Burrows v. Western Union Telegraph Co.

58 L.R.A. 433, 90 N.W. 1111, 86 Minn. 499, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 548
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 20, 1902
DocketNos. 13,069-(165)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 58 L.R.A. 433 (Burrows v. Western Union Telegraph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burrows v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 58 L.R.A. 433, 90 N.W. 1111, 86 Minn. 499, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 548 (Mich. 1902).

Opinions

LEWIS, J.

The firm of Scheffer & Rossum, of St. Paul, had in their employ a traveling agent by the name of Joseph E. Jerome, who resided and made his headquarters at Orookston, Minnesota. On October 8, 1900, a telegram was received by the firm as follows:

“Duluth, Minn., Oct. 8th, 1900.
Receiver’s No. 120.
Time filed, 11.25 a. m. 10 Paid. Rush.
To Scheffer & Rossum,
St. Paul, Minn.:
Telegraph me $50.00 at once; extra deal.
[Signed] J. E. Jerome.
Will call.”

,In response to this message the firm paid $50 to the respondent company at St. Paul, and the agent of the telegraph company at Duluth was authorized to pay the money to Joseph E. Jerome-Mr. Fletcher, the Duluth manager, made out a check for the amount, and handed it to Mr. Kent, the cashier. When the instructions were received from St. Paul to pay the money, the supposed Jerome was in the office, and it was known to Kent that he was the party who wired for the money. The imposter then went to get some one to identify him, and soon after six o’clock in the evening he called again in the company of one Belleveau, a resident of Duluth, who identified him as Joseph E. Jerome, whereupon the following check was delivered to him:

[501]*501“No. 706.
Western Union Tel. Co.,
Duluth, Minn., October 8th, 1900.
American Exchange Bank:
Pay to the order oí Joseph E. Jerome fifty and no 100 dollars.
$50.00. '
[Signed] G-. E. Fletcher, Office Manager.”

A receipt was taken, signed by Joseph E. Jerome, the date of which shows that the check was issued at 6.40 p. m. The party who obtained the check, in company with Belleveau, went immediately across the street to a store of appellant, and purchased a hat, offering the check in payment. He indorsed the check, writing the name “Joseph E. Jerome” on the back thereof, received the difference in cash, and departed. The telegraph company having discovered that the party receiving the check was not in fact the Joseph E. Jerome in the employ of Scheffer & Rossum, stopped payment of the check, and the present action was brought by appellant to recover the amount paid thereon.

This presents a question somewhat difficult of solution. We have found no case in the books presenting exactly the same facts. It is well settled that a bank has no authority to pay out the money of its depositors upon a check where the name of the payee has been forged. It is also the law that where the entire transaction is fictitious, and the payee and check have no existence in fact, at no time does such a check obtain legal status, no matter whether parties deal with it in good faith or not. It has been decided that where a check has been issued, payable to a certain party as payee, and another party of the same name comes into possession of it either by mistake or fraud, and forges the signature of the real party, this does not give the check any legal status, so as to protect a bank against which it was drawn. Mead v. Young, 4 Term R. 28; Graves v. American, 17 N. Y. 205; Famous v. Crosswhite, 124 Mo. 34, 27 S. W. 397. The authorities on this subject are quite thoroughly reviewed in the note to Land v. Northwestern (196 Pa. St., 230,) 50 L. R. A. 75, 84, and thus summarized: “Whatever the true theory may be, it is apparent from the foregoing cases that the drawer of a check, draft, or bill [502]*502of exchange, who delivers it to an impostor, supposing him to be the person whose name he has assumed, must, as against the drawee or bona fide holder, bear the loss, where the impostor obtains payment of or negotiates the same. On the other hand, if the check, draft, or bill is delivered to an impostor who has assumed to be the agent of the person named as payee, the loss will not fall on the drawer, at least if he was free from negligence, and there was a real person bearing that name, whom he intended to designate as payee.” But not one of the cases there reviewed presents exactly the same state of facts as are now under consideration.

In order to apply the general legal principles recognized in commercial law to the facts in this case, we must keep in view the relations of the two parties concerned. Scheffer & Rossum intended that the money should be delivered to their traveling agent, and to no one else, and for that purpose they constituted the respondent company their agent. It must be conceded that under the evidence the party who sent the telegram for the money was known to Belleveau, who identified him as Joseph E. Jerome, and that the fraud practiced was in personating the representative of Scheffer & Rossum. But it would make no difference if the impostor had imposed on Belleveau, the name Jerome being in fact assumed. The check, therefore, had a legal inception, because the telegraph company was authorized to issue it, and the mistake was made in issuing and delivering it to the wrong person. The fraud was possible for the reason that the agents of the telegraph company at Duluth accepted as satisfactory the identification which was offered. Whether the agents in so doing exercised reasonable caution, and such care as would relieve respondent from liability to Scheffer & Rossum, we need not inquire; but the Duluth agents exercised their judgment, issued the check, and placed it in the hands of the impostor, and thereby put it into his power to dispose of it to an innocent purchaser. Therefore, conceding that, as between itself and Scheffer & Rossum, it did all that could be required, what was appellant required to do, by the general rules of commercial law, when the check was tendered to him in payment of goods? If the check was in fact a nullity, [503]*503and never had any legal existence, then appellant acquired no title to it, even though he had taken the usual method of identifying • the indorser as the party receiving it. If the check had been issued and delivered to the right Jerome, and thereafter the impostor had forged his name and presented it, plaintiff would acquire no title, even though the impostor had been identified as the indorsee, because in that case the check would not have been made negotiable by virtue of the indorsement.

The test to be applied is whether, by the usual custom with reference to identification* appellant was negligent in failing to have the party presenting the check identified as the party to whom it was given. It was said in the case of Estes v. Lovering Shoe Co., 59 Minn. 504, 61 N. W. 674, that a check is within the purview of G. S. 1878, c. 73, § 89, which provides that possession of a note or bill is prima facie evidence that the same was indorsed by the person by whom it purports to be indorsed, and checks were brought within this provision of the statute for the reason that they are negotiable instruments, much used and growing in use in business transactions, and possessing all of the characteristics of inland bills. If, therefore, a check is indorsed when presented, it is to be received as prima facie evidence that it is the indorsement of the payee, because such rule is required by the necessities of business.

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Bluebook (online)
58 L.R.A. 433, 90 N.W. 1111, 86 Minn. 499, 1902 Minn. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burrows-v-western-union-telegraph-co-minn-1902.