National Bank of Baltimore v. Rockhold

119 A. 263, 141 Md. 439, 1922 Md. LEXIS 136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 23, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 119 A. 263 (National Bank of Baltimore v. Rockhold) 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
National Bank of Baltimore v. Rockhold, 119 A. 263, 141 Md. 439, 1922 Md. LEXIS 136 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

*440 Pattisox, J.,

delivered the opinion o-f the Court.

The appeal in this case is from a judgment recovered by Harry B. Rockhold, the appellee, against the National Bank of Baltimore.

The plaintiff was buyer for Harry T. Anderson, who had for years conducted a retail shoe business in the City of Baltimore, largely by means of mail orders, using the trade names of The Patapsco Shoe Company and The Anderson Shoe Company. ■ The business was not incorporated, nor was it a partnership, but was the sole property of Anderson.

In the fall of 1920, Anderson had quite a large stock of goods on hand, the value of which had greatly depreciated, and His business in that year was far less than it was in the preceding year; and like many others at that time, Anderson was hard pressed in his financial affairs and, in one .or more instances, he had asked and obtained the indulgence of some of his creditors in the extension of the time of payment of the amounts owing to them.

On the 15th or 16th day of November, Simon Dalsheimer, president of the Lord Baltimore Press, a company engaged in the printing business in the City of Baltimore and one of Anderson’s largest creditors, called upon him for a statement showing his financial condition. This was made and sent by him on the 23rd day of November, but, before sending it, he gave to Rockhold, who for more than twenty years had been in his service, and to whom he at that time owed $11,360, a check for the sum of $3,070 in payment of a private indebtedness to him forming a part of the said sum of $11,360, which had been standing for a number of years. The check of $3,070 was drawn to the order of himself and, by his endorsement thereon, was made payable to the plaintiff. In Anderson’s statement to the Lord Baltimore Press Company, the amount stated to be on deposit in the defendant bank was the amount that would’ be remaining therein after the payment of the check of $3,070.

*441 The plaintiff, in the afternoon of the 23rd of November, took the check to the defendant hank, reaching there a, little while after the hour at which the bank closed for business, but he nevertheless obtained a certification of ihe check from an official of the hank. After procuring the certification of the check, the defendant went to the ^National Exchange Bank, ■where he deposited it to his credit. On the following day, Anderson committed suicide, and when the certified check was, in due course, presented to the do Cendant hank, it refused payment thereon.

On the 27th day of December of the same year, suit was instituted by the plaintiff to recover the amount of the certified cheek.

The declaration contained six of the common money counts and one special count, and with it was filed the said cheek or a copy of it.

The pleas filed thereto were: (1) never indebted, as alleged; (2) never promised, as alleged; (3) that the certification of the check was procured by the fraud of the plaintiff; and. (4) alleging the’insolvency of Anderson and the knowledge of it, by both him and the plaintiff, at the time the check was given, though unknown to the defendant; the employment of the plaintiff by Anderson and the latter’s indebtedness to the defendant in the sum of $50,000, evidenced by ten notes, each for the sum of $5,000, the first falling due on ^November the 29th, 1920, and the last on March the 16th, 1921, and the others between those dates; that Anderson had on deposit with it at the time $17,555.94, which, as it alleged, was subject by reason of Anderson's insolvency to a “banker's lien” thereon, for the payment of said promissory notes; that the check lya? obtained by the plaintiff from Anderson before the maturity of the alleged debt from Anderson to the plaintiff, pursuant to the common purpose and intent of said Anderson and the plaintiff to defraud the defendant and to that extent defeat its “banker’s lien,” upon the funds oil deposit to Anderson’s credit; that after the alleged eertifi *442 cation of the said check and before its presentation for payment through the Baltimore, clearing house, on November the 24th, 1920, Anderson killed himself, and his insolvency thereupon, on that day, became known to the defendant and his other creditors, whereupon the defendant exercised its right of holding the said sum of Anderson on deposit under its “banker’s lien,” crediting the same in part payment of his indebtedness to the bank; that thereafter on November the 26th, 1920 (the intervening day, November the 25th, being Thanksgiving Day and a legal holiday), the check was presented through the Baltimore clearing house for payment for account of the plaintiff, and its payment was. refused by the bank in the exercise of its “banker’s lien.”

The plaintiff joined issue on the first and second and demurred to the third and fourth pleas. The demurrer to the third was overruled, but it was sustained as to the fourth, and, upon the. issues thereafter joined, the case was tried. At- the trial, three bills of exceptions were taken, two to the rulings of the court upon evidence offered, and one to the action of the court on the prayers.

Of the three prayers offered by the plaintiff, the second was withdrawn and the first and third were granted. The defendant offered but one prayer and that was rejected. The jury were instructed by the plaintiff’s third prayer that there was no evidence in the case legally sufficient to prove that the certification of the check sued on was procured by the fraud of the plaintiff. By his first prayer, the jury were told that “inasmuch as the defendant bank admits the certification by it of the check for $3,0Y0, the subsequent presentation of said check for payment and its refusal to pay said check, and that it has not paid said-check or any part thereof, plaintiff is entitled to a verdict for the amount of said check with interest from the day of its presentation to defendant for payment, to wit, November the 26th, 1920.

By the defendant’s prayer, the court was asked to instruct the jury that, if they found certain facts, those mentioned in *443 defendant's fourth plea, they should find that the certification was'fraudulently obtained, and their verdict should he for the defendant.

As stated by the appellant in his brief, the action of the court upon the demurrer to the fourth plea, and its rulings on the prayers, present practically the same question, and that question is, was the bank, upon the facts of the case, justified in i (“fusing payment of the certified check given by Anderson to the plaintiff, on the ground that the holder thereof obtained (lie certificate by fraud? And it is contended by tbe plaint iff that the evidence disclosed by the record shows that the certificate was procured by the fraud of the plaintiff, or at least was legally sufficient to go to the jury as tending to show such fraud.

There can, we think, be no question as to the correctness of the proposition that if the certification was procured by the fraud of the plaintiff and the check remained his property and did not pass to an innocent holder, the certification was not binding upon tbe defendant bank, and it could rightfully disregard the certification and refuse payment of the check. Daniel, Negotiable. Instruments (4th ed.), sec. 1608;

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Bluebook (online)
119 A. 263, 141 Md. 439, 1922 Md. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-baltimore-v-rockhold-md-1922.