Bellantese v. Bronx Savings Bank

152 Misc. 325, 273 N.Y.S. 885, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1578
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedJuly 16, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 152 Misc. 325 (Bellantese v. Bronx Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bellantese v. Bronx Savings Bank, 152 Misc. 325, 273 N.Y.S. 885, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1578 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Donnelly, J.

In this action plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant savings bank the sum of $1,867.09, moneys deposited with it by plaintiff, and which, it is claimed, the bank negligently paid upon forged withdrawal orders.

[326]*326On May 2, 1931, plaintiff society opened an account with the defendant by the initial deposit therein of $1,800. By a resolution of the society on that date this money was to be withdrawn pursuant to orders signed by Narciso Maiolo, president; Antonio Castagnozzi, treasurer, and Guiseppe Abetecola, secretary. By a resolution of the society dated February 23, 1932, the three names were changed in one respect, namely, that one Umberto Poli was substituted as treasurer in the place and stead of Antonio Castagnozzi. By a subsequent resolution dated April 20, 1932, the three names were again changed in one respect, namely, Angelo Moretto or Moretti. was substituted as secretary in the place and stead of Guiseppe Abetecola. This resolution of April 20, 1932, is a forgery. The name “ Angelo Moretto ” or Moretti ” is fictitious. No person of either name ever belonged to or now is a member of plaintiff society. (Brown v. People, 8 Hun, 562, 563; People v. Jones, 106 N. Y. 523; People v. Browne, 118 App. Div. 793, 799.) The forgery was committed by Poli, to make easier,” as stated by plaintiff’s counsel in his brief, his [Poli’s] forgeries and peculations of the society’s money.” There is ample justification for that statement.

The first withdrawal order presented to the defendant is dated February 23, 1932. It calls for the payment of $350. A comparison of the forged signature thereon of Guiseppe Abetecola with the genuine signature of Abetecola on the resolution of May 2, 1931, does not show any dissimilarities to excite suspicion. Following the resolution of April 20, 1932, in which the name “ Angelo Moretto ” or “ Moretti ” appears, there were presented to the bank eleven withdrawal orders, beginning April 22, 1932, and continuing to and including April 18, 1933. On the signature card at the defendant bank there is in the final letter of the name “ Moretto ” or Moretti ” a flourish which gives that letter the appearance of an o.” There is in the resolution a similar flourish in the same letter, giving it likewise the appearance of an o.” On all of these eleven withdrawal orders, with the exception of the one dated April 22, 1932, the name is written Moretti.” On the withdrawal order dated April 22, 1932, it is written “ Moretto.”

In Noah v. Bank for Savings (171 App. Div. 191, 193) it was held: “ The rule as to the liability of savings banks for payments made upon forged drafts is well settled. It is quite different from that which applies to ordinary banks of deposit which act at their peril and are absolutely hable for payments made upon forged checks, no matter how skillful the forgery may be. In the case of savings banks, however, the rule is that the bank will not be hable for having paid upon a forged draft unless negligence can [327]*327be imputed to it, that is to say, unless the discrepancy between the signatures is so marked and plain that an ordinarily competent clerk, exercising reasonable care, should detect the forgery. (Campbell v. Schenectady Savings Bank, 114 App. Div. 337; Kelley v. Buffalo Savings Bank, 180 N. Y. 171; Appleby v. Erie County Savings Bank, 62 id. 12.)”

In the instant case the defendant had two head tellers and other tellers who worked under them. When the pass book and withdrawal slip were presented at the window of either head teller, he examined the signature on the withdrawal slip and compared it with the signature on the identification card and on the resolution in the bank’s possession. The same procedure was followed in the case of each withdrawal slip presented at the window of each of the other tellers, after which the slips were passed on to each of the head tellers who made the same examination and comparison. In the case of each withdrawal the pass book was presented with the withdrawal slip.

It may be conceded that there is a difference between the names Moretto ” and Moretti.” Whether or not there is such a marked discrepancy in the manner in which the names were written upon the resolution and the identification card and the withdrawal slips resolves itself into a question of fact properly left to a jury to decide. (Fricke v. German Savings Bank, 4 N. Y. Supp. 627.) It would not be evidence of negligence if the difference was not marked and apparent, or if it would require a critical examination to detect it, and especially if the discrepancy was one as to which competent persons might honestly differ in opinion. (Appleby v. Erie County Savings Bank, ante, at p. 18.)

In the instant case the trial was before me without a jury. A comparison of the signature Moretto ” or “ Moretti ” on the resolution, with the signature on the identification card, shows no marked dissimilarity. The same is true of the signatures on the identification card and on the withdrawal slip dated April 22, 1932. On all of the other eleven withdrawal slips the name is written Moretti,” but the final letter in the name as it appears on the identification card is written as though the writer intended to make an i,” but, by making a flourish, the letter has the appearance of an o.” At bar the tellers were dealing with a class of depositors who have never adopted a standard signature, and whose signatures may on different occasions differ considerably. In these circumstances it is easy to understand why the defendant’s tellers, without any imputation of negligence, could detect no significant discrepancy in the signatures.

[328]*328Plaintiff society was organized for ■ the purpose of giving aid to its members, paid out of its funds. Poli became its treasurer in January, 1932. He had charge of the society’s benefit moneys paid to the society’s members, and of their disbursement. Death benefits were paid out of the society’s collections from its members. If these collections were not sufficient for the payment of benefits, the money was drawn out of the society’s account in the defendant bank. At the time of the society’s organization in 1922 it had a membership of between one hundred and fifty and two hundred; it now has a membership of fifty. Poli was the only one who drew money out of the society’s account in the defendant bank.

Narciso Maiolo has been a member of the society for twelve or thirteen years. He was its president in 1931 and 1932. During his incumbency as president the society’s financial secretary made reports to it each month purporting to show how much there was in its account with the defendant. After February 23, 1932, when Poli became treasurer, the practice of making such reports appears to have been discontinued, and a general audit, so called, was made only once a year. In these “ general audits ” information was given to the society purporting to show how much was in its account with the defendant bank. Up to the end of 1932 there had been withdrawn by Poli from the account approximately $1,400. To the question asked of Maiolo,

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Bluebook (online)
152 Misc. 325, 273 N.Y.S. 885, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bellantese-v-bronx-savings-bank-nycountyct-1934.