Hardy v. Chesapeake Bank

51 Md. 562, 1879 Md. LEXIS 86
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 18, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 51 Md. 562 (Hardy v. Chesapeake Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardy v. Chesapeake Bank, 51 Md. 562, 1879 Md. LEXIS 86 (Md. 1879).

Opinion

Alvey, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action- was instituted by the appellants against, the appellee to recover an' alleged balance due on bank account. The appellants were customers of and depositors in the bank of the appellee; and the appellants having been notified that their account was overdrawn, upon investigation, they discovered, as they allege, 'that a considerable amount that had been paid out on their account had been paid out on forged checks, and that, by a proper balancing of the account as of the 10th of October, 1873,. there was a balance of $6,113.37 then due them; and it was to recover that amount that this action was instituted.'

In the course of the trial below, several questions were raised and decided; some upon the introduction of the evidence, and others upon the prayers offered by the parties for instructions to the jury. We shall first consider the questions raised by the prayers, so far as those questions are presented by the exceptions taken by the appellants.

At the trial below, there were fourteen checks produced which were alleged to be forgeries on the appellants, and which had been paid by the appellee. These checks were all entered in the appellants’ bank-book, containing the account between the appellants and the appellee. Five of these checks, amounting to $860, were included among the checks entered in the bank-book at the time it was written up and balanced on the 13th.of July, 1873;. and the remaining nine checks, amounting to $1296, were dated, presented and paid, between the 13th of July,. 1873, and the 6th of October, 1873, at which latter date [583]*583the bank-book was again written up and balanced. Upon each occasion of writing up and balancing the bank-book, the cancelled checks were returned to the appellants, and the balance ascertained carried forward to their credit. Holmes, the alleged forger, was the confidential clerk and book-keeper of the appellants, and all the checks produced and alleged to have been forged were taken from the regular check-book of the appellants, and were filled up in the handwriting of Holmes. He was entrusted with the care of the appellants’ bank-book, their checkbook, and with the checks returned by the bank; and he entered in the bank-book all the checks paid by the bank, except the four last. It was his business to enter the checks in the bank-book and to superintend the writing up and balancing the account with the bank, and to keep himself informed of the true state of the account. It was not until about the 10th of October, 1873, upon being notified that their account with the bank had been overdrawn, that the appellants, as they allege, first discovered that Holmes had forged checks and drawn money on their account.

Upon proof of these facts, the appellants claim that, under well established principles of law, they were entitled to recover the entire amount of the fourteen checks produced, if in fact they were forgeries; and that the Court below was in error in refusing to grant their first prayer, which asserted this right. On the other hand, the appellee sought to maintain two distinct grounds of defence; first, that the checks alleged to be forged were not forged at all, but were the genuine checks of the appellants; and second, that, assuming the checks to be forged, there was such negligence, and apparent acquiescence, on the part of the appellants, as to induce the belief that the alleged forged checks paid after the 13th of July, 1873, were genuine, and that, therefore, the appellants are estopped to question the genuineness of the [584]*584checks, or the authority of Holmes to draw them in the name of the. appellants.

With respect to the first ground of defence, that was fully covered by the last prayer offered by the appellee, and which was conceded by the appellants. Of course, if the checks were not forged, there was no ground for the appellants’ action; and it was quite correct to instruct the jury, as was done by this conceded prayer, that if they should find that the hank-book of the appellants had been balanced, and the checks returned by the appellee to the appellants, and no objection was made to their payment, then, as to such checks, the burden of proof was on the appellants to show the alleged forgery.

But with respect to the second ground of'defence, the appellee, by its second prayer, which was granted as a qualification of the first prayer offered by the appellants, obtained an instruction to the jury, that though the appellants might be entitled to recover the amount of the first five of the fourteen checks alleged to have been forged, «being those prior to the 13th .of July, 1813, yet, in respect to the other nine, the acceptance of the balanced account in the bank-book by the appellants, containing entries made by Holmes of the forged checks, with the cancelled checks upon which such balance was struck, and the continuous dealing with respect to such balance, and the condition of the account — the hank in good faith paying the checks on similar signatures, to those on checks embraced in the former settlement of the account, without suggestion or intimation from the appellants that any thing was wrong — are facts sufficient to estop the appellants to question the genuineness of the checks, or the authority of Holmes to draw them in the form in which they were presented. It was to the granting of this prayer, as well as to the refusal to grant the first prayer offered by the appellants without qualification that the latter excepted.

[585]*5851. It is now perfectly well settled, that the relation between banker and customer, who pays money into the bank, or to whose credit money is received there on deposit, is the ordinary relation of debtor and creditor; and that when the bank receives the. money as an ordinary deposit and gives credit to the depositor, the money becomes the funds of the bank, and may be used by it as any other funds to which it may be entitled. It is accountable for the deposits that it may receive as debtor, and in respect to ordinary deposits there is an implied agreement between the bank and the depositor that the checks of the latter will be honored to the extent of the funds standing to his credit. Horwitz vs. Ellinger, 31 Md., 492, 503; Foley vs. Hill, 2 C. & Fin., 28; Thompson vs. Riggs, 5 Wall., 663; Bank of the Republic vs. Millard, 10 Wall., 152, 155. There is no question of trust, therefore, between the parties, but their relation is purely a legal one; and if the bank pays money on a forged checkno matter under what circumstances of caution, or how-1 ever honest the belief in its genuineness, if the depositor himself be free of blame, and has (lone nothing to mislead the bank, all the loss must be borne by the bank, for it acts at its peril, and pays out its own funds, and not those of the depositor. It is in view of this relation of the parties, and of their rights and obligations, that the principle is universally maintained, that banks and bankers are bound to know the signatures of their customers, and that they pay checks purporting to be drawn by them at their peril. Com. & Farm. Nat. Bank vs. First Nat. Bank, 30 Md., 11. No right or title can be legally claimed through a forgery; and the possession by the bank of a forged check upon which money has been paid, affords of itself no ground for claim of credit in account as against the party whose name has been forged.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Md. 562, 1879 Md. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardy-v-chesapeake-bank-md-1879.