First National Bank of Cushing v. Ketchum

1918 OK 183, 172 P. 81, 68 Okla. 104, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 299
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 9, 1918
Docket8645
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1918 OK 183 (First National Bank of Cushing v. Ketchum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Cushing v. Ketchum, 1918 OK 183, 172 P. 81, 68 Okla. 104, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 299 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

HARDX, J.

H. R. Ketchum commenced an action against First National Bank of Cushing to recover a balance due on certain deposits made by him and for damages for wrongfully protesting .two checks which had been drawn by him against his account when sufficient funds were on deposit to pay said checks. The bank answered pleading payment of the deposit and set out in detail the checks paid ■ by it which had been drawn 'by plaintiff ag'ainst bis account, among which was one check for the sum of $80, about which last-mentioned check this controversy hinges. Verdict and judgment were for Ketchum, and the bank appeals. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The court permitted plaintiff, over objections by defendant, to testify that a certain check purporting to be for tbe sum of $80 which had been charged to his account by defendant had been altered after its execution and delivery by him, in that the amount thereof had been raised from 80 cents to 80 dollars, and this action of the court is urged as error for the reason, as counsel claims, there was no allegation in any of the pleadings tendering an issue as to the amount of said check. Defendant alleged in its answer that, after this check had been paid by defendant and charged against the deposit of plaintiff in the sum of $80, plaintiff objected to the charge and claimed the check .had been raised from 80 cents to 80 dollars and that defendant thereupon credited plaintiff’s account with the sum of $79.20, and entered into an agreement whereby an action was to be commenced against the person presenting said check for payment to recover said sum, and further alleged that if said check had been altered as claimed the alteration thereof was made possible through the negligence of plaintiff because of the manner in which said check was executed. Under these allegations the evidence was properly admitted.

The court instructed the jury -that the burden 'was on defendant to prove that the check as paid by it was in the same condition as when drawn by defendant, and refused to instruct upon defendant’s request *105 that the burden was on plaintiff to prove am alteration in the cheek.

TUie relation between plaintiff land defendant was that of debtor and creditor, and there being no controversy over the fact that plaintiff had deposited certain funds to his credit with defendant, defendant seeking t-o avoid a recovery by plaintiff upon the plea of payment, was charged with the burden of sustaining that plea by a preponderance of the evidence. Winton v. Myers, 8 Okla. 421, 58 Pac. 634; Edwards et al. v. Johnston-Larimer D. G. Co., 59 Okla. 101, 158 Pac. 446; Standard Fashion Co. v. Joels, 60 Okla. 195, 159 Pac. 846; Zane on Banks and Banking 291; 7 C. J. 668.

The defendant could not lawfully pay out moneys on deposit with it to plaintiff’s credit except as directed by him, and in maintaining its defense of payment it was incumbent upon defendant to show that the checks upon which said .moneys were disburs¡ed; were drawn by plaintiff, and .this it sought to do by showing a credit of $80 which had been paid out on a check which defendant claimed had been executed by plaintiff. It was not enough to show that the moneys had in fact been paid out, but it was necessary to go further and show that same had been paid out according to the directions of plaintiff, and that the checks for the payment of which credit was claimed were the checks of plaintiff. Cushman v. Ill. Starch Co., 79 Ill. 281; Harris v. Jacksonville Bank. 22 Fla. 501, 1 South. 140, 1 Am. St. Rep. 201; Zane on Banks and Banking, 291.

Irrespective of the question as to where lay the burden of proof, the evidence conclusively establishes the alteration of the check in controversy. The original instrument is before us, and an examination thereof és-tablishes beyond any reasonable doubt that it has been altered as claimed. It was originally written in ink, and, at the end of the line opposite the name of the payee where the amount of the check is usually designated in figures, the maker had, according to his testimony, written the amount thus, “X80/100,” and in the line where the amount was written out, stated the amount thus, ‘‘only eighty cents.” The check as it now is, and was at the time of its payment, shows the original writing to have been retraced with an indelible pencil, and opposite the nanle of the- payee, where the amount was designated as above stated, same had been changed to read “$80.00,” and on the line Where the words “only eighty cents” were written the words “only” and “cents” 'have been erased, leaving the word “•eighty” in writing, and at the right end of the line appears the word “dollars1,'’ which is a part of the blank printed form on which the check was written. Adhere the word “only” was erased, a hole plainly appears-in the paper, and where the word “cents” was erased the paper is much thinner, and upon being held up to 'the light shows plainly that an erasure has been.made-, and where the figures $80.00’ now appear an- erasure also is plainly shown to have been made. There cannot be any reasonable doubt that the check has been materially altered, and the testimony of plaintiff -that the alteration Was made after its execution and delivery by him is uncontr.adicted, and, even if the court committed error in its instructions as to the burden of proof, we would not reverse the case for that reason.

Defendant claims that plaintiff was negligent in drawing the ch-eck, and thereby made it possible for the alteration to be made, and for -that reason is not entitled to recover, and that tine court committed error1 in instructing the jury that the fact whether or not the check -was negligently drawn was not to be considered by them. The negligence alleged is said to consist in the failure of plaintiff to diiaw a line through or erase the dollar mark at the end of the line where the amount of the ch-eck was designated in figures and in failing to erase the printed word “dollars” at the end of the line where the amount of the check was written in words, and because of bis failure to do this it was made possible for the person altering the check to make- the erasures hereinbefore described and leave the check in -its present condition. The rule urged has frequently been applied where an instrument was executed leaving certain blanks therein which were afterwards filled out in such manner as to leave no mark or indication of an alteration therein; but the distinction between an instrument executed in blank as to the date, the name -of the payee, or the amount when signed and delivered to another for use, and with authority to fill in blanks thus left, and an instrument complete on its face when signed -and delivered in which material alterations have been made is emphasized in many of the cases. In the latter case there is no implied authority to change the instrument as delivered, and the negligence of the maker under such circumstances cannot be said to cause the loss -which required the commission of a crime by another to effect. AVhere the maker of an instrument carelessly leaves blank spaces therein which he intrusts -to another to fill, and that other person disobeys instructionls and fills up the *106 space for a larger •amount, the rule may

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Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 183, 172 P. 81, 68 Okla. 104, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-cushing-v-ketchum-okla-1918.