Findlay v. Corn Exchange National Bank

166 Ill. App. 57, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 26
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 14, 1911
DocketGen. No. 15,821
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 166 Ill. App. 57 (Findlay v. Corn Exchange National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Findlay v. Corn Exchange National Bank, 166 Ill. App. 57, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 26 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

An action was commenced in the Municipal Court of Chicago on April 10, 1909, as a fourth class case. The amended statement of plaintiff’s claim, filed in the action, alleges that two checks had been wrongfully charged to plaintiff’s account, and that the amounts thereof still remained to his credit, for which he brought suit.

The substance of the defenses set up by the amended affidavit of merits filed by the defendant, may be briefly stated thus :

First, that the right of action, if any, growing out of the subject-matter of the suit belongs to Samuel Cabot, a corporation, the payee of the checks, and not to A. Findlay, the maker.

Second, that the plaintiff has forfeited any possible right of action which he may have had, by his negligence in discovering the forgeries, and Ms subsequent delay in notifying the defendant of the forgeries after the plaintiff discovered the same.

The plaintiff in error, Findlay, was a depositor of the Corn Exchange National Bank during 1907 and up to November 5th of that year, when his account with the bank was closed. In March, 1907, Findlay mailed to Samuel Cabot, a corporation, at No. 28 Dearborn avenue, Chicago, Illinois, a check in the amount of $100.65, and on May 19,1907, a further check for $40.80 in payment for certain goods purchased by him from Cabot. These checks, both of which were drawn on the Corn Exchange National Bank, came into the possession, as later explained, of one E. S. Schenken-berger, who forged the endorsement of the payee thereon, and then endorsed them over to the Chicago Savings Bank and Trust Company, which sent them to the Continental National Bank of Chicago for collection. The Corn Exchange National Bank paid them through the Clearing House to the Continental National Bank and charged the checks up to plaintiff’s account returning the cancelled or paid checks to plaintiff as vouchers, together with a statement of his account on the second of the month following their respective dates.

The plaintiff, Findlay, testified that the checks were placed in envelopes properly addressed and mailed by him to Cabot. It appears that the checks were received at the office of Samuel Cabot, the payee, by Morris Potthoff, the bookkeeper of Cabot, or by George H. Bell, Jr., who was employed in Cabot’s office as a clerk; and the checks were either taken by Schenken-berger from Cabot’s office or turned over to him by Potthoff or Bell, Jr. Both Bell, Jr., and Potthoff, the bookkeeper, were authorized to receive and open mail for Samuel Cabot.

George IT. Bell, Jr., was shortly after the time of the mailing of these checks indicted for forging endorsements on checks similar to the ones here involved, in Cabot’s office, but escaped before he was arrested and is now a fugitive from justice.

The first knowledge Findlay had of the forgery was obtained by him in the middle of March, 1908, when he received from Cabot a statement for the items paid by the checks in question. Findlay thereupon called George IT. Bell, Cabot’s manager, on the telephone and told him that he had paid the account contained in the statement received, and that he had the cancelled checks as evidence of such payment. Bell wrote Find-lay a letter requesting him to send the cancelled checks to Bell, which plaintiff did about a month later. Findlay states that he compared the endorsement Samuel Cabot on the checks in question with the endorsements on other checks sent by him t,o this same corporation, and found the endorsements to be dissimilar, and that he then knew something was the matter. This comparison was undoubtedly made prior to the time the checks were sent to Bell, as Findlay testifies that he never had the checks in his possession after mailing them to Bell in March, 1908.

No notice of the forgery was given to the defendant in error by Findlay or any one representing him, and no demand was made by Findlay or in his interest, until on or about March 26, 1909, or a little over a year after Findlay discovered that the endorsements in question were forged.

George H. Bell, representing Samuel Cabot, the payee named in the checks in question, received the cancelled checks from Findlay in April, 1908, and at once discovered that the endorsements of Samuel Cabot were forged thereon by one E. S. Schenkenberger, whom Bell knew intimately and who was employed by a corporation of which Bell was treasurer. Bell states in his evidence that it was at least two weeks after he made this discovery. of the forgeries before he disclosed that fact. He took time to think it over and consult an attorney he says. At the expiration of two weeks or more after discovering the forgeries, Bell went to the Chicago Savings Bank and Trust Company, which had paid the checks to Schenkenberger, and without presenting the checks, stated that he was the representative of Samuel Cabot, and that Schenk-enberger had forged Cabot’s endorsements on several checks and that the Chicago Savings Bank and Trust Company had paid Schenkenberger the amounts thereof on such forged endorsements. Bell was told that he might consult with the Bank’s attorney, William E. O’Neill, which he did on the same day.

The conversation of Bell with Mr. O’Neill, as related by the latter in his testimony, was to the following effect: Bell came to O’Neill’s office in the latter part of April or the first part of May, 1908, and they had a conversation relative to certain checks which had passed through the Chicago Savings Bank and Trust Company for collection, which Bell claimed were forged by Schenkenberger. Bell stated that Schenk-enberger had access to the mail of Samuel Cabot, whose office he, Schenkenberger, occupied at will, and that Schenkenberger had forged certain checks which were put through the Chicago Savings Bank and Trust Company. No checks were produced by Bell at that conversation. Bell also stated that Schenkenberger had misled Bell’s son, who had been in the employ of Cabot, and that both Schenkenberger and Bell’s-son had left the city, and he thought they were together. Bell further stated that he wanted to protect his son and separate him from Schenkenberger, if possible. Bell was then advised by Mr. O’Neill that he did not consider that the Chicago Savings Bank and Trust Company was liable for the forgeries, but he stated he thought it Bell’s duty to pay the amount thereof, to which Bell replied that they were larger in amount than he could afford to take care of, but that he wanted to protect his son, if possible. Subsequently Bell settled with Samuel Cabot for the forgeries, and took an assignment of its claim on the forged checks, and in March or April, 1909, he stated to Mr. O’Neill that he was going to pursue his remedy on those checks as he understood it to be.

The first notice of the forgeries received by the Corn Exchange National Bank was given to it by George H. Bell, Cabot’s representative, abont two weeks after tbe checks were returned by Findlay to Bell. At that time, Bell saw Mr. Gary of tbe Corn Exchange National Bank, and advised him that tbe endorsements on tbe checks were forgeries, and that be represented Samnel Cabot, tbe payee, and that be wanted to get tbe money on tbe checks. According to Bell’s story, be stated to Gary, “I could not ask Findlay to pay my account over again, be tried to do so once. ’ ’ Mr. Gary told Bell that before anything could be done Bell would have to get affidavits of tbe forgeries.

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71 N.E.2d 898 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1947)
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Bluebook (online)
166 Ill. App. 57, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/findlay-v-corn-exchange-national-bank-illappct-1911.