Crawford v. West Side Bank

17 Jones & S. 68
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedFebruary 5, 1883
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Jones & S. 68 (Crawford v. West Side Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. West Side Bank, 17 Jones & S. 68 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1883).

Opinion

By the Court.—Sedgwick, Ch. J.

—My opinion is that the judgment appealed from should be reversed.

The plaintiff having deposited money with the defendant, the latter was authorized to pay out on account of plaintiff the amount deposited as ordered by plaintiff’s checks. This relation of the parties involved obligations of the kind that rest upon contract, and it was the contract of the defendant that it would not charge the plaintiff with the amount of a payment made upon a check that was not drawn by plaintiff. Therefore, the inquiry in this case' is, was the amount in controversy, that the defendant charged to plaintiff, paid upon a check drawn by plaintiff.

The plaintiff had drawn an instrument in the form of a check upon the defendant, for $700, and as of the date of April 22, 1882. After giving attention to what, as matter of law, is identity of choses in action, it is clearly seen to be the fact that the instrument referred to was never presented to the bank for payment.

Morgan, who was named as payee in it, changed April 22, on the paper, to April 21. Beyond controversy, this was a material alteration. The effect was that from the time of the alteration the instrument ceased to be the act of the plaintiff and was void against him. When the defendant, after paying the amount written in it to Morgan, charged the sum to the plaintiff, as the payment was not made upon the order of the plaintiff, the charge' was not justified by the contract between the parties.

As a part of the argument of the learned counsel for respondents, it was urged that the defendant was bound to know only the signature upon the check.. The leading case of Hall v. Fuller (5 Barn. & Cress. 750), is that the banker [72]*72is bound to ascertain that the check is genuine in all respects. Bankers cannot charge checks paid by them that have been forged as to their amounts, or to holders that claim through a forged indorsement of the payee. The principle of this is that, the money was not paid upon the depositor’s order. The instance of a date being changed is not an exception to the rule. When the date is forged, the instrument ceases to be order of the depositor. In this respect checks are like notes and bills. The well-known text of Chitty on Bills (181) is: “ If a bill of exchange or promissory note be altered without the consent of the parties in any material part, as in the date, sum, or time when payable, or consideration, or place of payment, such alteration at common law, and independently of the stamp acts, renders the bill or note wholly invalid, as against any party not consenting to such alteration, and this although it be in the hands of an. innocent holder,” citing the leading case of Marler v. Miller (4 T. R. 320; 1 Smith’s L. C.).

It was also argued that the bank is entitled to charge it against the account of the maker, for the correct amount, and at the true time he made it payable. This implies, as I understand, that the bank had a right to keep the check, as it did in fact, until the day of the true date, and then to charge its amount against plaintiff’s account. This does not appear to me to be correct in principle, or to regard the nature of the transaction.

The check, if unaltered, could not legally be paid out of the funds of the plaintiff, on presentation for such payment before the true day, of April 22 (Godin v. Bank of Commonwealth, 6 Duer, 76). Any one acquiring the check before that day would have, in the implied obligation of the drawing of the check, a «promise of the drawer that the bank would pay upon presentation, on or after the date of April 22. The bank on which it was drawn, that is, the present defendant, would have no further right. If the bank had cashed the check, unaltered, but on April 21, and on that day the whole of the account had been assigned, or paid out, so that the bank had been driven to an action [73]*73upon the check, of course it would recover judgment. But the chéck being forged as to its date, the answer of the plaintiff, that the check was void as to him, that is, that it was not his check, must have prevailed. The defendant by keeping the forged check one day could not transform the promissory instrument that was invalid to bind the plaintiff to see that the check was paid upon demand, into an instrument valid to justify such a payment upon demand.

Some cases were cited to support the propositions advanced for the respondent. For instance, in Susquehanna Bank v. Loomis (85 N. Y. 207), Danforth, J., says: “It must be conceded that the Plainfield Bank was at least en-entitled to have refunded to it the difference between the true sum. for which the draft was drawn, and that to which the check had been altered. The Plainfield Bank was the drawer of the draft, and the citation says in effect, that it could not be charged by the drawee with the amount of the draft to the extent that it had been increased above the amount which was originally and justly due upon it.” This, it may be here said, is the opposite of asserting that against its depositor the bank is only bound to look to the genuineness of his signature upon the check. The citation may imply, in connection with the further citation of Hall v. Fuller (5 B. & C. 750), that the Plainfield Bank could properly be charged with the genuine amount of the draft before it was feloniously increased. And Hall v. Fuller did so hold. In both cases it was either the fact or was considered to be the fact, that at some time previous to his payment upon the forged instrument, there had been issued by the drawer to the payee a genuine instrument, which would have authorized the payment of the genuine amount by the drawee. Under the circumstances, it was in effect held, that although of course, the genuine instrument was destroyed, nevertheless the obligations and rights under it passed by the transaction. Strictly, of course, the forged, instrument was a nullity as to any obligation upon itself, and could not transfer rights under a genuine instrument. In favor of an innocent party, it might legally be evidence [74]*74of a circumstance which was relevant to the .rights and devolution of rights under the genuine instrument. When, physically, the forged instrument was the same as the genuine instrument, excepting the alteration of some words or figures, it would be difficult to describe the transaction concisely, unless by referring to the payment of the amount of the genuine instrument as being made upon the forged instrument. Such a description of the facts would not be meant to assert the validity of the forged instrument in any respect. The law justified the payment to the less amount, as made under rights springing from a genuine instrument that had been destroyed, which if not destroyed but presented at the time of the actual payment, would have been effectual against the drawer.

In the present case, at the time of the actual payment, there was no't and never had been in existence a genuine instrument which would have justified any payment out of plaintiff’s credit, with defendant (Godin v. Bank of Commonwealth, supra). The defendant would have bought "a past dated check if it had not been altered. It having been altered, they must abide the consequences appropriate to the fact, that they bought a forged chose in action.

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Related

Marine Nat. Bank v. . Nat. City Bank
59 N.Y. 67 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Cowing v. . Altman
71 N.Y. 435 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
Susquehanna Valley Bank v. . Loomis
85 N.Y. 207 (New York Court of Appeals, 1881)
Godin v. Bank of Commonwealth
6 Duer 76 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1856)

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Bluebook (online)
17 Jones & S. 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-west-side-bank-nysuperctnyc-1883.