Interstate Hosiery Mills, Inc. v. First National Bank

11 A.2d 537, 139 Pa. Super. 181, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 31
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 12, 1939
DocketAppeal, 254
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 11 A.2d 537 (Interstate Hosiery Mills, Inc. v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interstate Hosiery Mills, Inc. v. First National Bank, 11 A.2d 537, 139 Pa. Super. 181, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 31 (Pa. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by Parker, J.,

This is an action in assumpsit brought against a bank by one of its depositors to recover the sum, with interest, of four checks paid by the bank on the forged signatures of two of the officers of the depositor and charged to the depositor’s account. The issues raised were submitted to a jury and after a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the refusal of defendant’s motion for judgment n. o. v., and entry of judgment for the plaintiff, the defendant appealed, claiming that judgment should be entered in its favor.

There was evidence tending to show that the bank paid the four checks on forged signatures and deducted the amounts thereof from depositor’s account with it. It is admitted by plaintiff, however, that the checks alleged to have been forged were not delivered to the bank before this suit was begun. As a general rule, a bank on which a check is drawn by one of its depositors is charged with knowledge of its depositor’s signature and if the bank pays a forged check it does so at its peril. Payment, in legal contemplation, will be considered to have been made out of the bank’s own funds so that it has no right to charge the depositor’s account with the amount thereof and will be held liable to him for so doing: National Union F. Ins. Co. v. Mellon Nat. Bk., 276 Pa. 212, 216, 119 A. 910; 9 C. J. S., Banks & Banking, §356.

The bank, however, contends that suit would not lie against it until the alleged forged checks were returned to it, and that in any event the uncontradicted evidence produced by the depositor was so clear and precise that the court should have declared as a matter of law that the depositor was guilty of such an unreasonable delay in advising the bank of the forgeries as to bar a recovery. We will therefore limit our consideration to a *184 discussion of the defenses raised, first considering the subject of delay in connection with the evidence bearing on these questions, viewing it in a light most favorable to plaintiff, as we are required to do.

The plaintiff, Interstate Hosiery Mills, Inc., operated a large mill and had offices at Lansdale, Pennsylvania. It carried accounts in ten or more banking institutions, including several accounts in First National Bank of Lansdale, the defendant. The account here involved was known as a transfer account and on it eighteen to twenty-nine checks were drawn each month, the account being used mainly as a means of transfer of cash from New York or other places where its funds were principally kept in order to provide for the payment of its payrolls and the cash demands arising at its local office. The payrolls were met either by withdrawing funds in cash or by transferring them to another account known as the payroll account from which individual checks were drawn in favor of the employees. By an arrangement between the bank and the depositor, the bank was required, upon the first business day of each month, to render a statement to Interstate of its checking accounts for the preceding month and to return to it the cancelled checks. This arrangement was strictly complied with over a period of years. The statements and checks for the months of December, 1937, and January, 1938, reached plaintiff’s office on the first or second days of the succeeding months.

The bank, during December, 1937, paid two checks purporting to be signed by officers of Interstate, one on December 16, 1937, for $189.55, and the other on December 17, 1937, for $190, and charged these checks to Interstate’s account. The dates and endorsements of these two checks were not shown as they were apparently destroyed by the forger after their return to the depositor, as we shall later see. Two checks dated January 8,1938, for $141.75, and January 24, 1938, for $760, were paid by the bank on January 12 and January 26, *185 1938, respectively. The January checks, were made payable to Ray Marien and the December checks were presumably so made. None of the four checks was signed by persons authorized to execute checks for plaintiff.

For a period of ten years, Interstate had employed certified public accountants, Homes & Davis, of New York, to make monthly, semi-annual, and annual audits of all their accounts, the auditors being also entrusted with the duty of preparing various statements required by federal authorities, income tax reports, tax reports, and the like. It had full access to the offices and all of the accounts and books of Interstate. The senior supervising auditor in charge of the various audits was Ray Marien, an employee of Homes & Davis. When the December cancelled checks and statement were delivered to Interstate, they were forthwith turned over by it to the auditors and Ray Marien took them to New York to the offices of the auditing company in that city. Although the head bookkeeper for plaintiff requested Marien to return the checks to him, he did not do so but retained them.

On January 31, 1938, the bank received, on the stationery of Interstate, a letter purporting to be signed by one of its officers requesting the bank to forward the January cancelled cheeks and statement to Homes & Davis at New York. This letter was a forgery, apparently perpetrated by Marien, and led to his detection. By a mistake of one of the employees of the bank, the instructions in that letter were not obeyed and an officer of the bank immediately called an officer of Interstate and apologized. The officer of Interstate, not having written such a letter, was surprised and started inquiries. The result was that Interstate discovered, on February 2, that the letter of January 31, 1938, was a forgery and that four amounts had been withdrawn from its account corresponding with the checks referred to and that there were no corresponding entries on *186 their books. The forged checks all bore numbers and this led to the discovery that the blank checks used in perpetrating the forgeries were torn from the back of the check book and that the corresponding stubs were removed. On February 2, as soon as Interstate obtained this information, it promptly notified the bank it had drawn no such checks and made demand for reimbursement. It thereafter acted with reasonable promptness in obtaining and supplying information with respect to the manner in which and the person by whom the forgery was perpetrated. The depositor received from the bank a copy of the December statement, but it has not been able since January 2, 1938, to obtain the forged checks cashed in December for delivery to the bank.

Ray Marien was promptly prosecuted in New York for the cashing of one of the checks forged in January and is now serving a term in a penitentiary in that state. The January checks were immediately placed in the hands of the district attorney in New York as necessary evidence in the prosecution of the forger, and when the checks had served that purpose they were returned to the plaintiff and produced at the trial.

While no degree of care on the part of the bank will relieve it from liability for paying a forged check, it may be relieved by the conduct of the depositor. When a depositor’s pass book has been written up and returned to him with the cancelled checks which have been charged to his account, it is his duty to examine such checks within a reasonable time and to report promptly any forgeries which he has discovered.

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Bluebook (online)
11 A.2d 537, 139 Pa. Super. 181, 1940 Pa. Super. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-hosiery-mills-inc-v-first-national-bank-pasuperct-1939.