Califf v. First National Bank

37 Pa. Super. 412, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 296
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 12, 1908
DocketAppeal, No. 208
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 37 Pa. Super. 412 (Califf v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Califf v. First National Bank, 37 Pa. Super. 412, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 296 (Pa. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Opinion by

Porter, J.,

Some time prior to April 6, 1901, one M. C. Decker applied to the plaintiff, who is an attorney at law, for a loan to Mrs. Matilda Brown, the mother-in-law of Decker. Decker was a minister of the gospel and the evidence in this case established nothing which ought to have aroused the suspicion of the plaintiff as to the regularity of the transaction. Being satisfied as to the sufficiency of the land owned by Mrs. Brown, as a security, the plaintiff acting for Mrs. Emily L. Rice, a client, arranged to make the loan taking as security therefor a note with the warrant of attorney to confess judgment. The plaintiff drew such a note and gave it to Decker for the purpose of having it executed. Decker, on April 6, 1901, returned this note, with what purported to be the signature of Mrs. Brown and two subscribing witnesses. The plaintiff thereupon caused judgment to be entered upon the note, paid off certain claims, and mailed to Mrs. Matilda Brown, at her proper address, a letter containing a check on the defendant bank, payable to her order, for $364.74, the amount of the balance of the loan, the check was drawn by the plaintiff upon his own account, as a depositor of the First National Bank, the defendant. This check was presented by M. C. Decker at the Athens National Bank, of Athens, Pa., and by that bank negotiated, Decker indorsing it in this form: “Matilda Brown, per M. C. Decker, attorney in fact,” which indorsement was guaranteed in writing, by the Athens National Bank, upon the back of the check in this form: “Indorsement guaranteed, M. J. Murphy, cashier.” Following this indorsement was the indorsement by the Athens National Bank in this form: “Athens National Bank, Athens, Pa., M. J. Murphy, cashier.” The check thus indorsed was on [415]*415April 8, presented by the Athens National Bank to the First National Bank of Towanda, the defendant, and was by that bank paid and charged to the account of the plaintiff. The check remained in the possession of the defendant bank until February 14,1902, when the plaintiff’s bank book was written up, balanced and this check, with others, was delivered to him. In the latter part of May, 1903, Mrs. Rice wrote to Mrs. Brown requesting payment of interest on the judgment, and Mrs. Brown replied, saying: “that she did not know what she meant.” Some time in June, 1903, the plaintiff with this letter which had been written by Mrs. Brown to Mrs. Rice and the check in question in his possession went to see Mrs. Brown about the matter and she then told him that she had never received the check and knew nothing about the transaction. The plaintiff on the same day, while on his way home after liis call on Mrs. Brown, called at the Athens National Bank and told the officers of that institution what Mrs. Brown had said. But there is no competent evidence that he at that time reported the matter to the defendant bank. Nothing further was done in the matter until April, 1906, when a writ of scire facias was issued on the judgment. Matilda Brown, on May 7, 1906, presented her petition praying the court to open the judgment, averring that she had never had any dealings with the plaintiff (Mrs. Rice) and had never received any money or property from her, that the petitioner had never given to the plaintiff, or to anyone for the plaintiff, the note upon which the judgment was entered, and that the same was not signed by her nor had she authorized anyone to sign the same for her. Mrs. Rice made answer to the petition, which was filed August 18, 1906. Depositions on behalf of the defendant, in this proceeding to open the judgment, were taken in November, 1906. The plaintiff in the present action, testifies that during the taking of these depositions he became convinced that the contention of Mrs. Brown that she had never authorized the loan and never had received any part of the money arising from the same, was true, and because of that conviction he within a few days called the matter to the attention of the defendant bank. He had exhibited [416]*416the check to the officers of the bank, asserting that its payment by the bank had been unauthorized and that he was entitled to be paid the amount of the check, and after the negotiations had been carried on for some time, the plaintiff finally, on December 18, 1906, made a formal tender of the check to the bank, presenting his own check, payable to himself, for the amount thereof and demanded that the bank pay him the $364.74. The bank refused payment, and the plaintiff thereupon brought this action and recovered a judgment in the court below. The defendant appeals.

The contract between a bank and'its customer is to pay the customer’s checks or bills to the person or persons designated by the customer, and to none other, and if a check or bill is payable to order, the banker has only authority to pay it to the payee or to another person who becomes the holder by genuine, or duly authorized indorsement: United Security Life Ins., etc., Company v. Bank, 185 Pa. 586. The reason of the rule that when a bank pays a depositor's check on a forged indorsement, or an unauthorized one, it is held to have paid it out of its own funds and cannot charge the payment to the depositor's account, is that there is an implied agreement by the bank with its depositor that it will not disburse the money standing to his credit except on his order: Land Title & Trust Co. v. Northwestern National Bank, 196 Pa. 230. When a bank pays a check made payable to order and the indorsement is forged or unauthorized, it is the same as if payment had not been made and the amount due the depositor is not thereby affected: United Security Life Ins., etc., Co. v. Bank, 185 Pa. 586; Houser v. National Bank of Chambersburg, 27 Pa. Superior Ct. 613; Clark & Co. v. Savings Bank, 31 Pa. Superior Ct. 647. When a depositor seeks to recover the amount of a check which has been paid by a bank upon a forged or unauthorized indorsement, “It is always a good defense that the loss complained of is the result of the complainant’s own fault or neglect, and it will require a statute in very explicit terms to do away with so universal a principle of law founded on so incontestable a principle of justice:” Iron City National Bank v. Fort Pitt National Bank, 159 Pa. [417]*41746. The evidence in the present case disclosed nothing which would justify an inference of negligence on the part of the plaintiff in the manner in which this check was issued. The check was in proper form- and it was sent in a letter duly addressed to the payee and deposited in the mail. The appellant contends, however, that the plaintiff was negligent in two instances: (1) That when his book was balanced and the check returned to him in February, 1902, he was bound to see that this check did not have the personal indorsement of Mrs. Brown, but only of Decker as her attorney in fact, that this was sufficient to have, excited the suspicions of plaintiff and ought to have caused an immediate investigation by him, and it was negligence not to have made such investigation; (2) that when, in June, 1903, Mrs. Brown told the plaintiff that the check had not been received by her it was the duty of the plaintiff to have at once notified the defendant bank, and that his failure to do so was such negligence as must defeat his recovery. The only assignments of error which touch this branch of the case are based upon the refusal of the court below to give binding instructions in favor of the defendant. If, therefore, the evidence was such as to require the submission of the question of the negligence of the plaintiff to the jury, those specifications of error cannot be sustained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Pa. Super. 412, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/califf-v-first-national-bank-pasuperct-1908.