Linick v. A. J. Nutting & Co.

140 A.D. 265, 125 N.Y.S. 93, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2913
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 20, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 140 A.D. 265 (Linick v. A. J. Nutting & Co.) 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
Linick v. A. J. Nutting & Co., 140 A.D. 265, 125 N.Y.S. 93, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2913 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinions

Burr, J.:

On July 20, 1909, plaintiff signed his name to a blank check. Thereafter David Ryckoff and Benjamin Silberman stole the check, filled in the name of F. A. Mann as payee and the sum of $147.87 as the amount thereof, and presented it to the State Bank, where plaintiff kept his account, and procured it to be certified. Thereafter they indorsed said check with the name of F. A. Mann and passed it to defendant for value, who collected the amount thereof from the said bank. Plaintiff, having taken up said check from the bank now sues defendant as for money had and received for the amount of the check.

The question submitted, and which we are called upon to decide, is whether defendant obtained any title to the check which, as against the plaintiff, was a valid obligation for $147.87, As a general rule, one can only part with title to personal property by his voluntary act, or by conduct sufficient to create an estoppel. In the case of commercial paper it was long ago held that when by voluntary act a party intrusts another with such paper with a blank thereon designed to be filled up with a stipulated amount, such party is liable to a bona fide holder of the instrument, although the amount inserted was larger than that agreed upon. So, if the place of payment is left blank when the maker delivers it, the insertion of a different place of payment than that agreed upon will not avoid such paper in the hands of an innocent holder for value. (See Van Duzer v. Howe, 21 N. Y. 531; Redlich v. Doll, 54 id. 234.) The authorities are not harmonious as to the basis of this liability. Some deem that it rests upon an implied authority conferred by the maker upon the person to whom it was delivered to fill in the blanks, and others upon estoppel by reason of negligence. (National Exchange Bank v. Lester, 194 N. Y. 461, 465.) Upon neither of these grounds can the plaintiff be charged in this case. Certainly not upon the ground of implied authority, for that doctrine grows out of the relation of principal and agent, and there is no such relation between a thief and his victim. There is a vast difference in the rule of liability upon negotiable instruments between [267]*267a case, where the possession has been parted with by the affirmative act of the maker in an incomplete state, and one where his parting with such possession is the result of a crime. The rule that the bona fide holder of an incomplete instrument, negotiable but for some lack capable of being supplied, has an implied authority to supply the omission, and to hold the maker thereon, only applies where the latter has by his own act, or the act of another, authorized, confided in or invested with apparent authority by him, put the instrument in circulation as negotiable paper. (Ledwich v. McKin, 53 N. Y. 307; Davis Sewing Machine Co. v. Best, 105 id. 59, 67.)

None of the circumstances connected with the theft of this paper appear, except that it was stolen and that the persons guilty of the crime have been tried, convicted and sentenced for the same. Plaintiff, therefore, cannot be charged with negligence giving rise to an estoppel, unless a man is guilty of negligence in writing his name upon a piece of paper which by some possibility may after-wards be stolen from him, which paper afterwards comes into the hands of a third person who is an entire stranger to the transaction, with words written over the signature which are sufficient in form to make it a check or note. Actionable negligence involves, jm^st, the existence of a duty; second, the omission to exercise ordinary and reasonable care in connection therewith, and third, injury resulting in consequence thereof. In view of the contractual relation existing between the bank and its depositor, some duty of care may be owing to it. The bank, by the terms of its contract with him, is bound to pay on his account to the holder of paper bearing his genuine signature the amount called for, if such amount is to his credit. But a third person is under no obligation to honor his paper. He can take it or not as he pleases, and as a rule such paper is accepted in reliance upon the immediate transferrer thereof. (Trust Co. of America v. Conklin, 65 Misc. Hep. 1.) What duty, therefore, is owing to him ? Again, at the risk of being charged with lack of ordinary care and prudence, must one guard against the possibility of a crime being committed ? It has been held that where the maker of a completed negotiable instrument has parted with its possession, but it is in such form that it is possible to make alterations in it, he is not guilty of negligence in thus [268]*268delivering it, for the reason that he is not bound to assume that the person to whom he delivers it will be likely to commit a crime because it is apparently easy to do so. (National Exchange Bank v. Jester, supra.) The drawer of a check is not bound so to prepare it that nobody else can successfully tamper with it. ( Critten v. Chemical Nat. Bank, 171 N. Y. 219,224.) Much less can a party be held liable for negligence because it is possible that he may be deprived of the possession of an incomplete negotiable instrument by a crime. He is not bound to anticipate nor guard against such an act. No case . has been cited holding a maker liable under such circumstances. We have found two well-considered cases to the contrary. (Burson v. Huntington, 21 Mich. 415; Baxendale v. Bennett, L. R. 3 Q. B. Div. 525.) In the Burson case the note was taken by the payee named therein from a table in the room of the maker, without his authority or consent, and transferred to an innocent holder for value. Judge Christianoy says, in an opinion concurred in by the entire court (the italics are ours): “ When a note payable to bearer, which has once become operative by delivery, has been lost or stolen from the owner, and has subsequently come to the hands of a bona fide holder for value, the latter may recover against the maker, and all indorsers on the paper when in the hands of the loser ; and the loser must sustain the loss. In such a case there was a complete legal instrument; the maker is clearly liable to pay it to some one ; and the question is only to whom. But in the case before us, where the note had never been delivered, and therefore had no legal inception or existence as a note, the question is whether he is liable to pay at all, even to an innocent holder for value. The wrongful act of a thief or a trespasser may deprive the holder of his property in a note which has once become a note, or property, by delivery, and may transfer the title to an innocent purchasér for value. But a note in the hands of the maker before delivery'is not property, nor the subject of ownership, as such ; it is, in law, but a blank piece of paper. Can the theft or wrongful seizure of this paper create a 'valid contract on the part of the maker against his will, where none existed before ? There is no principle of the law of contracts upon which this can be done, unless the facts of the ease are such that, in justice and fairness, as between the maker and the innocent holder, the maker ought to be estopped to deny the making and [269]*269delivery of the note.

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Bluebook (online)
140 A.D. 265, 125 N.Y.S. 93, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linick-v-a-j-nutting-co-nyappdiv-1910.