National Park Bank v. Fourth National Bank

7 Abb. Pr. 138
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1869
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Abb. Pr. 138 (National Park Bank v. Fourth National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Park Bank v. Fourth National Bank, 7 Abb. Pr. 138 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1869).

Opinion

Barrett, J.

The facts admitted by this demurrer, if they do not add a fresh chapter to the category of crime, serve at least to illustrate the endless variety of its resources, and the almost unaccountable sinuosity of its paths.

A swindler buys from the Ridgely National Bank of Springfield, Illinois, a genuine bill of exchange for twenty dollars and twenty cents, on the National Park Bank of this city. His primary object in this transaction is to procure, as a basis for his deliberately planned fraud, one of the printed or engraved forms of such instruments in use by the Ridgely Bank, together with the genuine signature of its cashier. He next proceeds, Toy means of acids, to obliterate the name of the fictitious payee, also the words and figures “twenty^,” representing the sum for which the bill was drawn, and, more singular still, the name of the drawer. This leaves the date, the number of the bill, and the drawee’s name intact. The name of E. Gr. Panchón, also a fictitious person, is then substituted for that of John Wise, the payee originally named ; the amount is altered to sixty-four hundred dollars by simply writing the words “ sixty-four hundred” upon the blank space produced by the obliteration of the words and figures “twenty ,20°0,” and the drawer’s name, “William Ridgely, cashier,” is written upon precisely the same spot as that previously occupied by the genuine signature.

■ Why the forger should have made any alteration except in the amount, why he should have substituted one fictitious payee for another, and why he should seemingly have lessened his chances of success by disturbing the genuine signature of “ William Ridgely, cashier,” are questions which, although not material to the present discussion, must be interesting to the detective and to those who make a metaphysical study of the freaks and morbid operations of the human mind. Certain it is that but for this eccentric and apparently purposeless piece of criminal surplusage, there would have been no doubt, upon the authority of Bank of Com[140]*140merce v. Union Bank (3 N. Y. [3 Comst.], 230), of the plaintiffs’ right to recover, the court of last resort having there held that the drawee is not bound to detect, nor responsible, in case of acceptance or payment, for alterations in the amount of an originally genuine bill.

But to resume. The alterations having been thus effected, the swindler betakes himself to Nashville, Tennessee, where he completes the operation by a sale of the bill to the Third National Bank of that place, who indorse it to the defendants in this city. The latter then present it to the plaintiffs, who innocently pay it, and, upon discovery of the facts, some seventeen days later, immediately notify the defendants, demand' a return of the money, and, upon its refusal, bring this action.

The difficulty in disposing of the question thus presented consists neither in arriving at the justice and common sense of the case, nor in the obscurity of the underlying principle. It is debatable only because of the superficial consideration which the subject has received, and the absence of a guiding principle in one of the earlier English cases (Price v. Neale, 3 Burr., 1354), and because of some dicta in our own courts, in which subsequent criticisms upon that case, and, indeed, the whole tendency of modern English authority, are completely overlooked, and the doctrine of Price v. Neale is treated as well settled and unquestioned, and, so far as certain obiter expressions go, is followed, upon the principle of stare decisis. The latter doctrine is of course exceedingly important, but in this age of searching analysis and ruthless criticism, precedents other than those furnished by our court of last resort, are valuable less for their general conclusions than for the reasoning upon which the result is based ; and ancient rules are binding only because of their ability to stand the.test of modern thought, and to meet the wants which arise in a progressive and commercial age, and spring from an advanced civilization.

Before examining the cases to which I refer, let u$. [141]*141for a moment consider the question presented, in the light of principle.

The Nashville Bank, when, through the defendants, it presented the bill in question to the plaintiffs for payment, was already robbed. The act had been accomplished—the money was gone ; and in its place the bank held a piece of paper, which, except to the extent of the twenty dollars and twenty cents, was absolutely worthless. Such being the condition of the bank, it presents that piece of paper to the plaintiffs, and the doctrine of Price v. Neale is that all the subsequent rights of the parties hinge exclusively upon the chance of the teller’s failure then and there to detect the forgery. If the discovery be made, the defrauded party continues the loser, but if, by any to the one, happy, to the other, unhappy, accident, the discovery should not be made, the loss is immediately shifted upon the party paying ; and the defrauded party, without the trouble of pursuing the thief, in effect recaptures his property by being restored to the precise pecuniary condition in which the swindler found him. Thus, without either consideration or consent advisedly given, but by the purest accident, or, to put it at the very worst, by a piece of mere negligence, the drawee’s title to his money becomes hopelessly and irrecoverably changed. To such reasoning I can never yield. One can well understand that if the drawee accept the bill, and upon the faith of such acceptance a party purchase the paper in good faith and for value, it would be inequitable to permit the acceptor thereafter to deny the genuineness of the drawer’s signature. Even where the holder has taken the bill without any such guarantee, and it has been paid, the injustice of allowing the money to be recovered back is equally comprehensible, where, between the time of the payment' and that of the discovery and notice of the forgery, the situation of the holder has been changed, and he has lost some valuable right—such as the discharge of prior and solvent indorsers ; or, to put it more precisely, where he can show that but for the accidental payment, and the [142]*142subsequent delay, he could have recovered the amount of his bill.

In other words, what strikes the mind as the satisfactory doctrine applicable to such cases, is that of estoppel in pais — that a party who admits a fact shall not subsequently be permitted to deny its truth, where the opposite party has acted upon the faith of such admission, and would be prejudiced by its denial (Plumb v. Cattaraugus ounty Mutual Ins. Co., 18 N. Y., 392; citing 6 Adol. & El., 475, 3 Hill, 265, and 8 Wend., 483 ; Truscott v. Davis, & Barb., 495 ; Martin v. Angell, 7 Id., 407 ; Otis v. Sill, 8 Id., 102). Drifting away from this legal principle, it seems to me that we are entirely at sea, and without chart or guide.

Now let us look at the cases.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Abb. Pr. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-park-bank-v-fourth-national-bank-nyctcompl-1869.