Citizens' Bank of Fayette v. J. Blach Sons

153 So. 404, 228 Ala. 246, 1934 Ala. LEXIS 178
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 15, 1934
Docket6 Div. 537.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 153 So. 404 (Citizens' Bank of Fayette v. J. Blach Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens' Bank of Fayette v. J. Blach Sons, 153 So. 404, 228 Ala. 246, 1934 Ala. LEXIS 178 (Ala. 1934).

Opinion

KNIGHT, Justice.

Suit by the Citizens’ Bank of Fayette against J. Blach & Sons. The plaintiff stated his case in four common counts. Count 2 was for money paid, and count 3 was for money had and received.

The plaintiff, a banking institution, contends that it had paid, by mistake, to the defendant $175 on what subsequently proved to be a forged draft or check; and that it is entitled to recover it hack.

It is without dispute in the evidence that the plaintiff was, during the year 1932, engaged in the banking business at Fayette, Ala., and that the Mobile & Gulf Railroad Company was, during that period, one of its depositors, and one of its regular customers. -The plaintiff had on file the signature card of the persons who were authorized to audit accounts, and to sign the name of the railroad company to checks drawn on this bank.

It further appears without dispute that during the latter part of November, 1932, a man representing himself to he R. C. Tracy appeared in the store of the defendant, at Birmingham, Ala., and asked for a Mr. Arthur, who was the clothing clerk. Arthur being out of the store at that time, another of the defendant’s clerks sold the man a suit of clothes and an overcoat; the cost of the same being $64.50. In payment of this bill, the man, who had introduced himself as Tracy, produced a check ostensibly drawn by the Mobile & Gulf Railroad Company, for $175 in his favor, on the plaintiff, the Citizens’ Bank of Fayette. The account, in settlement of which the check was drawn, appeared to have been audited by a man by the name of N. N. Boyd, and approved by one J. L. Dodson. The name of the Mobile & Gulf Railroad Company was signed to the check by N. N. Boyd. After some questioning of Tracy, the clerk, Mr. Masters, carried the check to Mr. Mudwilder, defendant’s credit man, for authority to cash it. Upon being so authorized, the clerk cashed the check, taking out the amount charged for the suit of clothes and overcoat, and paid Tracy the balance in money. This check was forwarded to the Citizens’ Bank of Fayette for payment, bearing the unqualified indorsements (1) of the defendant, J. Blach & Sons, and (2) the First National Bank of Birmingham. The check was presented for payment to the plaintiff by the First National Bank, Fayette, Ala., and was duly paid by the plaintiff.

When this check was canceled and paid, it was delivered to the Mobile & Gulf Railroad Company. The latter notified the plaintiff that it was a forgery, and thereupon the plaintiff repaid to the Mobile & Gulf Railroad Company the amount of the check, and de manded payment of the defendant; all of which was done promptly.

The evidence leaves no room to doubt that Tracy was an impostor and that the check was a forgery pure and simple.

The defendant declined to refund the amount of the cheek to plaintiff, and this suit, followed.

The case was tried in the court below by the judge, without a jury, and, from a judgment in favor of the defendant, this appeal is prosecuted.

Ordinarily, money paid under a mistake of fact may be recovered in a proper action, and the denial of the right to a bank to recover in such cases is an exception to the general rule. The extent and scope of this exception is a matter upon which there is much contrariety of decision. However, it is said, in actual practice, the exception is confined within narrow limits, and is entirely just and necessary to give stability to commercial paper.

In the case of Goddard v. Merchants’ Bank, 4 N. Y. 147, it was decided over eighty years ago that the drawee of a bill is held bound to know the handwriting of his correspondent, the drawer, and, if he pays a draft or check in the hands of a bona fide holder for value, he is concluded by the act, although the instrument turns out' to be a forgery. But this is true, as has often been pointed out, only when the words tona fide are given a meaning to include absence of negligence, as well as good faith. 12 A. L. R. 1090.

*248 In the ease of Deposit Bank v. Second National Bank, 10 Ky. Law Rep. 350, the Kentucky court held that, as between the drawee and a cashing bank without negligence on the part of the latter, the loss must be borne by the drawee bank. The court held that in such a case the drawee should not be heard to say he was mistaken. That the doctrine is but the practical application of the rule that, where one of two innocent persons must suffer, he who has been the occasion of the loss must bear it. But the rule is applied only where both parties are equally innocent of wrong. If the person collecting the check has been guilty of negligence, if he did not receive it in the ordinary course of business, or if he received it under circumstances which should have excited suspicion, he cannot hold the money so received. On the other hand, if the bank pays the cheek when it could, by the exercise of proper care, have discovered the forgery, there would be no occasion for the application of the rule. To the same effect is the holding of the same court in the case of Deposit Bank v. Fayette National Bank, 90 Ky. 10, 13 S. W. 339, 7 L. R. A. 849.

In the case of State Bank v. First National Bank, 87 Neb. 351, 127 N. W. 244, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 100, it was held that, where a check was cashed for a payee known to the cashing bank, with no suspicious circumstances attending the transaction, the drawee could not recover the money paid. .

In the case of Iron City National Bank v. Peyton, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 184, 39 S. W. 223, it was held that, where one takes a check for goods sold, under circumstances attended with no -suspicious circumstances-, the drawee, bank could not recover the money paid. .

The old doctrine holding the bank bound to know its correspondent’s signature is thus referred to by Mr. Morse in his treatise (section 464):

“The old rule is unreasonable. The old doctrine was that a bank was bound to know its correspondent’s signature. A drawee could not recover money paid upon a forgery of the drawer’s name, because, it was said, the drawee was negligent not to know the forgery, and it 'must bear the consequence of its negligence. This doctrine is fast fading into the misty past, where it belongs. It is almost dead, the funeral notices are ready, and no tears will be shed, for it was 'founded in misconception of the fundamental principles of law and common sense..
“It is not enough to create legal liability, or to give A a right to acquire or retain the property of B, to show merely that A has been negligent; if so, property would be. changing hands so rapidly that it could not be seen in transit, any more than the spokes of a bicycle. One more element is necessary, namely, that damage to A, being himself innocent in the matter, should natuially and proximately result from B’s negligence. * * *
“If a bank receives forged bills purporting to be its own, it can, upon reasonably prompt-discovery of the forgery, return them. Is it harder for the bank to know its own paper than that of its depositors, and is it less negligent in receiving forgeries of its own name-than in paying upon a forgery of some one out of a hundred.or a thousand customers?”

In the .case of Bank of Williamson v. McDowell County Bank, 66 W.

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153 So. 404, 228 Ala. 246, 1934 Ala. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-bank-of-fayette-v-j-blach-sons-ala-1934.