Espy v. Bank of Cincinnati

85 U.S. 604, 21 L. Ed. 947, 18 Wall. 604, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1334
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 23, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 85 U.S. 604 (Espy v. Bank of Cincinnati) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Espy v. Bank of Cincinnati, 85 U.S. 604, 21 L. Ed. 947, 18 Wall. 604, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1334 (1874).

Opinion

Mr. Justice MILLER

delivered the opinion of the court.

Stall & Meyer, customers and depositors with the First National Bank of Cincinnati; made their check on that bank for the sum of $26.50-, payable to the order of Mrs. E. Hart, and delivered it to a stranger to all the parties to the transaction, out of which this controversy arose. This mail erased the name of the - payee and the amount for *615 which it was given and inserted the name of Espy, Heidelbach & Co., bankers and brokers, and also the sum of $3920, and passed it to Espy, Heidelbach & Co., in payment of bonds and gold which he purchased from them. The cheek was paid by the bauk through the clearing-house, and the next day the fraud was discovered, and the bank made a demand on Espy, Heidelbach & Co., for the amount' as paid through a mistake.

If this were all the case there could be no doubt of their right to recover. Tim principle that money so paid under a mistake of the facts of the case'can be recovered back is well settled, and in the case of raised or altered checks so paid by banks on which they were drawn there are numerous well-considered cases where the right to recover has been established, when neither the party receiving nor the party paying has been in any fault or blame in the matter. Of course if there is fault on the part of the party receiving pay for such a check it strengthens the right of recovery.

But in the case before us the rights of the parties are to be determined by what took place between themselves before the check was paid. It appears by the bill of exceptions that the man who perpetrated the fraud, having ascertained from Espy, Heidelbach & Co. the price of the bonds and gold which he proposed to buy of them, told them that he had dealings with Stall & Meyer and would get their cheek for the amount, and after an absence of two or three hours returned with the cheek in question. Not wishing to take it from this stranger without further information, they sent Mr. Snarenberger, one of their clerks, to the bank with instructions to ascertain if the check was good, and to say that it was presented by a stranger. Snarenberger presented it to Mr. Sanford, the proper officer of the bank, who, after examining the check and the state of Stall & Meyer’s account, said. “It is good,” or “It is all right; send it through the clearing-house.”

There is a slight disagreement between Snarenberger and Sanford as to the precise words used, but we do not deem the difference of any importance. But there is difference in *616 another point between these two, which with the jury might have had some weight. Snarenberger testifies that he told. Sanford that tlie check was offered to his house by a stranger, which Sanford denies; and Sanford says that he told Snarenberger that if the check was'offered by a stranger he would advise them to have nothing to do with him; that he would be careful and not pay so large a check to a stranger, no matter how good-looking he was.

On the return of Snarenberger, Espy, Heidelbach & Co. delivered the bonds and gold to the stranger and received the check in payment, and in the language of the record the stranger went his way and was heard of no more. Espy, Heidelbach •& Co. indorsed the check, and it was paid, as stated already, through the clearing-house.

In a suit brought by the bank to recover the money it had a judgment, to reverse which this suit is brought.

The defendants excepted to the admission of certain testimony given by the plaintiff's on the trial for the purpose of proving that the words “ all right,” “ it is good,” when used in reference to a check presented at the bank on which it is drawn, had, by the custom and usages of the bankers of Cincinnati, acquired a limited and well-understood meaning, namely, that it had reference exclusively to the genuineness of the drawer’s signature and to the state of his account at the bank. The objections made to this evidence were that in its nature it was inadmissible; that the person testifying showed his want of knowledge on the subject, and that the expressions “ all right” and “ it is good” were not the precise expressions used. But we need not inquire whether the court ivas right in admitting this testimony, because in the Subsequent progress of the trial it became immaterial. The court refused t-o charge the jury, as requested by the plaintiffs in their fifth and sixth prayers, that if there was such an understanding among bankers as to the use of the terms mentioned, it limited the responsibility of the bank to these two matters; and in the charge of the court of its own motion it placed the case beyond the influence of such testimony, by instructing the jury that as matter of law.such *617 was the effect of the words supposed, when used under the circumstances suggested by the interrogations .of plaintiff’s counsel in regard to the understanding of them among bankers.

We are relieved also, by an attentive consideration of the instructions given by the court, from another very grave question much discussed by counsel in this court, that is, whether a verbal statement by the proper officer to certify checks that the one presented is good, is, or is not, the equivalent of a written certification of the check in the usual manner. For the fourth instruction asked by the defendants and granted by the court is precisely what is claimed by counsel here as to the effect of such verbal statement, as will be seen at once by its inspection. It is as follows: “ A verbal certification, of a check is equally valid with a written certification, and constitutes a contract obligatory on the party giving the certification, the consideration of which is the property parted with by the party receiving the certification on the faith of the certification.” The .plaintiff in error, against whom the jury rendered their verdict, notwithstanding the instruction, thus given, must be held to have had the benefit of the principle thus asserted with the jury, whether the court was right in giving it or not.

The plaintiffs on the trial below prayed ten distinct instructions to the jury, all of which were granted except the fifth and sixth, which we have considered. The defendants prayed eight instructions, all of which were refused or modified except the fourth, to which attention has just been called. Upon all these rulings of the court as well as típon the. charge of .the court of its own motion, errors are assigned.

• But we are of opinion that the whole case turns upon the latter charge of the court. This consisted of four distinct propositions:

1. That if defendants .below sent the check to the bank for the purpose of having the latter pass upon the genuineness of the signature and the state of the account of the drawer, the statement that it was good, or all right, would *618 estop them from denying that the signature was genuine, and there were funds to meet it.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
85 U.S. 604, 21 L. Ed. 947, 18 Wall. 604, 1873 U.S. LEXIS 1334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/espy-v-bank-of-cincinnati-scotus-1874.