4 Daly 223 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1871
—The answers of the defendants Frink and Sweeny, each alleged that the several checks, payable to the order of the plaintiffs, for the conversion of which this action was brought, were “ duly indorsed by the payees therein.”
The plaintiffs’ title to the checks was shown not only by their being obligations payable to them, but also by proof of
It appeared on the trial that these checks had been presented to the banks on which they were drawn (one on The Continental and the other on the Importers’ and Traders’ Bank); that they were paid upon the forged indorsements of the plaintiffs and charged to the respective accounts of the drawers. The right of the plaintiffs to maintain an action for the conversion of their property in these checks is well established by the case of Talbot v. Bank of Rochester (1 Hill, 295), as is also the right to join the successive transferees in one action by the case of Nichols v. Michael (23 N. Y. 264). See also White v. The Mechanics' National Bank, post, p. 225. No demand was necessary as to either defendant. Frink and Sweeny had transferred the checks, and The Park Bank had collected them. Besides they severally put the plaintiffs’ title in issue. They each assumed and exercised the right of an owner, and claim to have held the checks in their own right. In bringing this action, the plaintiffs do not, until satisfaction of their, claim, confirm or assent to the acts or title of any wrong doer, except that they probably affirm the payments made by the banks on which the checks were drawn and their absolute conversion by means of payments made by the drawees.
In recognizing the agency, they do not impair their remedy against the agents, through whom a wrong had been effected.
Under these views, the mere return to plaintiffs of these paid and canceled checks, after suit brought, the extinguishment of which as a subsisting liability was recognized by the
Judgment affirmed.
Present, Daly, Ch, J., Robinson and Larrehore, JJ.