Green v. Purcell National Bank

37 S.W. 50, 1 Indian Terr. 270, 1896 Indian Terr. LEXIS 38
CourtCourt Of Appeals Of Indian Territory
DecidedSeptember 19, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 37 S.W. 50 (Green v. Purcell National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court Of Appeals Of Indian Territory primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Purcell National Bank, 37 S.W. 50, 1 Indian Terr. 270, 1896 Indian Terr. LEXIS 38 (Conn. 1896).

Opinion

Springer, C. J.

(after stating the facts.) The parties to this suit, by their attorneys, signed and submitted to the court below an agreed statement of the facts in this case. That statement is as follows: “It is agreed that in 1893 the defendant bank was doing business at Purcell, and that on the said day plaintiff, Green, deposited for collection in defendant bank a check drawn on Riverside Bank of New York by one Nevins, in favor of Charles J. Waldron, for $25 (check hereto attached;) that plaintiff, H. L. Green, indorsed the check; that defendant bank forwarded the same for collection in due course, and the same was paid by the Riverside Bank; that afterwards the defendant bank paid to Green the proceeds of said check, $25. It is agreed that Green came into possession of said check in due course, and without any knowledge of any forgery. It is agreed that the name of the payee, Chas. J. Waldron, is a forgery, and not genuine. It is agreed that prior to the 25th day of February, 1894, Green had no knowledge of such forgery. It is agreed [273]*273that the Riverside Bank afterwards discovered the forgery, and came back along the line for the amount, and that defendant bank paid back the money, $25, to the Riverside' Bank, some time in November, 1898, and that defendant had full knowledge of the forgery prior to the 1st day of December, 1898. It is agreed that defendant bank made no effort to notify G-reen of the forgery, or that they had to pay the money back to the Riverside Bank. It is agreed that defendant bank knew the residence of Green, and could have notified him at any time during the months of December, 1893, and January, 1894. It is agreed that on the 23d day of February, 1894, plaintiff, Green, deposited in defendant bank a check drawn on Gainesville, Texas, for the sum of $25, for collection, and, when collected, for credit to plaintiff’s account in said bank (deposit slip hereto attached.) It is agreed that defendant bank collected said sum of $25, and realized thereon the sum of $25. It is agreed that when Green called upon defendant bank for the proceeds of said last-named check they informed him that they had collected said sum, but that they had used the same to pay themselves the sum of $25, for which Green was liable to.defendant bank, by reason of having indorsed the first-mentioned check, the name of the payee, Waldron, being a forgery; that this was the first knowledge that Green had that the name of Waldron was forged.”

The counsel for appellant contends that the agreed statement of facts shows that the appellant acted in perfect good faith, that he took the check upon which Waldron’s name had been forged to the bank, and indorsed the same for collection. They concede that appellant, by his indorsement, guarantied the genuineness of Waldron’s signature, but they insist that this did not relieve the Riverside Bank, or the appellee, the Purcell National Bank, from the duty of notifying appellant of the fact as soon as the forgery was [274]*274discovered; and, failing so to do, counsel for appellant insist that appellant was released from all responsibility as in-dorser of tlie check. Counsel comment, in their printed argument, with some severity upon the “avaricious clutches, ” which, they allege, the Purcell Bank got “on some of appellant’s effects, ” referring to the $25 collected on the Gainesville draft, and applied to the repayment of the same amount advanced by the bank to the appellant on the forged indorsement of the Waldron check.

Endorser1601* Notice.

The Purcell Bank was not obliged to notify the appellant, Green, that Waldron’s name had been forged to the check. That was a fact of which Green himself was obliged to take notice ; and, if he did not know it, yet, as the recipient of the proceeds of a forged check or indorsement, he had none of the rights of an innocent holder of commercial PaPer- •'•aw he was charged with the knowledge of the forgery, the beneficiary of which he became by his own acts. He stood in the forger’s shoes, and, however innocent he may have been in fact, yet, ih law, having received the stolen goods, he acquired no better title than the thief himself would have had. Any funds of the appellant which may thereafter have come into the possession of the appellee could be legally applied to the reimbursement of the bank for the amount advanced on the forged check. No wrong has been done appellant. He obtained money which did not belong to him; he appropriated it to his own use, and he has been compelled by the judgment of the court below to restore it to the rightful owner. The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

Lewis, J., concurs.

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W. 50, 1 Indian Terr. 270, 1896 Indian Terr. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-purcell-national-bank-ctappindterr-1896.