Allen v. . Williamsburgh Savings Bank

69 N.Y. 314, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 841
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 69 N.Y. 314 (Allen v. . Williamsburgh Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. . Williamsburgh Savings Bank, 69 N.Y. 314, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 841 (N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

*317 Folger, J.

It may be taken as undisputed, that the name of the plaintiff to the order on the defendant is not his genuine signature. If the payment had been' made in reliance upon that instrument, and in the absence of agreement as to the mode of making payment, the defendant could not be excused. It would have been bound to know that the signature of its customer was forged; (The Nat. Park Bank v. Ninth Nat. Bank, 46 N. Y., 77.) If the payment had been made in reliance upon the fact alone, that it was to a person producing the deposit book, the defendant could not be excused; it must appear in addition that there was the exercise of at least ordinary care and diligence. So it was held in Appleby v. Erie Co. Savings Bank (62 N. Y., 12.)

It has made rules as to payments, by which it and its customers are to be governed, they being in the nature of an agreement; (ib.) It is not to be excused, until it has shown that it used its best efforts, called for under the circumstances of the case, to prevent fraud. It agreed to do that by those rules. It is true that the plaintiff has agreed to the rules also, and that a part of them is, that all payments made to persons producing the deposit books shall be deemed good and valid payments to depositors respectively. He is to be held to have agreed to it, however, in view of the counter-agreement of the defendant, that it would use its best efforts to prevent fraud. It may hold the depositor to one part of the rule, but it must be held to the other. There is also to be kept in sight the other rule which is connected therewith, prescribing the three ways in which drafts may be made. By the word “ drafts ” is not meant the instruments in writing commonly known as such, viz.: bills of exchange or orders for money; but the acts or fact of drawing money by the depositor from the funds of the bank. Those three ways were: first, personally; second, by the order in writing of the depositor, if the bank have his signature on its signature book; third, by letter of attorney, duly authenticated. Now it has made payment; but it was not to the plaintiff personally; it was not on the order in writing of the plaintiff, whose *318 signature it had upon its signature book; it was not by letter of attorney duly authenicated. So that it is confined for a justification of the payment, to the operation of the rule that all payments made to persons producing the deposit books shall be deemed good and valid payments to depositors respectively. And relying upon that, it must show also that it used its best efforts to prevent fraud.

The defendant insists that it has shown this, and that it should have been ruled as matter of law by the trial court that it had done so; and that the trial court was in error in submitting any question to the jury.

It relies upon Schoenwald v. Metropolitan Savings Bank (57 N. Y., 418), as a conclusive authority upon that point.

. If it be conceded that it was so held in that case, we think that the case in hand is distinguishable therefrom. In that case special attention is not given to the clause' in the rules, that the secretary will use his best efforts to prevent fraud. It is quite likely, that there was in the judgment of the learned court no need to notice it. It seems from the report, that the signature to the order presented, was very much like the genuine signature of the depositor there ; that the plaintiff herself testified, that she did not know if it was or not, and that it looked like her handwriting ; and could deny that it was her signature, only argumentatively, because she never gave any -one a paper like that. The testimony in that case will bear out the remark of the learned commissioner who delivered the opinion: “I do not discover that there was anything in the nature of the transaction to indicate that the order was a forgery, as, upon somewhat questionable evidence, the jury has found.” But I am compelled to say, that there are some expressions in the opinion in that case, with which I cannot agree. For instance, that “the bank had the right to make the payment it did, on the simple production of the pass book.” How the depositor there was a female. The person who produced the book was a male. Here was a fact,- which at once notified the bank officers that it was not the depositor who applied for payment. It can *319 not be, that in such case, the bank officers should not be excited to suspicion, and called to the exercise of inquiry and care. Although there was an order for money, in that case, the opinion denies', “ that it was at all material to the defendant whether it was a forgery or not.” The person producing the book was plainly not the depositor named in it. This was a fact calling for care. How was care to be shown ? The book was not a negotiable instrument. Though such an evidence of a right may be assignable by delivery, the delivery must be accompanied with the intent to assign. That intent is not established by the possession of the book merely. An officer, in the exercise of ordinary care, would or should in such a case, ask for further evidence of right to demand payment. The natural and easy evidence to be given, would be the order of the depositor upon the bank, for the payment of money to the holder of the book. So, when an order is required, or is produced with the book without previous requirement, it is a material thing, whether it be forged or not, and the paying agent of the bank is called upon to scrutinize, and compare and verify it. If detected as a forged order, it is not “ at least equal to no order at all,” for it is, as a forged order, a conclusive proof of an attempted fraud, which the bank has promised the best efforts to prevent.

I do not say that the result reached by the learned commissioner was not a correct one upon the facts of that case, which appear much stronger to sustain him, in the appeal book, than in the report in 57 N. Y. But with the reasoning as above noticed I cannot agree. The officers of savings banks, acting under rules such as those shown to us in this case, are bound to the exercise of care and diligence, up to the mark which is fixed for the bank by those rules. When a person of one sex produces the deposit book' issued to one of another sex, it should arrest the attention and excite inquiry. It will be entirely incompatible with a pretence of good faith, or of the use of best efforts to prevent fraud, to assert that a payment in such case was believed to be to the depositor personally, and to take shelter behind the *320 clause in the rules, that a payment to the person producing the book shall be deemed good and valid. Payment to .a woman producing the book of a man, without an assignment, without proof of delivery, without an order, or letter of administration or testamentary, and merely upon the production of the book, is negligence too gross to be justified or excused. The defendant perceived this, and required an order for the money. It did not rely upon the possession of the book.

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Bluebook (online)
69 N.Y. 314, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-williamsburgh-savings-bank-ny-1877.