Bennett v. First National Bank of Hollywood
This text of 190 P. 831 (Bennett v. First National Bank of Hollywood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This action was brought by plaintiff against the First National Bank of Hollywood to recover the sum of one thousand dollars, which the bank charged to his account because of the payment of a check drawn by him thereon and upon which the name of the payee was forged.
Judgment went for plaintiff, from which the defendant appeals upon the judgment-roll.
As appears from the findings, the facts are as follows: In August, 1917, one S. W. Thomas, then a man of good repute and president of the Garvanza Investment Company, falsely represented to plaintiff that he was the agent of Abbie Gilbert (who was in fact a real person), and that she desired a loan of two thousand dollars, to be secured by mortgage upon certain real estate owned by her. Plaintiff agreed to make the loan and some days thereafter Thomas delivered to him a note and mortgage purporting to be executed by Gilbert, both of which documents were in fact forged instruments. Thereupon plaintiff delivered to Thomas a cheek 'for one thousand dollars, drawn upon defendant *452 bank and payable to the order of Abbie Gilbert, whose name Thomas, without her consent or knowledge, indorsed thereon and deposited it in the First National Bank of Glendale to the credit of the Garvanza Investment Company, the account of which he used for his own purposes, and which check, upon being presented to defendant, was paid in due course on August 22, 1917. Thereafter, to wit, on August 27, 1917, in advancing the balance due upon said purported loan, plaintiff gave his check upon defendant bank for one thousand dollars, payable to the order of S. W. Thomas, who duly indorsed the same, which defendant paid to the account of said Garvanza Investment Company upon presentation, likewise charging the same to plaintiff’s account. Prior to the time when the Garvanza Investment Company received the proceeds of the Thomas check, all the money represented by the Gilbert check was by it cheeked out and paid to persons not here concerned. While Thomas, between September 4, 1917, and April 5, 1918, paid plaintiff in installments the sum of one thousand' dollars, which sums were credited generally upon the forged note of Abbie Gilbert, no part thereof was from the proceeds of the Gilbert check. Neither Abbie Gilbert nor the parties hereto learned of the fraudulent nature of the transactions until September, 1918, at which time plaintiff demanded payment from defendant of his one thousand dollars so paid out on the Gilbert check. The court further found that plaintiff was not guilty of any negligence which contributed to the action of defendant in making said payment, and that the payment of one thousand dollars made by Thomas on said purported note of Gilbert “was not made at the expense of or to the injury of defendant, and that plaintiff was not (thereby) benefited beyond his total loss.”
Upon these findings appellant attacks the court’s conclusion of law based thereon, “that plaintiff had a right to apply the whole sum of one - thousand dollars paid by S. W. Thomas to plaintiff on account of the said note and mortgage in liquidation of the said check of one thousand dollars made and delivered by plaintiff to said S. W. Thomas on the twenty-seventh day of August, 1917, and to apply no part of the same on the said check of one thousand dollars payable to said Abbie Gilbert.”
*453 Defendant’s unauthorized act in paying the Gilbert check upon which' the indorsement was forged is conceded by appellant (Redington v. Woods, 45 Cal. 406, [13 Am. Rep. 190]), who, however, insists that defendant should have the benefit' of the one thousand dollars paid by Thomas in liquidation of any damage sustained by plaintiff on account of such unauthorized action on its part.
The action is not based upon the fraud practiced by Thomas • upon plaintiff. That is no concern of defendant.
The judgment is affirmed.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.
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190 P. 831, 47 Cal. App. 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-first-national-bank-of-hollywood-calctapp-1920.