Metropolitan Savings Bank v. Mayor of Baltimore

63 Md. 6, 1885 Md. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 8, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 Md. 6 (Metropolitan Savings Bank v. Mayor of Baltimore) 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
Metropolitan Savings Bank v. Mayor of Baltimore, 63 Md. 6, 1885 Md. LEXIS 53 (Md. 1885).

Opinion

Irving, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

These cross-appeals are a continuation of Mayor and City Council of Baltimore vs. Frederick M. Ketchum, Jr., by his guardian, Wm. Hollingsworth Whyte, 57 Md., 23, wherein the city was required to issue a new certificate of stock to Frederick M. Ketchum, a minor, whose stock had been cancelled upon a forged assignment thereof. The question now involved is, shall the loss resulting from the forgery be borne by the city, or by the Metropolitan Savings Bank; or shall the same be shared by the city and the bank as has been decreed by the Circuit Court?

There can be no doubt, that a corporation, by issuing stock, declares by its certificate to the world, that the person [9]*9in whose name it stands, is the holder of the number of shares which the certificate states him to be, and that it is issued with the intention that it shall be so used and acted upon, and the company is thereby liable to pay to any one who has accepted the same, and acted thereon to his injury. The city solicitor in this Court concedes this to be the established law, and it is unnecessary to quote authorities to sustain that position.

The object of this rule of law, is to prevent loss to a party who shall be deceived by tbe certificate, and it is only to the extent that loss has actually been incurred through misrepresentation, made by the certificate, that it will be made good. The inquiry here is, to what extent was the bank actually induced to lend its money upon the statements of the certificate alone? The essential and undisputed facts are as follows: On the 27th day of May, 1876, Isaac W. M. Helm, (together with George W. Bishop,, who had lately been one of the Judges of the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City,) came to the bank and requested a loan of §3500, and offered as collatual secm-ity a certificate of stock of the city for §18,400. The stock stood in the name of Frederick M. Ketchum, Jr., and purported to bear his endorsement for transfer. The holder was a minor, and the endorsement was forged; though the bank was ignorant of both these facts. The loan was made, and Helm gave his note to the bank, payable one year after date, which was duly discounted, and the bank accepted the certificate with the endorsement as security for the money lent.

Upon the 18th of July following, Helm accompanied by Bishop, again called at the bank and requested a. further loan of six thousand dollars upon the certificate of stock already held by the bank, as collateral for the first loan. It was agreed on the part of the bank to make this additional loan, provided Helm would have a new certificate made out in the name of the bank, to cover both [10]*10loans. Helm agreed to this, but said it would take sometime to get it done, and meanwhile he wanted $2000 for immediate use, which the hank gave him; and also gave him the certificate for $18,400 to take to the city register ■and have changed into two certificates, one of which should be in the name of the bank. It is proper to state in this connection, that in the first interview, Helm stated that Ketchum in whose name the certificate stood, and by whom it professed to be endorsed for transfer, was his brother-in-law, and that he held himself an interest in the stock. In accordance with the arrangement, Helm took the certificate to the city register accompanied by Bishop, and a certificate of ten thousand dollars was made out in the name of the Metropolitan Savings Bank of Baltimore; and one for $8,400 was made out in favor of the original holder. The certificate for the Bank was left with the register, and the next day, one of the officers •of the bank called and received it. This having been done, the bank gave Helm the balance of the six thous- and dollar loan, less the discount on all, including the two thousand dollars lent on the day of the second application. At that time, the whole indebtedness was consolidated, the old note for $3500 was surrendered, and a new note was taken for $9500. Subsequently about the 13th of November, 1876, the bank made another loan of five hundred dollars upon the new certificate, and still later •about the 29th of the same month bought the certificate out-right, paying the current rate of premium therefor, and surrendering the note for the loans. For nearly two years, the city paid the interest on the certificate to the bank, before the forgery was discovered. The fraud being -discovered, the city ceased to recognize the certificate, and this litigation began.

On the part of the city, it is contended, that the bank, upon this state of facts, made Helm their agent to have the certificate changed which they held as collateral on a [11]*11forged endorsement, and having entrusted him therewith, and sent him with Mr. Bishop to have the new certificate issued to the bank, the city officer was thereby thrown off his guard, and induced to make the change at the instance ■of the hank; and the hank being first deceived, caused them to he deceived, and therefore should hear the whole loss.

On the part of the hank it is contended that in no sense oan the hank he regarded as having made Helm its agent for any purpose, and that the city was hound at its peril, to know that the transfer was properly authorized; and inasmuch as the city upon a forged endorsement issued to the hank a ten thousand dollar certificate, hy that act it had deceived the hank, and induced it to lend its money and make a transaction it would not have entered into without such certificate ; and thereby it had been lulled into security and failed to make from Helm the money first loaned on the original certificate.

To neither of these contentions did the learned Judge who decided this case below give unqualified assent. He thought the hank should bear the loss resulting from its unwarranted confidence to the extent of the loans made ■on the faith of the old certificate and the representations of Helm before the new certificate was issued; ■and that the city should hear the loss resulting from further advances made by the hank on the faith of the new certificate, and its purchase, after the certificate was made out in the name of the bank. This decision was based upon the principles decided in Brown, Lancaster & Co. vs. Howard Fire Insurance Co., et al., 42 Md., 384, and John A. Hamilton & Co. vs. The Central Ohio R. R. Co., 44 Md., 551. We think these cases entirely justified the Court in the conclusion reached, and that there is no proof in this case to take it out of the operation of the principles there enunciated, or to distinguish it from them. 'To the extent of the advances actually made before the [12]*12ten thousand dollar certificate was issued, the bank certainly confided wholly in the genuineness of the endorsement, and depended upon the truthfulness of Helm in respect to his interest in the same and his statements about, it. The city was in no way responsible for their negligence in that regard. The bank was careless. It accepted as true-that which was false, and had parted with its money upon the faith, that the certificate, which was genuine, was also-genuinely endorsed for transfer, so that it could take title under it. The city was negligent in not requiring certain proof that the transfer was genuine before it cancelled the old and issued new certificates.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Md. 6, 1885 Md. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-savings-bank-v-mayor-of-baltimore-md-1885.