Chase v. Waterbury Savings Bank

69 L.R.A. 329, 59 A. 37, 77 Conn. 295, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 11, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 69 L.R.A. 329 (Chase v. Waterbury Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. Waterbury Savings Bank, 69 L.R.A. 329, 59 A. 37, 77 Conn. 295, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 100 (Colo. 1904).

Opinion

Hall, J.

From April 1st, 1887, to September 26th, 1900, the plaintiff made in person twenty-five deposits in the defendant savings-bank, which, with dividends added at the rate declared by the bank, amounted, at the time of the trial in March, 1904, to $3,230. The plaintiff has neither herself withdrawn any part of said sum, nor has she given anjr order for any payment to others. Upon four occasions between December 31st, 1901, and March 3d, 1902, the plaintiff’s daughter, Mrs. Keith, who with her husband lived with the' plaintiff, obtained money from the bank, amounting in all to $500, by presenting the plaintiff’s bankbook, of which she had fraudulently obtained the possession, and by presenting, with the bank-book, forged orders purporting to have been signed by the plaintiff and directing payment to be made to Mrs. Keith of the sums named in the orders.

Early in April, 1902, Mrs. Keith confessed to her mother that she had drawn money upon the bank-book, but claimed that she could obtain no more without an order from the plaintiff, and offered to write to the bank and secure a reply which would satisfy the plaintiff; and a few days later read to her mother what purported to be a letter from the bank to the effect that no further money could be drawn on the plaintiff’s account without an order from the plaintiff, and that it would be all right. Thereafter the plaintiff kept her bank-book locked up in a more secure place, but did not then notify the bank that her daughter had thus wrongfully obtained possession of the bank-book and drawn the money.

On the 16th of April, 1902, Mrs. Keith presented at the bank to Mr. Merriman, the defendant’s bookkeeper, a forged letter of that date, purporting to have been signed by the plaintiff, addressed to the treasurer of the hank, representing that the plaintiff had accidentally destroyed her bankbook and requesting that a new one be issued in its place, *297 and further stating that the plaintiff was an invalid and had sent her daughter, Mrs. Keith, to get the new book, and had inclosed an order for money. Mr. Merriman informed Mrs. Keith that a new book could not be issued until a bond had been given to the bank, and prepared and gave to Mrs. Keith a form of a bond, with instructions to have it executed by the plaintiff and some responsible person as surety. On the following day Mrs. Keith presented the bond to Mr. Merriman at the bank, with the plaintiff’s name as principal and the name of another person as surety signed thereto. Both signatures were forgeries. In the absence of the treasurer of the bank, and without inquiring as to the responsibility or existence of the person whose name appeared as surety on the bond, and without submitting the matter to the “Board of direction,” or to “a committee appointed for that purpose,” Mr. Merriman issued and delivered to Mrs. Keith a new book, in the name of the plaintiff, with the balance due upon the first book transferred thereto, and at the same time paid to Mrs. Keith $800 upon a forged order presented by her, dated April 16th, 1902, purporting to have been signed by'the plaintiff and directing said sum to be paid to Mrs. Keith upon the amount due upon the first book. Six payments, amounting to $1,700, were made by the bank to Mrs. Keith upon presentation of said second book with forged orders of the plaintiff, the last payment having been made on the 27th of October, 1902.

The plaintiff had no knowledge of the existence of said second book, nor of the payment of any of the money drawn by her daughter thereon, until informed of these facts by the bank on the 1st of November, 1902, when she immediately obtained from her daughter the second book and $20 of the money which she had fraudulently drawn.

Said second book was issued, and all the payments upon both bank-books were made, by the bank in good faith and upon the belief that the letter and order’s purporting to liave been signed by the plaintiff were genuine, and the plaintiff gave no notice to the defendant that Mrs. Keith had fraudulently obtained possession of the first book, and *298 that said letter and orders were forgeries, until November 1st, 1902.

The following statement was printed in the plaintiff’s bank-book: “ Take care of this Book. If you lose or mislay it, give immediate notice to the Bank; as if it.gets into improper hands, you may be defrauded.”

Among the by-laws printed in plaintiff’s book were these :

“Article 13. Dividends and money withdrawn shall be paid only to the depositor, or to the depositor’s order, or legal representative; but neither the principal nor interest of any deposit shall be paid to any person, unless the depositor’s book of entries made by an officer of the Corporation or of the Direction shall be presented that such payments may be entered therein, or unless the depositor shall prove to the satisfaction of the Board of Direction, or a committee appointed for that purpose, that such book has been lost or destroyed, in which case the depositor or his legal representative shall lodge with the Treasurer a written discharge.”
“ Article 15. This Bank will not be responsible to any depositor, or to his heirs or assigns, for any fraud that may be practiced upon any of the officers of this Institution by forged signatures, or by presenting a depositor’s book, and drawing money without the knowledge or consent of the owner. And all entries of money paid, made in the depositor’s book by an officer of the Institution, shall be deemed good and valid evidence of money paid, and shall exonerate this Bank from any liability on account of any fraud practiced in drawing the money of any depositor.”

The above facts appear to have been proved at the trial beyond controversy.

Whether the officers of the bank exercised reasonable care in issuing the second book, and in making the payments to Mrs. Keith upon the first and second book upon the forged orders, and whether the plaintiff was negligent in failing to keep her first bank-book in a safe place, and in not notifying the bank that her daughter had fraudulently drawn money on the first book when she learned of it in *299 April, 1902, were among the disputed questions of fact at the trial.

The only properly assigned reasons of appeal are the denial of the defendant’s motion for a new trial, upon the ground that the verdict was against the evidence, and the failure of the trial judge to charge the jury in accordance with the specific requests set forth in the appeal. The last reason of appeal, that “ the court erred in charging the jury as certified to in the printed record,” is not a proper assignment of error. It fails to point out the particular errors complained of, in a charge covering twelve pages of the printed record, and therefore raises no question which this court is bound to review. General Statutes, § 802; Hayden v. Fair Haven & W. R. Co., 76 Conn. 355, 365; Simmonds v. Holmes, 61 id. 1, 9.

The substance of the several requests contained in the appeal may be fairly stated as these four requests to charge: First. That Article 15 of the by-laws was sufficient authority to the bank for the payments made to Mrs. Keith. Second. That the plaintiff’s failure to notify the bank that Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 L.R.A. 329, 59 A. 37, 77 Conn. 295, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-waterbury-savings-bank-conn-1904.