J. C. Hockett Co. v. Simmonds

87 N.E.2d 739, 84 Ohio App. 467, 55 Ohio Law. Abs. 545, 39 Ohio Op. 556, 1949 Ohio App. LEXIS 753
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1949
Docket7021
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 87 N.E.2d 739 (J. C. Hockett Co. v. Simmonds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. C. Hockett Co. v. Simmonds, 87 N.E.2d 739, 84 Ohio App. 467, 55 Ohio Law. Abs. 545, 39 Ohio Op. 556, 1949 Ohio App. LEXIS 753 (Ohio Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

OPINION

By ROSS, J.:

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County, affirming a judgment of the Municipal Court of Cincinnati, in favor of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff, a corporation engaged in the business of owning and operating an elaborate jewelry store in the heart of the business district of the City of Cincinnati, accepted a check drawn by the defendant in payment of a thirty dollar purchase and gave the person presenting and endorsing the check $119.25, the difference between the amount of the purchase, plus tax, and $150.00, the face value of the check. When the check was presented through channels to the drawer’s bank for credit it was found that payment had been stopped by the drawer. The Plaintiff now brings this action against the drawer of the check to recover the sum of $150.00, plus interest and costs.

The answer was essentially a general denial.

It appears from the evidence that the defendant was induced to give the check in question to a person who represented herself to be “Sarah McMillan,” who was accompanied by another woman. Shortly after such person with her companion had left with the check it was discovered that the consideration for the check did not exist and that the representations made by the women inducing the defendant drawer to part with the check were wholly false and fraudulent. The check was given to the woman representing herself to be “Sarah McMillan” at the request of her companion, late Friday afternoon after banking hours. Payment was stopped on the check by the de *547 fendant drawer at the opening of the drawee bank Saturday morning, the next day following. That same Saturday afternoon, after the close of banking hours, two women entered the store of the plaintiff, made a purchase of a pen priced at thirty dollars. One of the women represented to the sales lady that she was “Sarah McMillan” and tendered the defendant’s check for $150.00 to the sales lady in payment of her purchase, endorsing the check in the latter’s presence, “Sarah McMillan, William H. Taft Road.”

It. is admitted by all concerned that the person so endorsing the check and tendering it as “Sarah McMillan” was not the person to whom the check was given by the drawer, as “Sarah McMillan.” Nor was such endorser present when the check was given to “Sarah McMillan.” The payee of the check receiving the check from the drawer defendant, understood by the drawer to be “Sarah McMillan” in no way resembled the endorser of the check from whom the plaintiff’s employee received the check. This endorser identified herself to the sales lady by presenting a “billfold”, containing a photograph, a driver's license, containing the signature “Sarah McMillan,” and “other documents.” The “billfold” and its contents were taken to the manager of the store, who authorized acceptance of the check after examination of its contents, and glancing at the endorser. No other attempt was made by the plaintiff’s employees to ascertain whether the person, to whom was given the merchandise and the balance of the amount of the check, was the actual payee intended by the drawer.

The trial court found as a fact that the companion of payee at the time the check was delivered by the drawer was the companion of the person who represented herself to be “Sarah McMillan” to the plaintiff’s employees, and who endorsed the check, but that the recipient of the check from the drawer was not present in plaintiff’s store at the time plaintiff made payment thereon. In other words, the companion of the real payee was also the companion of the endorser of the check who received the value of the check in merchandise and cash from plaintiff’s employees.

There was other evidence introduced indicating that this “companion” was present at other times and places when other checks given by the drawer defendant to the payee “Sarah McMillan,” coincident with delivery of the $150.00 check herein involved, were cashed by storekeepers, but that these women impersonating the payee were different in each case.

If the plaintiff had paid value upon the endorsement of the actual payee of the check, it would have been protected as a *548 holder in due course. 10 C. J. Sec. p. 1089, Sec. 494 B. Bills and Notes; 8 Am. Jur. p. 314, Section 602, Bills and Notes.

See: Continental-American Bank & Trust. Co v. United States, 161 Fed. (2) 935, 42 Cal. App. (2) 536

The fact remains that the plaintiff did not pay to the actual intended payee of the check, who may have been an imposter. Nothing that the drawer did can be construed as an act misleading the plaintiff into paying to a person other than the real payee.

It is almost inconceivable that astute persons engaged in business, daily dealing with the public, conscious of the prevalence of persons who prey upon the credulity of citizens, could pay a woman entirely unknown, the proceeds of a check, presented after banking hours when it was impossible to check the validity of the instrument presented, and with but a cursory examination of papers, easily forged, which might or might not identify such person. The presence of signs in many establishments upon which is stated “No checks cashed here" indicates that not all persons engaged in business are so credulous.

The law requiring payment to the actual person whom the drawer intends and designates In a check as payee is well established. Beattie v. National Bank of Illinois 174 Ill 571, 43 L. R. A. 654. In this case it is stated at pages 656 and 657, L. R. A.:

“Nothing is better settled than that a forged indorsement does not pass title to commercial paper negotiable only by indorsement, and does not justify the payment of such paper. Here, whether the indorsement of the payee’s name was technically a forgery, or was merely a spurious and false indorsement, in either case it was inoperative to change the title to the instrument. Graves v. American Exch. Bank, 17 N. Y. 205. In Graves v. American Exch. Bank, 17 N. Y. 205, it was held that the drawee of a bill of exchange is bound to ascertain that the person to whom he makes payment is the genuine payee, or is authorized by him to receive it, that it is no defense against such a payee that the drawee, in the regular course of business, with nothing to excite suspicion, paid the bill to a holder in good faith and for value, under an indorsement of a person bearing the same name as the payee. There it was said by the court: ‘The defendants, on whom the draft was drawn paid it upon the indorsement of another Charles F. Graves, residing at or near La Salle, who wrongfully took it from the postoffice at Mendota. Such a payment, although *549 made in good faith, did not devest or impair the title of the owner who had not seen or indorsed the paper.’ In Mead v. Young 4 T. R. 28, the action was brought by the indorser of a bill of exchange against the acceptor, the bill having been drawn by one Christian on the defendant in London, payable to Henry Davis or order; and having been put into the foreign mail, inclosed in a letter from Christian, it goes into the hands of another Henry Davis than the one in whose favor it was drawn. The defendant accepted the bill, and it was discounted by the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.E.2d 739, 84 Ohio App. 467, 55 Ohio Law. Abs. 545, 39 Ohio Op. 556, 1949 Ohio App. LEXIS 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-c-hockett-co-v-simmonds-ohioctapp-1949.