Kemble v. National Bank

94 A.D. 544, 88 N.Y.S. 246
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 94 A.D. 544 (Kemble v. National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kemble v. National Bank, 94 A.D. 544, 88 N.Y.S. 246 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Smith, J.:

This appeal is upon the facts as well as upon the law. Upon July 1,1902, the plaintiff claims to have deposited with the defendant a $1,000 bill. This the defendant denies, claiming that the bill deposited was a $100 bill and not a $1,000 bill. These claims present the pivotal fact in the case which has been disposed of by' the jury in favor of the plaintiff. Upon the trial was presented a square conflict of testimony. The plaintiff distinctly swears that the bill deposited was a $1,000 bill, while the defendant’s teller who received the bill swears positively that it was a $100 bill. Evidence was given upon the part of the plaintiff to corroborate his story. It was shown where he received a $1,000 bill a short time before the deposit. Evidence was given on behalf of the defendant to corroborate the contention of the defendant’s teller. Upon making the deposit the deposit ticket was made out by the teller himself as a deposit of $100. Upon plaintiff asking for something to show for the deposit, the teller gave him a bank book upon which was credited a deposit of $100. It was further shown that the cash balanced substantially upon that night, and other witnesses who had drawn out $100 or more in cash upon that day were sworn to the fact that they had received no $1,000 bill given to them as a $100 bill. Upon this conflict of testimony the jury has given credence to the plaintiff’s version of the story, and we are not able to see that the evidence preponderates against their conclusion or that the jury was actuated in reaching their conclusion by any other motive than a desire to ascertain the exact truth.

There were several rulings made during the progress of the trial upon which is based in part the claim of the defendant for a new trial. Upon the plaintiff’s side of the case witnesses were sworn to the, fact that within an hour and a half of the time of the deposit, in a business transaction, in a law office in the city of Kingston, the plaintiff received a $500 bill and a $1,000 bill. This was sworn to by several witnesses who were present without objection on behalf of the defendant. Thereafter Mr. Searing, the attorney, was called to [546]*546the stand, and his evidence was received over the objection and exception of the defendant, to the effect that one of the bills was a yellow bill and the other a green bill, the contention being on the part of the plaintiff that a $500 gold certificate was given and a $1,000 greenback, while on the part of the defendant the contention was that the bill presented at the bank was a $100 gold certificate. This evidence, admitted over the defendant’s objection, is claimed to have been erroneously admitted. To this we cannot agree. In Stephen’s Digest of the Law of Evidence (3d ed. chap._l, art. 1) a relevant fact is defined as one which renders probable the existence or non-existence of the fact in issue. Upon the disputed question as to whether the bill presented to the bank was a $100 gold certificate or a $1,000 greenback, we think within this definition the fact that within an hour and a half of the time of the deposit the depositor had received a $1,000 greenback and a $500 gold certificate is relevant to the fact here in issue. Unless the evidence of the witness Searing tends to prove that one of the. bills presented was a $1,000 bill, it is harmless in the case. If such be the tendency of the evidence, as it is urged in the appellant’s brief, it is then legitimate evidence within the role stated.

After having made the deposit, and upon the 12th day of July, 1902, the plaintiff drew two checks, one for $600 and one for $45, against the account. The $45 check was paid, and the $600 check was protested. The defendant objected to the introduction of the $600 check and its objection was overruled, to which ruling an exception was taken. This ruling also is claimed .to have vitiated this verdict. The objection was not made until after the evidence was received, and it may well have been overruled as coming too late. .

This deposit was made upon the 1st day of July, 1902. A bank book was thereupon given to the plaintiff as his receipt. Upon July twelfth, upon receipt of the check for $600, the cashier of the bank telephoned to the plaintiff that he only had $100 in the bank. Thereupon the plaintiff went to the bank with his bank book, and opening it for the first time discovered that the bank book showed a deposit of $100 instead of $1,000. U pan these facts, at the close of the charge, the appellant’s attorney asked the court to charge “ That it was the duty of the plaintiff to look at his pass book wheh he [547]*547received it, or within reasonable time thereafter, and if the defendant’s position was prejudiced by the plaintiff’s neglect in that respect, then the plaintiff cannot' recover.” The court: “ I decline to charge that; I leave that to the jury to determine. Defendant excepted.” The apparent effect of the ruling of the court was to leave to the jury to determine whether it was the plaintiff’s duty to look at his pass book when he received it or within a reasonable time thereafter, as well as the question whether his failure so to examine his pass book had prejudiced the defendant. If the law imposes this duty upon the plaintiff in this case, the appellant contends that the court was in error in refusing to charge the request. Appellant strongly contends that the authorities establish the duty of a depositor to examine his bank book within a reasonable time that he may notify the bank of errors therein which might be cured by prompt action on the part of the bank, or which might prevent further losses by the bank. It cites in support of its contention the case of Leather Manufacturers Bank v. Morgan (117 U. S. 96) and the case of Critten v. Chemical National Bank (171 N. Y. 220). Those were cases, however, where the bank had paid a series of forged checks, and it was there held that inasmuch as the bank was liable to be deceived by skillful forgeries, there was a duty upon the part of the depositor to examine his vouchers when returned, in connection with his check book, so as to ascertain if the checks paid were genuine or forged checks. In this State the duty of the depositor and the consequences of neglect of that duty is well defined in the case last cited. In that case the head note in part reads: “ A bank depositor owes to the bank the duty of exercising reasonable care to verify returned vouchers by the record kept by him of the checks he has issued, for the purpose of detecting forgeries or alterations: A depositor by neglecting his duty in this respect, or by failing to discover and notify the bank of forgeries, does not, however, adopt raised checks as genuine and ratify their payment or estop himself from asserting that they are forgeries — his liability is limited to the damages sustained by the bank in consequence of such neglect. A bank is not relieved from liability for raised checks, which it had paid before the account was balanced, by the failure of the depositor to subsequently discover the alterations unless thereby the bank has lost an opportunity to obtain res[548]*548titution. A bank is, however, relieved from responsibility for raised checks which it paid after the account was balanced, by the negligence of the depositor in the examination of the returned vouchers and comparison with stub's of his check book Which would have disclosed the alterations and prevented the subsequent frauds, in the (absence of negligence on the fart of the bank in faying the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 A.D. 544, 88 N.Y.S. 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kemble-v-national-bank-nyappdiv-1904.