Commercial & Farmers' National Bank v. First National Bank

30 Md. 11, 1869 Md. LEXIS 4
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 8, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 30 Md. 11 (Commercial & Farmers' National Bank v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial & Farmers' National Bank v. First National Bank, 30 Md. 11, 1869 Md. LEXIS 4 (Md. 1869).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case presents questions of considerable interest to the public, and of importance to the banking institutions of the [16]*16State. The material and undisputed facts, which must be stated somewhat in detail, are these: On the 20th of December, 1866, about 2 o’clock, P. M., an individual, well dressed and of respectable appearance, but a stranger unknown to any of its officers, came to the counter of the receiving teller of the Commercial and Farmers’ National Bank, said he wished to open an account, and presented a check on the First National Bank of Baltimore for $4,600iu50, purporting to be drawn by Horace Abbott, dated the 18th of December, and payable to the order of John S. Hillan. The teller, who knew Mr. Abbott’s financial standing to be good, and had seen his checks before, produced the signature book in which the man put the name “John S. Hillan, No. 504 W. Fayette street,” and endorsed the check at the counter in that name. The teller then gave him a customer’s small bank book, in which the amount of the check was put to his credit as cash; but on the same day the teller was directed by the cashier not to allow the account to be drawn upon until the deposited check was known to be good or was paid. On the morning of the next day, the 21st, this with other checks was sent by the Commercial and Farmers’ Bank to the clearing house, its amount being noted on the lists which were there balanced and settled. From thence it was taken to the First National Bank, where it was passed as genuine by the proper officers of that bank, charged to Mr. Abbott’s account, and credited to the Commercial and Farmers’ Bank. By the custom and usage of all the banks in the city of Baltimore, proved by all the witnesses, where a check is sent through the clearing house to the bank on which it is drawn, and is not heard from before eleven o’clock on the day on which it is so sent, the bank sending it has the.right to assume it was good or had been paid, and to act accordingly. On the following day, the 22d, after the check had thus been accepted as1' genuine and paid by the First National Bank, the same person presented himself at the counter of the paying teller of the Commercial and Farmers’ Bank with his bank book, [17]*17and said be wanted to draw some money; a blank check was-given him which he filled up for- $4,500, payable to self or bearer, and signed the name “ John S. Hillan.” The teller ascertained from the books the amount to his credit, and from the receiving teller his identity with the individual who had previously made the deposit, compared the signature of the check with that on the signature book, asked him how he wanted the money, and whether he was going to use it in Baltimore, with a view of endorsing the check good, if he wished to use it in the city among the merchants; but the man replied he wanted to take the money to Washington, and the teller then paid him the $4,500 in small notes of fives and tens, making quite a large bundle.

Mr. Abbott was a large customer and depositor of the First National Bank, and was absent from Baltimore, from the 14th to the 22d of December. His account charged with this check was overdrawn by him on Monday the 24th, to. the amount of $372/„80, and the overdrawing continued during the week until Saturday the 29th, when his account was overdrawn $2,297, and after bank hours of that day, he was for the first time informed by the bank officers of such overdrawing. This information led to an immediate examination of his account and checks, when he discovered the check in question, pronounced it a forgery, and stated he never knew such a man as John S. Hillan, and had never drawn such a check. The forgery of his name was very skilfully executed and difficult of detection, and the check itself was in printed form exactly similar to those used by him from his check book. Notice of the forgery was given by the First National Bank to the Commercial and Farmers’ Bank, on Monday the 31st, and re-payment of the money demanded, but the latter denied its liability beyond the $100/00 still remaining to Hil-lan’s credit. No such person as John S. Hillan could be discovered or traced.

The First National Bank having refunded to Abbott, brought this action against the Commercial and Farmers’ [18]*18Bank to recover back the money the former had thus paid on this forged check. The- declaration contains the common counts for money paid by the plaintiff for the defendant, at its request; for money received by the defendant for the use of the plaintiff; and also special counts for money-paid by the plaintiff to the defendant, at its request, on this forged check.

It is our first duty to determine what principles of law are to govern the decision of the case upon the conceded facts above stated. In arriving at a just conclusion upon this subject, we are without the aid of any express adjudication of our own Courts, for no case similar in its circumstances has heretofore arisen in this State. The case of The Merchants’ Bank vs. The Marine Bank, 3 Gill, 96, is materially different in that there was there a genuine instrument upon which there was a forged endorsement of the payee’s name, whereas here the check is a forgery throughout. We think, however, the legal principles which must guide and control our judgment have been settled by decisions elsewhere of the highest authority.

In the early case of Price vs. Neal, 3 Burr., 1354, where an action of assumpsit was brought to recover back from the endorsee and holder, money which had been paid to him by the drawee on two bills of exchange, one of which was paid without acceptance, and the other accepted and then paid, and on both of which it was afterwards discovered the drawer’s name had been forged, Loud Mansfield, after adverting to the form of action as one in which the plaintiff could not recover the money unless it be against conscience in the defendant to retain it, said: “but it can never be thought uncon-scientious in the defendant to retain this money when he has once received it upon a bill of exchange endorsed to him for a fair and valuable consideration, which he had bona fide paid without the least privity or suspicion of the forgery. Here was no fraud, no wrong. It was incumbent on the plaintiff to be satisfied that the bill drawn upon him was the drawer’s [19]*19hand before he accepted or paid it; but it was not incumbent on the defendant to inquire into it.” The authority of this case so far as it proceeds upon the ground that the drawee is bound to know the handwriting of his correspondent, and as applicable to the case of a bill accepted or paid by the drawee, where the drawer’s name has been forged has never been questioned but has been uniformly and abundantly sustained. It is because the acceptor is bound to this knowledge that in an action against him the handwriting of the drawer need not be proved. The same rule has been extended to bank notes and bank checks and for precisely the same reason. A bank which receives money on deposit, and thence derives profit is justly held to the obligation to know the signatures of its depositors to their checks, and if it pays in mistake a forged check there is no reason why the loss should be shifted to another innocent party upon whom the law casts no such obligation, and who, upon the faith of such payment, has parted with his own money or been placed in a worse position than he would have been but for such payment.

Another instance of the application of the same principle is found in Smith vs.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Md. 11, 1869 Md. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-farmers-national-bank-v-first-national-bank-md-1869.