National City Bank v. Waggoner

230 A.D. 88, 243 N.Y.S. 299, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8552
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 23, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 230 A.D. 88 (National City Bank v. Waggoner) 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
National City Bank v. Waggoner, 230 A.D. 88, 243 N.Y.S. 299, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8552 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinions

Sherman, J.

Defendant Central Hanover Bank and Trust Company (hereinafter teimed Central Bank) has attacked the sufficiency of the complaint as against it. Assuming, as we must, upon this motion in advance of trial, the truth of the allegations of the complaint, the following pleaded facts are before us, which, however, are not substantiated by proof and must await trial for their actual establishment, viz.:

Six banks which are plaintiffs paid in this city to the Chase National Bank on August 31, 1929, an aggregate sum of $500,000, to the credit of the Bank of Telluride, a small State banking institution with a capital of $50,000 engaged in business in a small town in the Rocky Mountains, in Colorado, which bank at that time was and for a long time prior thereto had been insolvent and was closed because of insolvency by the Colorado authorities on September 5, 1929. The plaintiffs had been induced to make such payments by telegraphic instructions purporting to come to each separately fiom its correspondent bank in Denver, Colo. These telegrams were spurious, having been forged by the defendant Waggoner, the president of the Bank of Telluride, or by his direction, in pursuance of his scheme to defraud plaintiffs and to obtain thereby possession of the sum of $500,000.

At that time there was not, and for some time theretofore there had not been, any sum to the credit of the Telluride Bank with the Chase National Bank.

Defendant Waggoner, in pursuance of his fraudulent scheme, had caused three blank checks to be drawn on the Chase National Bank by the cashier of the Telluride Bank at a time when it had no sum whatsoever to its credit at the Chase National Bank. The date, name of payee and amount of payment were left blank in [90]*90these checks. On Saturday morning, August 31, 1929 (which was a half-holiday in this city), Waggoner called at the Chase National Bank with these three blank checks and demanded payment to himself of said sum of $500,000 in cash. This was refused and he thereupon filled in, with the knowledge of the Chase National Bank, the date in each of the checks and his own name as payee. He inserted the sum of $225,000 in one of the checks, the sum of $200,000 in another, and the sum of $70,000 in the third check.

The check for $225,000 did not come into the possession of the Central Bank, whose liability, if any, grows out of its dealing with the two remaining checks.

Waggoner caused the check for $225,000 to be certified by the Chase National Bank and the amount thereof was charged against the said $500,000.

At or prior to that time the Chase National Bank had knowledge that the Telluride Bank was then and for some time had been insolvent, and that it did not own such a large amount of money as had been deposited to its credit.

On the same day Waggoner indorsed in blank the check for $200,000 and presented it to the Central Bank and requested that it be paid to him. The Central Bank, which then had knowledge of the facts hereinbefore set forth as to the manner in which that check had been issued (as to the fraud and fraudulent purpose of the defendant Waggoner), refused to pay to Waggoner the amount of the check in cash, whereupon Waggoner delivered it to the Central Bank with instructions to credit it to the Telluride Bank, which was done. During the same morning Waggoner indorsed the remaining check, which he had filled in for $70,000, to the order of a vice-piesident of the Central Bank with instructions to credit it likewise to the Telluride Bank.

Monday, September 2, 1929, was Labor Day, a legal holiday in New York. On Tuesday, September 3,1929, the check for $70,000 was credited by the Central Bank to the Telluride Bank. Thereupon, on the same day the Central Bank procured the two checks aggregating $270,000 to be certified by the Chase National Bank, which charged the amount thereof against the said $500,000. When it certified these checks the Chase National Bank had knowledge of the insolvency of the Telluride Bank and that it did not own such a large amount of money.

On Wednesday, September fourth, the Central Bank presented both checks to the Chase National Bank for payment, through the New York Clearing House, of which both the Chase National Bank and the Central Bank were membeis, and received credit therefor, subject to the rule or regulation of the Clearing House [91]*91providing that a drawee bank was entitled to be íecredited by the presenting bank with the amount of any check which had been improperly presented and credited through the Clearing House before three p. m. on that day.

Prior to that hour on September 4, 1929, plaintiffs discovered the fraud hereinbefore set forth and gave the Chase National Bank notice of the fact that the moneys paid by each of them to that bank had been procured by fraud, which notice was received by the Chase National Bank in time to give notice to the Central Bank and to return the checks and demand a recredit therefor. The Central Bank has refused to recredit or repay to the Chase National Bank any part of the amount so collected by it through the New York Clearing House. The complaint further charges that prior to three p. m. on September 4, 1929, the Central Bank had knowledge that the amount of $270,000 had been obtained from the plaintiffs by fraud, as above stated, and prior to that hour it likewise had knowledge of all of the facts hereinbefore referred to. Nevertheless, it thereupon appropriated more than $200,000 of that money to its own use by attempting to apply it in payment of past due notes, held by it, of the Telluride Bank and of Waggoner, and of a corporation controlled by Waggoner, all of which it had theretofore written off on its books as worthless.

A judgment declaring the rights and other legal relations between the parties with respect to the said sum of $500,000 is demanded together with an accounting, as well as judgment in favor of the respective plaintiffs for such sums as the court may determine them to be respectively entitled to and for other equitable relief.

Clearly a cause of action in equity is set forth. If the allegations of the complaint be substantiated at trial, the Central Bank will have been shown to have accepted the checks with knowledge that the moneys called for by them had been obtained from plaintiffs by fraud and larceny; with such knowledge it caused the checks to be certified and then appropriated the amount thereof to its own use by applying the proceeds to the payment of a worthless past indebtedness carried upon their books as of no value whatsoever. It stands charged with an unwillingness to pay the $200,000 check to the payee Waggoner yet ready to accept the proceeds for its own enrichment. Under such circumstances it cannot well be maintained that the Central Bank innocently received these moneys and has parted with any value whatsoever in reliance thereon. (Albany County Bank v. People’s Ice Co., No. 1, 92 App. Div. 47, 55.)

It will be incumbent upon plaintiffs' at trial to trace these moneys from their ownership into the possession of the Central [92]*92Bank. The Chase National Bank may be regarded as a conduit through which such funds came into defendan s hands, and the checks used by Waggoner to carry out his fraudulent enterprise are to be considered as the instruments through which that dishonest purpose was effected. Nor does the fact that in the process of the perpetration of the fraud the checks were certified avail to prevent a recovery, any more than if the checks had been uncertified.

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Bluebook (online)
230 A.D. 88, 243 N.Y.S. 299, 1930 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-city-bank-v-waggoner-nyappdiv-1930.