Bk. of Balto. v. Drovers', Etc., Bk.

122 A. 12, 143 Md. 168, 30 A.L.R. 1019, 1923 Md. LEXIS 86
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 16, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 122 A. 12 (Bk. of Balto. v. Drovers', Etc., Bk.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bk. of Balto. v. Drovers', Etc., Bk., 122 A. 12, 143 Md. 168, 30 A.L.R. 1019, 1923 Md. LEXIS 86 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

The appellee sued the appellant to recover the sum of $2,500 with interest, paid in error by the appellee to the appellant, on account of a check appearing to have been drawn by John B. Hammond to the order of Chester Page, on the Drovers and Mechanics National Bank of Baltimore, dated February 24, 1922, for that amount, and bearing the forged certification of the teller of that bank. The check was cashed by the Bank of Baltimore on Saturday, February 25, 1922, paying Chester Page, a depositor in that bank, who presented the check about eleven o'clock, the amount in currency. It was sent to the clearing house on Monday, February 27, and the items presented by the defendant against the plaintiff were delivered to the agent of the plaintiff and taken to its banking house.

The Baltimore Clearing House is an association of some of the banks in Baltimore, including the plaintiff and defendant, and "for the purpose of effecting settlement of the daily balances between them, and for the promotion of their interests." By article 6 of its constitution, it is provided that "such banks as desire a preliminary exchange of sealed packages between themselves, each bank giving to the other its receipt for the amount indicated on the outside of the sealed package, on printed forms to be provided therefor, shall meet for this purpose at 8.15 A.M. at the Clearing House each morning, such receipts to be charged against the respective banks at the regular clearing, which shall be at 9.45 A.M. precisely; checks and items represented by these receipts to be governed by the same regulations which govern items cleared through the regular clearing at 9.45 A.M." Settlements of daily balances are made by transfer of funds of the respective members on deposit with the Baltimore Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond. There is an afternoon clearing at 1 P.M., except on Saturdays, when the hour is 12 noon.

In article 8 of the constitution there is this provision: *Page 170

"In the case of errors in the exchanges and claims arising from mis-sent items, notice must be given by 12 o'clock noon and adjustment made directly, between the banks which are parties thereto and not through the Clearing House. In the case of claims arising from checks that are `not good' or irregular, or from other causes, notice must likewise be given before 12 o'clock noon, and the adjustment may be made directly between the banks parties thereto, or at the clearing of returned items held in the afternoon of the same day, as next hereinafter provided. Upon request made before 12 o'clock noon, any bank shall extend until 1 o'clock P.M. the time for returning items on it as `not good.'"

According to the custom of the plaintiff, the bundle of items received from another bank is first handed to the clerks, who verify the amounts and then turn over the items to the receiving and paying tellers, or their assistants, who examine them with reference to the signatures. They are then given to clerks, who examine them to see if the endorsements are regular, and, if they are, they are assorted according to the initial letters of the persons against whom they are to be charged. Certified checks are charged against the drawers at the time of the certification, and hence they are not given to the bookkeepers when they are returned, but are set aside for the paying teller to compare them with his certified check blotter, and the memorandum of such outstanding checks so returned to be cancelled. Some other items go to the paying teller besides certified checks. Several of the clerks of the bank were sick on that day, and the paying teller did not examine the certified checks until about 2.15 P.M. There was a valid certification of a check for $2,500 dated February 24th, 1922, signed by "John B. Hammond" and endorsed by "Chester Page," and on the 25th of February the teller of the Drovers and Mechanics Bank paid that check to Hammond and took it up. Upon looking, about 2.15 P.M., at the certified checks sent from the clearing house *Page 171 on the morning of the 27th, the teller saw two similar certified checks to the one that he paid on the previous Saturday, one of which had been cashed by the Bank of Baltimore. Seeing that they were forgeries of the certification he had made on the 24th, the teller at once told the vice-president of the plaintiff of his discovery. Upon further examination, they found that there were seven forged certifications (including the one paid by the defendant) presented to different banks on the 25th, all of which had been paid and sent to the clearing house. The banks, including the defendant, were at once notified.

Whether or not "John B. Hammond" and "Chester Page" were one and the same person, or Page was a confederate of Hammond, is not definitely known, but on February 4th, 1922, "John B. Hammond" opened an account with the Drovers and Mechanics Bank, made deposits and checked on them, and on the 24th of February he had a little over $2,500 to his credit. "Chester Page" opened, in the Bank of Baltimore, a "commercial account" in which he deposited $500, and a "savings account" in which he deposited $50. Between the two men, or the one man of two names, as the case may be, they got $20,000 out of eight banks in Baltimore on a deposit of $2,500 in one, plus some little balances they left. Hammond and Page, or Hammond alias Page, whichever it was, forged, or had forged by some one, the certification on the check cashed by the Bank of Baltimore, and, as we understand, six others. The protectograph used on the valid certification was not on the forged certification, and the valid one was written in green ink, while that on the forged ones was in black ink. The name of the drawer was not forged, nor was that of the payee.

It was agreed that on February 27th, 1922, the plaintiff bank was charged, through the clearing House, with $34,437.30 in favor of the defendant bank, and was credited with $23,690.49 against it. Included in the amount charged against the plaintiff was the check of $2,500, upon which *Page 172 was the forged certification. That balance was settled in the usual manner at 12 o'clock on that day.

The case was tried before JUDGE STEIN, sitting as a jury, in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City. There are six bills of exception, presenting rulings on evidence, and the seventh, which includes the action of the court on the prayers. The plaintiff offered four prayers, all of which were rejected excepting the second, and the defendant offered two, both of which were rejected. The defendant excepted to the granting of the plaintiff's second prayer and the rejection of its two prayers. The principal question to be determined is whether the failure to give the defendant notice of the forgery by the time named in article 8 of the constitution of the clearing house, quoted above, defeats a recovery, and as the plaintiff's second and the defendant's second prayer present the positions of the respective parties, we will first consider them. The theory of the plaintiff is that, as the defendant did not take any action to its detriment which was induced by failure of the plaintiff to give notice of the forgery within the time prescribed by the rules of the clearing house, its failure to do so does not prevent a recovery, while that of the defendant is that, as the notice was not given as fixed by the rule, payment of the check had become final and the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.

It does not seem to us to be material that the check in controversy was actually signed by the drawer and endorsed by the payee.

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Related

Suburban Construction Co. v. Page
159 A. 777 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
122 A. 12, 143 Md. 168, 30 A.L.R. 1019, 1923 Md. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bk-of-balto-v-drovers-etc-bk-md-1923.