Goetz v. Bank of Kansas City

119 U.S. 551, 7 S. Ct. 318, 30 L. Ed. 515, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 1918
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 10, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 119 U.S. 551 (Goetz v. Bank of Kansas City) 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
Goetz v. Bank of Kansas City, 119 U.S. 551, 7 S. Ct. 318, 30 L. Ed. 515, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 1918 (1887).

Opinion

Ms. Justice Field

delivered- the opinion of the court.

In October, 1861, the plaintiffs in error, Goetg and Luening, were partners in the business of buying and selling hides on commission, at Milwaukee, Wisconsin. At that time ■ one Du Bois was a dealer in hides at .Kansas City, Missouri. On the tenth of that month Du Bois telegraphed to them from' Kansas City, inquiring what they could sell four hundred green ■ salt hides for; and what they would advance on a--bill of lading of the shipment. The firm answered by telegram, stating the market price of light hides on that day, and that they would pay a draft “for two thirds value, bill-of lading 'attached.” On the same day, the firm sent a letter to Du: Bois, repeating the message, and adding that if the -hides were in good condition and number one, they could sell them readily; that their commission was two- and a half per cent.; and that they would sell all hides that he might ship to the market at Milwaukee. Upon this understanding, and during the same month, Du Bois drew upon the firm five drafts, amounting in. the aggregate to $9395, which were accepted, and, with the exception of the fifth one, were paid. The fifth one, which was for two thousand dollars, was protested for non-payment. To each of the drafts were attached a bill of lading and an invoice of the shipment. The bill of lading purported to have been issued by the Chicago and Alton Kail-road Company, stating that it had received hides, giving the number and estimated weight, to be transported on the road from Kansas City to Milwaukee, and marked and consigned as follows: “ To shipper’s order. Notify Goetz and Luening, Milwaukee, Wis.” The invoice purported to give the net .weight in pounds of the hides shipped, and the market price *554 at Milwaukee, and. their estimated aggregate value, referring to the sight draft for two thirds of the amount. ■

The drafts were made payable to Thornton, the cashier of the Bank of Kansas City, and were cashed as drawn, the bank paying their full face, less the usual rate of exchange on Milwaukee. The amount, as each was cashed, was passed to the credit, of Du Bois, and was checked out by him in the usual course of business, within a few days.

The drafts were sent by the bank to its correspondent at Chicago indorsed “for collection” on its account, ánd by him. were forwarded to Milwaukee. The invoices of some of the shipments were indorsed in the same way. The bills of lading were indorsed by Du Bois, per J. MacLellon, his clerk. ■

The signatures to the bills of lading proved'to-be forgeries, on which account Goetz and Luening refused to. pay the fifth draft. The bank thereupon brought an action against them, for the amount in the Circuit Court of the United States. They defended, and set up as a counter claim the sums they had -paid on the four drafts. At the same time, they commenced an action in the State court against the bank to recover the money paid on those four drafts. The latter action'was removed, on application of the bank, to the Circuit Court of 'the United States^ where the two actions were consolidated- and tried as one, the same questions being involved in both. The trial resulted, by direction of the court, in a verdict for the bank, by which it recovered against the firm the amount claimed on the unpaid draft, and defeated the claim of the firm for the return of the money paid on the other four drafts. *

■ The contention of Goetz and Luening was substantially'this, that they accepted the drafts in the belief that the bills of lading were genuine that their genuineness was asserted by the indorsement of the bank on the invoices accompanying them; that the bills of lading were forgeries ; that no shipments as stated, therein had been made.; and that Du Bois bore in. the community such a reputation for dishonesty, hav-, ing been charged at other times with forging bills of lading attached to drafts.drawn by him, that the bank was guilty *555 of culpable negligence;, amounting to bad faith, in discounting , these drafts on the faith of the bills of lading presented by him without inquiring as to their genuineness.

•. The testimony offered by the firm respecting the charactér of Du Bois was of great length, but it would serve no useful purpose to discuss it. It is sufficient to say that it consisted of a mass of loose statements, general charges of criminality, i with vague references in some instances to reported particulars, sensational articles in newspapers, surmises, insinuations, rumors, beliefs, and suspicions; which might make, men cau-. tious in their dealings with him; but they were altogether of too indefinite and uncertain a character to interdict all transactions with him in the ordinary course of business. ,

•Besides, testimony was produced by the bank highly favor-' able to the standing and character of Du Bois. He is-shoWn . to have been a man of great enterprise and capacity; and just before opening business with the bank, to have been a member of the governméht. of Kansas City,- representing his ward in' the .common Council, and spoken of as a prominent candidate for its ■ mayoralty. He was a member and director of. the board of trade of the'city, and one of its committee on arbitration, to which business disputes of its members were referred for settlement. He had been a captain in the Union army, and bore the-reputation of a brave and, gallant officer. He was received in the best, society-of the city, and was generally-popular. He commenced ‘business with the bank in March, 1881, and drafts by him, cashed by the bank, amounted - from twenty to one hundréd thousand' dollars a month. ' Those drafts were always accompanied by bills of lading, and not until after the discovery of the forgery of the bills of lading in this case Was1 it known that in any of these transactions he had been guilty of dishonest conduct.

Under these circumstances, it is not suprising that, when the drafts on the merchants' in Milwaukee'were presented for discount, the bank made no inquiry as to the genuineness of the bills of lading attached to them. A bank in discounting commercial paper does not- guarantee the genuineness of a .document attached to it as collateral security. Bills of lading *556 attached to drafts drawn, as fa the present case, are merely - security for the payment of the drafts. The indorsement by the bank on the invoices accompanying some of the bills, “ for collection,” created no responsibility on the part of the bank; it implied no guarantee that the bills of lading were genuine; it imported nothing more than that the goods, which the bills -of lading stated had been shipped, were to he held for the payment of the drafts, if the' drafts were not paid by the drawees, and that the bank transferred them only for that purpose. If the drafts should be paid, the drawees were to take the ■ goods. ' To hold such indorsement to be a warranty .would create great embarrassment in the use of bills of lading as collateral to commercial paper against which they are drawn.

The bank after discounting the drafts, stood towards the acceptors in the position of an original lender, and could not be affected in its claim by the want of a consideration from the drawer for the acceptance, or by the failure of such consideration. This has been held in numerous cases, .and was directly adjudged by this court in Hoffman v. Bank of Milwaukee,

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119 U.S. 551, 7 S. Ct. 318, 30 L. Ed. 515, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 1918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goetz-v-bank-of-kansas-city-scotus-1887.