else. Without
“It is a misfortune which has happened without the defendant’s fault or neglect. If there was no neglect in the plaintiff! yet there is no reason to throw off the loss from one innocent man upon another innocent man. But in this case, if there was any fault or negligence in any one, it certainly was in the plaintiff, and not in the defendant. ”
2. There is, I think, another reason why the plaintiff should not recover. The department waited over a month, from about March 11th to April 17th, after having notice of the forgery, before returning the check to the hank, or giving any notice of its intention to hold the bank liable. This was, within all the cases, an unreasonable time to wait. The notice should have been given without unnecessary delay after discovery of the fraud, to enable the bank to pursue any remedy it might have against the forger or indorsers. It is no doubt true that full knowledge of the forgery may not have been in possession of the government until the coming in of the special agent’s report. But it was apprised of the fraud beloro March loth, and knew substantially all that was afterwards reported of it by the agent. It certainly know enough of it to put it upon inquiry. It is urged in answer to this objection that the defendant also had notice of the fraud about the same time. But that was not enough. The government did not repay the money until July, and the