28 N.Y.S. 711 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1894
There was sufficient evidence to sustain the finding that the disputed checks were not drawn by plaintiffs, nor with their knowledge nor in the course of their business, and that they
There is no ground for holding the plaintiffs estopped. After the bank had parted with its money upon the forged checks, nothing was done nor left undone on the part of the depositors by which the bank lost any rights; and, although the pass book showing the account as balanced was retained by them for some time, the delay was accounted for by showing that in the ordinary course of business the book and the vouchers were given to their bookkeeper for examination, and that he availed himself of the opportunity to conceal the fraud he had already perpetrated. This delay did not make the account stated conclusive upon the plaintiffs, but only cast upon them the burden of impeaching it for mistake, and proving that the checks were forged. August v. Bank (Sup.) 1 N. Y. Supp. 139. Had they even made a personal examination of thé vouchers, and been deceived by the fraudulent signature, and acquiesced in the account under the impression that it was correct, they would not be estopped from making the claim upon subsequent discovery of the forgery, unless the delay had prejudiced the bank. Weisser v. Denison, 10 N. Y. 68. Banks are bound to know the signatures of their depositors, and, if they pay forged checks, they commit the first fault, and cannot visit the consequences upon the innocent depositor, who, after the fact, is also deceived by the simulated paper. So if the depositor, in the ordinary course of business, commits the examination of the bank account and vouchers to a clerk who is the criminal, and he fails to .disclose the forged checks, the duty of the depositor to the bank is discharged, although, if he had made the examination personally, he would have detected them. The duty of the depositor at most is to exercise ordinary care, and this was performed when, in the ordinary course, they intrusted the duty of examination to the usual agent. Frank v. Bank, 84 N. Y. 209; Welch v. Bank, 73 N. Y. 424.
It was not error for the court to refuse the instruction asked for by defendant,—that the jury must find a verdict for defendant; that the plaintiffs, by their course of conduct, had put it in the power of their bookkeeper to perpetrate the forgery, if the checks were forged, and the plaintiffs’ own negligence estops them from the right to recover in this action. It is not now contended, however, that the defendant was entitled to a direction of a verdict as asked for, but that it was the duty of the court to submit the question of plaintiffs’ negligence to the jury. 27o such request was made at the trial, and the only exception which it is claimed presents error in this regard is one taken “to that part of the charge wherein it states that the only question for the jury is whether Wachsman & Company drew the checks in dispute or not.” This exception, in the absence of request to submit the specific question
It is argued that the exception last referred to is available to appellant because the instruction that the only question for the jury was whether plaintiffs drew the checks in dispute or not did not present the real issue litigated upon the trial, and was therefore erroneous. On the contrary, that was the principal issue litigated upon the trial, and no error was committed in submitting it to the jury, and in submitting it as the only issue, since appellant claimed, in effect, that there was no other, by asking a direction of a verdict on the other question, which he deemed established by the evidence; Much of appellant’s brief is devoted to considerations which, however proper for cognizance by the city court, are ineffectual upon this appeal, where we are limited to the review of questions raised by appropriate exceptions.
The general exception to the instruction complained of does not suffice to present the question whether there was any proof of the forgery of two of the checks. There was no motion to dismiss the complaint at the close of the case, and no request for instruction on the point now made, nor any exception to the submission to the jury of the genuineness of the two checks. The only exception to ruling upon admission of evidence presents no error. The forged checks were made payable to one J. Gr. Morris, and the plaintiffs had the right to show that they had no dealings with such á person.