Canal Bank v. Bank of Albany

1 Hill & Den. 287
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1841
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Hill & Den. 287 (Canal Bank v. Bank of Albany) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Canal Bank v. Bank of Albany, 1 Hill & Den. 287 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1841).

Opinion

By the Court, Cowen, J.

It is not perceived what advantage, direct or remote, Bentley can derive from the plaintiffs’ recovery, nor what he can lose by their failure. It is said, the plaintiffs will hold the money to be recovered in trust for the witness. This is not so. Their recovery or failure will neither add to nor take from their liability to him. Their recovery will not, as the defendants’ counsel supposes, estop them to deny that Bentley’s name was forged. The record and proceedings here would not, as such, be any evidence whatever between him and- the plaintiffs. The whole is but- a more solemn admission of the forgery; and his being sworn as a witness, adds nothing to its strength. in his favor. Should he sue the Montgomery County Bank, and should they plead payment, they would have the same right to contest the forgery as if this suit had never been; nor could any of the proceedings here be used as evidence against the witness, even though the plaintiffs should fail to establish the forgery against these defendants.

On the merits, there was nothing in the nature of the transaction to conclude the plaintiffs against showing the forgery. They had done no act giving currency to the bill on the strength of Bentley’s name. Even had they accepted it on the day when it was drawn, the defendants could have holden them concluded only in respect to the genuineness of the drawer’s name, he being their immediate correspondent. (Chit, on Bills, 336, 7, Am. ed. of 1839.) And the act of payment could amount to no more. (Id. id.) Neither acceptance, nor payment, at any time, nor under any circumstances, is an admission that the first, or any other endorser’s name is genuine. (Id. 628.) In point of title, then, the case of the defendants was the same as if the name of Bentley had not appeared on the bill.. They have obtained money of the plaintiffs without right, and on the exhibition of a forged title as a genuine one. The plaintiffs paid their money under the mistaken belief thus induced, that the name was genuine. To a note or bill payable to order, none but the payee can assert any title without the endorse[290]*290ment of such payee: not even a bona fide holder. (Id. 286, a, 430.)

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Related

Levy v. Bank of United States
4 U.S. 234 (Supreme Court, 1802)
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1 Binn. 27 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1802)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Hill & Den. 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canal-bank-v-bank-of-albany-nysupct-1841.