Continental National Bank v. Tradesmen's National Bank

59 A.D. 103, 69 N.Y.S. 82

This text of 59 A.D. 103 (Continental National Bank v. Tradesmen's National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental National Bank v. Tradesmen's National Bank, 59 A.D. 103, 69 N.Y.S. 82 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Hirschberg, J. :

The disposition of this appeal would involve no difficulty but for one remark of the learned trial justice to the jury. On a previous, trial a verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff by direction of the court. The Appellate Division in the first department reversed the judgment entered on that verdict, and the luminous and elaborate opinion then written settled the law of the case so that -on anew trial it was only necessary to ascertain from the jury whether the plaintiff was negligent in paying and retaining the draft on June, fourteenth, and whether the defendant paid its fraudulent depositor in reliance thereon. (Continental Bank v. Tradesmen's Bank, 36 App. Div. 112.) The defendant’s liability to refund the money in this action, so far as affected by the plaintiff’s obligation to pay the' same originally because of the previous certification of the= raised- draft by it on June thirteenth, regarded as an- act of' negligence in and by itself, was not considered by the court at all. Mr. Justice Ingraham said (p. 114): “ The question as to-the right of the plaintiff to recover back this money may be viewed in two aspects: First, with reference to its liability on the certification of the draft on June thirteenth; and, second, as to the right tereco ver. the amount paid to the defendant, such payment having-been made on J une fourteenth and in the regular course of business. In the view we have taken of this second aspect'of the question, it is unnecessary to discuss the obligation of the plaintiff to the-def endantj the holder of the draft, in consequence of the certification, on June thirteenth.”

On the second trial, nevertheless, the learned trial justice said to-the jury: “The question seems, to me to be narrowed down to a. single one, and that is, whether the Continental National' Bank, at the time that they certified the draft of the Philadelphia Bank [105]*105drawn upon it, were guilty of culpable negligence in doing so. That appears to be about the question involved in this case. And that is, as I understand, the question as stated by Mr. Justice Ingraham in his opinion in this case on appeal.” The defendant excepted specifically to this portion of the charge, but it was not withdrawn or modified in any way, nor was the jury instructed that the plaintiff’s negligence in certifying the draft could only operate to defeat a recovery when taken in connection with the subsequent negligence charged, viz., that of paying the draft when finally presented. The court did, indeed, correctly charge the jury on the question of the culpable negligence of the plaintiff in receiving the draft on June fourteenth, retaining and paying.it without examination and verification, notwithstanding it had in its possession , ample proof of the fraud, and on the question of the payment by the defendant to its depositor, relying upon such acceptance and payment by the plaintiff. The evidence is sufficient to sustain a finding by the jury in the defendant’s favor upon these questions, but inasmuch as a finding by the jury adverse to the defendant on these questions would,, under the charge, be still consistent with a finding in its favor on the question of the original certification, and the verdict may accordingly have been based solely thereon, the question of law not considered on the former appeal must be determined now.

It is unnecessary to recapitulate the facts. They are set forth in ' detail in the opinion in the first department. The drawer of the draft was the Philadelphia National Bank, one of the plaintiff’s, depositors, accustomed to draw almost daily, and invariably notifying the plaintiff of the fact. The notifications were in the form of daily letters of advice, containing a list of the drafts with serial number, date, amount and name of payee. The one in question was drawn and dated June 7, 1894, payable to BLenry F. Thompson, in the sum of seventy-six dollars, and bore the serial number 2269. Written information of the fact was at once conveyed by mail te the plaintiff and received by it. On June thirteenth the draft, having meanwhile been raised to $7^660, and its date changed to June 12,1894, was presented to the plaintiff for certification and promptly -certified. The written information of the fact of the fraud, deducible from the advices received from Philadelphia between and [106]*106including June seventh and thirteenth, was on the bookkeeper’s desk at the time, but was unexamined and disregarded. The draft was deposited by Thompson with the defendant, and after passing . through .the clearing house, and being accepted and paid by the plaintiff, was drawn against by Thompson with the exception of a small balance still remaining in defendant’s hands. The action is brought to recover the difference between the amount of the draft as raised and as originally drawn, as money had and received by the defendant from the plaintiff by mistake.

While the precise question does not appear to have been decided in this State, the Court of Appeals has come so close to it in the final decision in Clews v. Bank of New York Nat. Bk. Assn., (114 N. Y. 70), that in view of the manifest injustice of any other result, I have no hesitation in applying it to the support of this judgment. There a draft for $254.50 was certified by the bank on which it was drawn, and was thereafter raised to $2,540 and the date altered. Clews, before receiving it as good, sent a messenger to the bank to inquire whether the certification was good. The bank had, of course, knowledge of the date and amount of the original draft in its certification book, and had also received a letter notifying it that tlie draft had been lost and to stop payment. Without making recourse to this information, the teller replied Yes ” to the inquiry, and Clews, having thereupon taken the draft in payment for bonds sold, was permitted to recover from the bank, not upon the certification, but for actionable negligence in making it. I can see no difference in principle between that case and the case of a draft presented to the bank after it has been raised and then certified by the bank with full knowledge^ or the means of knowledge, of the fraud. Had ■ Clews received the raised draft uncertified, and had he then sent it to the bank for certification before accepting it, its certification by the bank without examination would have presented the conditions existing in the case at. bar; but it would be impossible to say that such deliberate certification without verifying the integrity" of the draft would be any less an act of culpable negligence or less calcu-' lated to betray the holder to his loss than would be the utterance .of a hurried “ Yes ” in response to an inquiry at the window. And the negligence of the plaintiff in originally certifying the draft in question ón June' thirteenth, with the correspondence before it [107]*107which would have disclosed the fraud, is certainly not in any degree-less culpable than the recognition and payment of the draft on the following day when the act may be assumed to have been in reliance on the fact that it bore the unquestionably genuine certification of the bank’s own officer.

On any other theory the consequences of plaintiff’s negligence will be visited upon the defendant, a party wholly innocent and free from blame.

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Continental National Bank v. Tradesmen's National Bank
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Bluebook (online)
59 A.D. 103, 69 N.Y.S. 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-national-bank-v-tradesmens-national-bank-nyappdiv-1901.