114 Ga. 683 | Ga. | 1902
Woods & Malone brought suit against the Colony Bank, making in their petition substantially the following allegations. On a named day, a draft for $150, payable to A. W. Hodge or bearer, and purporting to have been drawn by Jacob Dorminy upon petitioners, was cashed by the defendant and transferred to it by the person then having it in possession. At the time, of cashing the draft the defendant was guilty of negligence in failing to require any identification of the person presenting it, and in failing to use any diligence to ascertain whether or not the signature of Jacob Dorminy was genuine. The defendant indorsed the draft, and in due time it was presented to petitioners for payment. Petitioners, in the exercise of all due diligence, and believing the paper to be genuine, paid -it and charged the amount to the account of Dorminy, the defendant receiving the sum thus paid. Subsequently the signature of Jacob Dorminy was discovered to have been forged; whereupon petitioners credited Dorniiny’s account with the amount with which it had been charged, and promptly notified the defendant that the paper was a forgery, and demanded the return of the money paid it by petitioners, which demand was refused. The payment of the amount of the draft by petitioners was made under a mistake of fact as to the genuineness of the signature of Jacob Dorminy, and petitioners were guilty of no negligence in the matter. They sued to recover back from the defendant the money paid on the draft, with interest. Attached to the petition as an exhibit was a copy of the draft, on the back of which was the indorsement, “A. W. Hodge,” and the following indorsement by the defendant: “ Pay to order of any bank or banker. The Colony Bank, Fitzgerald, Ga., Wm. R. Bowen, Cashier.” The defendant demurred generally; and also demurred specially on the grounds, that the petition did not allege what person transferred the alleged draft to the defendant; that the petition shows that if the plaintiffs have sustained any loss, it was by their own neglect and careless
The rule that a drawee is presumed to know his drawer’s signature, or at least that he is presumed to know it better than a stranger, is founded on sound reason, and is predicated upon the further presumption that the drawer is a customer or business associate of the drawee, and that their business relations have been such as to insure such knowledge on the part of the drawee. But, in determining the relative rights of a drawee who, under a mistake of fact, has paid, and a holder who has received such payment upon a draft to which the name of the drawer has been forged, it would seem to be only fair to consider the question of diligence or negligence of the parties in respect thereto. If the holder has been negligent in paying the forged paper, or has, by his conduct, however innocent, misled or deceived the drawee to his damage, it would be unjust for him to be allowed to shield himself from the results of his own carelessness by asserting that the drawee was bound in law to know his drawer’s signature. Of course the drawee must, in order to recover back from the holder, show that he himself was free from fault. An examination of the case of Price v. Neal, supra, which is cited with confidence by counsel for the defendant in error, will show that the underlying principle of the decision was the negligence of the drawee. Says Lord Mansfield, in that case: “The plaintiff lies by, for a considerable’ time after he has paid these bills, and then found out that they were forged, and the for
Tested by what has been said, the petition in the record before us measures fully up to the requirements-of law. According to it, the defendant bank was grossly negligent in paying out money to a man of whom they knew nothing, upon a paper as to the genuineness of which they knew nothing, and in failing to take any precautionary measures to obtain information in regard to either.
Judgment reversed.