Fletcher Savings & Trust Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.

149 N.E. 105, 84 Ind. App. 659, 1925 Ind. App. LEXIS 185
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 13, 1925
DocketNo. 12,097.
StatusPublished

This text of 149 N.E. 105 (Fletcher Savings & Trust Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fletcher Savings & Trust Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 149 N.E. 105, 84 Ind. App. 659, 1925 Ind. App. LEXIS 185 (Ind. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

McMahan, J.

This action was brought -by appellant to recover on a bankers’ blanket forgery and alteration policy of insurance. The complaint was in two paragraphs. A demurrer to each paragraph having been sustained, appellant appeals.

The first paragraph of complaint alleged, in sub *660 stance, that on November 15, 1921, appellee issued to appellant a policy of insurance, whereby appellee agreed to indemnify appellant against direct loss which might be sustained by appellant under the terms of such policy. The policy is made a part of the complaint, and, by its terms, appellee agreed to indemnify appellant against loss, not exceeding $25,000, which it might sustain through payment by appellant: “A.—Of any check, certified check, or draft drawn upon the Insured Bank, or of any promissory note or domestic trade acceptance or bank acceptance payable at the Insured Bank, and upon which there shall have been forged as the Drawer, Maker or Acceptor thereof, the signature of a depositor or that of any person whose signature such depositor has instructed the Insured Bank to recognize, or B.—Of any check, certified check or draft drawn upon the Insured Bank, or of any promissory note, domestic trade acceptance or bank acceptance payable at the Insured Bank, or of any certificate of deposit issued, or of any acceptance made, by the Insured Bank which shall have been raised or altered in any respect, or upon which the name of any indorser shall have been forged.”

That while said policy was in force, the Mutual Printing and Lithographing Company applied to appellant to extend certain credit to it on promissory notes to be executed by said company to appellant. That B. G. Saltzgaber and W. E. Henkel had been and then were officers and stockholders of said company, said Henkel then being a man of large means and abundantly responsible for any obligation incurred by him up to $100,000. That appellant refused to extend any credit to said company unless and until said Henkel should become indorser of such notes as should be executed by said company to appellant. That thereafter, Saltzgaber presented to appellant a written instrument purporting *661 to have been signed by Saltzgaber and Henkel, and reading as follows: “Indianapolis, Indiana. February 8, 1922. I hereby become surety for the payment of all present or future obligations and indebtedness, and the renewals and extensions thereof, now owing or hereafter incurred by the Mutual Printing and Lithographing Company to Fletcher Savings and Trust Company of Indianapolis, and as such surety I agree to pay such respective obligations, debts, renewals and extensions according to. their terms. On written notice from me to said bank to that effect, I shall not be liable for obligations' thereafter incurred. B. G. Saltzgaber, W. E. Henkel.” That when Saltzgaber presented said instrument to appellant, he represented that it had been executed by Henkel, and appellant, believing it had been executed by Henkel, took and accepted from said company certain promissory notes, and that it paid to said company the total of $39,000, which amount was subsequently reduced to $38,000, by reason of a certain payment.

That during all the times herein referred to and for many years prior thereto, there has existed continuously an established, uniform, widespread, universal, general and notorious custom and usage in the banking and trust company business in the city of Indianapolis and elsewhere throughout the State of Indiana that the word “indorser” signified and included all persons who indorsed a promissory note on the note itself and also signified and included all persons who, by a separate written instrument, agreed to pay the present or future obligations and indebtedness of another; that the plaintiff and defendant, in making the said insurance contract, contracted with reference to and in view of said custom, usage and practice, and that the same entered into and became a part of said insurance policy, and that said insurance policy was executed by the *662 parties thereto with full knowledge on-the part of each of said custom, usage and practice, and with the intent and purpose that such custom, usage and practice should apply to and become a part of said insurance policy; that the word “indorser” used in said insurance policy was used with reference to said custom, usage, and practice and with the intent on the part of both parties thereto that it should include not merely' a forged indorsement on a note itself, but any forged signature of any person who by a separate written instrument agreed to pay the obligation of another.

That during all the times hereinbefore referred to and for many years prior thereto, there had existed continuously an established, uniform, widespread, universal, general and notorious custom, usage and practice in the banking and trust company business -in the city of Indianapolis, and elsewhere throughout the State of Indiana, of which defendant had full knowledge and notice at the time it executed the policy sued on, that banks and trust companies, when they desire to procure the indorsement of a particular person on the promissory notes of a corporation which are often to be renewed in whole or in part, would, instead of procuring such indorsement on each note as executed, procure from said proposed indorser a general agreement that he would become liable for the payment of all present or future obligations and indebtedness and the renewals and extensions thereof and an agreement from such prospective indorser to pay such respective, obligations; that the plaintiff and defendant, in making said insurance contract, contracted with reference to and in view of said custom, usage and practice, and that the same entered into and became a part of said contract and insurance policy, and that said contract and insurance policy was executed by the parties thereto with full knowledge on each of their parts of said custom, *663 usage and practice and with the intent and purpose that such custom, usage and practice should apply to and become a part of said contract and insurance policy and that an agreement of the character above referred to, whereby said Henkel agreed to become surety for the payment of all present and future obligations and indebtedness of said Mutual Printing and Lithographing Company and, as such surety, agreed to pay such respective obligations, was within the contemplation of the parties an indorsement of each of such promissory notes; that the plaintiff hereto had for many years prior to the execution of the policy sued on followed such custom, usage and practice and that the defendant had full knowledge and notice of such fact at the time it executed said policy of insurance.

That Saltzgaber is dead. That Henkel did not sign said instrument, his signature thereto being a forgery. That the lithographing company is insolvent and in the hands of a receiver; that appellant will not receive from the estate of Saltzgaber and from the lithographing company a sum in excess of $4,000 and that the total loss to appellant on account of said forged instrument will be in excess of $34,000. That appellant did not learn of said forgery until after said money had all been paid to said company.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bedford Bank v. Acoam
9 L.R.A. 560 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 N.E. 105, 84 Ind. App. 659, 1925 Ind. App. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fletcher-savings-trust-co-v-fidelity-deposit-co-indctapp-1925.