Guaranty State Bank & Trust Co. v. Lively

149 S.W. 211, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 856
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 12, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 211 (Guaranty State Bank & Trust Co. v. Lively) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guaranty State Bank & Trust Co. v. Lively, 149 S.W. 211, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 856 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

FLY, J.

This is a suit instituted by ap-pellee against the American Exchange Na *212 tional Bank of Dallas, wliicli, for brevity’s sake, will herein be called the “National Bank,” to recover $1,500 paid out by the bank on a check drawn by appellee in favor of E. Crawford. In the petition it was averred that the check was paid without authority because it had never been indorsed by E. Crawford or by his authority, and consequently the money had not been paid out as directed by the check. It was alleged that appellee was a depositor with the National Bank and had demanded the $1,500 which the bank refused, claiming that it had paid out that sum of money on a check drawn by appellee in favor of E. Crawford. The National Bank answered by general denial and specially answered that, if a check was drawn by appellee in favor of E. Crawford, and if said’ check was paid by the bank, it was paid to the Guaranty State Bank & Trust Company, which, with S. J. McFarland, are hereinafter called appellants, who guaranteed to the National Bank the validity of all prior indorsements, and asked that said bank and its officer, S. J. McFarland, be made parties, and, in the event judgment should be rendered against the National Bank, that it have judgment over against the said appellants.

The appellants filed a number of special exceptions to .the answer and cross-bill of the National Bank and to the petition of appellee, and answered that the check was procured by one Joseph Weil from the agent of appel-lee, representing himself to be the agent of E. Crawford, to whom the check was payable, that Crawford was a fictitious person, but that Weil represented himself to be the agent of Crawford, which in fact was untrue, and that said Weil had indorsed the name of Crawford on the check, and the sum of $1,500 was in the due course of business paid out thereon by the State Bank, and was indorsed and presented by the State Bank to the National Bank, on which it was drawn, that the State Bank was ignorant of the forgery, and not until long after the check had been cashed was it notified that the indorsement was a forgery, at a time when Weil had fled the country, leaving no assets. It was further alleged that the appellants were only indorsers and had not been sued until many terms after the forgery was discovered, and that thereby they were released from any liability. The cause was tried by jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee against the National Bank for $1,608.75, and in favor of the National Bank against the appellants for a like amount.

It was shown by the evidence that, in a transaction with one Joe Weil, appellee, through his agent, drew a check on the National Bank, where he had money on deposit, in favor of E. Crawford, who was thought by appellee’s agent to be a real person, but who was in fact merely a fictitious person, the check was delivered to Weil for Crawford. Weil took the check to appellants’ bank and represented that E. Crawford was a cotton buyer who desired to open up an account with the bank, and presented the cheek with the name of E. Crawford indorsed thereon and the amount, $1,500, was put to the credit of E. Crawford, and was afterwards drawn out on checks signed E. Crawford, but really drawn by Joe Weil, who afterwards fled the county. It appeared that Weil had been engaged in a number of forgeries, and they became notorious, aud on November 10, 1909, the National Bank was notified by appellee that the indorsement of the name of E. Crawford on the check was a forgery. The check was dated October 20, 1909. The agent of appellee used every means in his power to find Weil, and, as soon as he was convinced that the money had been paid on a forgery, he notified the National Bank. He did this as soon as he saw the check which had been returned as a voucher. Weil told the agent of appellee that Crawford lived in Dallas and was a cotton buyer, and was at Richardson. No such man lived in Dallas. Weil, after his departure, wrote to appellee’s agent that he owed the $1,500. The circumstances tend to show that E. Crawford was a creation of Weil’s for purposes of revenue only.

[1] The first assignment of error complains of the refusal of the court to instruct the jury that failure to sue at the first or second term of the court after the check had been paid had released appellants as indorsers. The law as to fixing the liability of indorsers has no application to the facts of this ease. The suit required by article 304, Rev. Stats., has no application to a case in which an indorsing bank has paid a forged indorsement of a check drawn on another bank by a depositor of the latter. The suit required by the statute to fix liability is one against the acceptor of a bill of exchange or maker of a negotiable note, and could have no reference to a suit in which the paying bank is impleaded by the bank on which a check is drawn. No one was called upon to sue the drawer of the check or any one else in this instance, because no one had been hurt but the drawer. I-Ie was the man to sue and who did sue. The law has in contemplation eases in which a bill of exchange has been accepted or negotiable note made, and provides that the liability of the drawer or indorser of the bill of exchange or indorser of the note may be fixed by suit within a certain time against the acceptor of such bill of exchange or maker of the promissory note. That law has no application to the facts of this case. The law as to bringing suits under article 304 applies to the holder of any bill of exchange or promissory note assignable or negotiable by law, and has no reference in this instance to the National Bank, because it did not hold the paper, which had been paid oil and which was back in possession of the drawer of it. The article in *213 question has reference to dishonored paper, and not to that which has been paid on a forged indorsement. The check on the National Bank was never dishonored, but was promptly paid, and of course it could not have been protested. The rule is that, where a protest is not required, the law as to time in which suit shall be brought to fix liability has no application. In such instances the debt becomes the original liability of the indorser. Wells Fargo & Co. v. Bank, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 636, 47 S. W. 1024; Will. Civ. Cases, § 396; Goddard v. Bank, 4 N. Y. 147.

The second and third assignments are overruled. The allegations in the petition objected to are sufficiently explicit. The allegations are clear to the effect that the check had not been indorsed by the payee himself or by his authority, and that as soon as he learned of it he notified the National Bank. The latter bank did not urge any exceptions to the petition. It is positively alleged that the money was demanded and that it had been paid without authority by the National Bank. There was and is no issue on that question. Appellants admit in their pleadings that the money was paid by them on the indorsement of a fictitious person, and that the National Bank paid them the amount of the cheek after it had been indorsed by them. The National Bank did not complain of the notice given it.

[2] It is the general rule that, when the drawer of a check makes it payable to a payee known by him to be fictitious, it is considered to be payable to bearer; but if a real person is intended by the name of the payee, the check must be indorsed by that person or by some one with authority from him, or a forgery is perpetrated in indorsing the check.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 211, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guaranty-state-bank-trust-co-v-lively-texapp-1912.