People's Bank v. Franklin Bank

6 L.R.A. 724, 88 Tenn. 299
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 6 L.R.A. 724 (People's Bank v. Franklin Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People's Bank v. Franklin Bank, 6 L.R.A. 724, 88 Tenn. 299 (Tenn. 1889).

Opinions

Eolkes, J.

Young was a depositor of the complainant bank. His name was forged to a check drawn on the complainant, payable to the order of one Morgan. Morgan’s name was also forged as an indorser on the check. This check, with the forged name of Young, the maker, and of Morgan, the indorser, was presented to the defendant, the Eranklin Bank, and was cashed or purchased by the defendant, and transmitted, after indorsement by the defendant, to the complainant bank by mail. The complainant bank had and kept an account with the defendant bank, and upon the receipt of the check passed the amount thereof to the credit of the defendant bank. The complainant bank was located and did business at Springfield,' in the county of Robertson; the defendant bank was located and did business at Clarksville, in Montgomery County. The check which had been received by the complainant bank and passed to the credit of defendant bank, as above stated, on December, 8, 1888, was ascertained, thirty-one days thereafter, to be a forgery. This discovery being made by the depositor, Young, when he came to examine his pass-book, together with the checks returned therewith. Thereupon, the complainant bank canceled the charge against Young, the depositor, and at once [301]*301notified the defendant bank of the forgery, and demanded that the same be made good by the defendant bank. Upon refusal, complainant filed this bill to recover the amount" of the check as having been paid by it through mistake upon the forged check, charging in the bill the facts above stated, and also the further fact that when presented the check • bore the indorsement of the defendant bank, and that upon the faith of such indorsement the complainant’s teller accepted the check, and gave credit to the defendant bank with less careful scrutiny of the genuineness of the drawer’s signature, by reason of the confidence reposed in the genuineness of the paper as evidenced by the indorsement of the defendant bank. The defendant answered the bill, admitting that it had received and cashed the check, as charged, and, stating that it was unable to furnish the name of the party, or parties, by whom the check had been presented, and to whom it had been paid by it, but presumed that it had required identification, but of this they do not remember. The allegations of the bill were sustained by the proof; but the Chancellor, being of opinion that the plaintiff should, at its peril, know the genuineness of the signature of its depositor, refused the relief prayed for, and dismissed complainant’s bill, from which complainant has appealed, assigning errors.

The general rule undoubtedly is, that the bank has, at its peril, to know the genuineness of the [302]*302signature of its depositor; and if it pays a forged check, the loss must fall upon the bank and not upon the depositor, except in cases where the negligence of the depositor has induced or brought about the payment by the bank. This duty, with reference to the bank, may be said to be an exception to the general rule that money paid by mistake can be recovered, and to the general statement of another equally well-settled rule that the payment of a forged paper conveys no title; for it is. well settled that the deposit of a forged bill or base coin creates no indebtedness, although credited to the depositor’s account, for the reason that payment in such material could not discharge a debt and cannot create one. The bank is not only responsible to the depositor where the check with the depositor’s signature forged is paid by the bank (except where the depositor has been guilty of negligence sufficient to mislead the bank), but the bank is precluded from recovering from a party to whom the forged check has been paid, where such party, being without fault, would be prejudiced by being required to refund- to the bank, upon whom rests the duty of determining the genuineness of the depositor’s signature. Notwithstanding some conflict of authority upon the subject, a careful investigation of the adjudged cases and of the text-books leads us to the conclusion that the bank can recover of a party to whom payment is made on a forged check, indorsed by' the party to whom paid, where the [303]*303party to whom paid has been guilty of negligence in receiving and indorsing the check; for, notwithstanding the negligence to some degree that the paying bank has been guilty of in paying the forged cheek without detecting the forgery of its depositor’s signature, it often happens, or may happen, that the party to whom payment is made has been guilty of the first negligence in purchasing and indorsing the forged paper. The bank upon whom the check is drawn, in the practical administration of banking business, may well be lulled to a less careful scrutiny of its depositor’s signature of a cheek where the same is indorsed by another bank with which it is in correspondence or interchange of business, than it would exercise in accepting and paying the same check, not so indorsed, to a stranger. The indorsement of the check by the payee may be said, ordinarily, to be a guarantee of the genuineness of the in-dorsements theretofore on the paper, and also of the genuineness of the drawer’s signature, subject, perhaps, to some exception in particular cases, as, for instance, where the indorsement is máde after the genuineness of the preceding signatures has been approved by the paying bank. Applying these principles to the case at bar, we are of opinion, and so adjudge, that the first fault was with the defendant bank. This bank accepted and cashed a check drawn On a bank in another county, to which the name of the drawer and the payee had both been forged, and, so far as this record dis[304]*304closes, without requiring any identification of the parties to whom such payment was made; certainly without reserving any evidence of the identity of such parties for the benefit of itself or of others who might be injured by such forgery. The complainant bank, upon receiving such check in due course of mail for dej>osit to credit of defendant, might well rely upon the exercise of due prudence and diligence on the part of its depositor, the defendant bank, and might well regard the latter’s indorsement of the check as significant of the fact that such prudence had been exercised, and, if not, that the indorsement would stand as a guarantee to the paying bank from loss that might otherwise fall upon it by reason of its passing the amount of the check to the credit of such indorser. Such would not only seem to be sound in theory and supported b}^ authority, but is in accordance with the proof in this case; and it is a matter of such general information that perhaps the Court might be warranted in taking judicial knowledge of it; that in dealings between banks, and especially with reference to clearings and clearing-houses, banks will adjust and pay differences between each other, or between itself and the clearing-house, upon the faith of the in-dorsement by other banks of the checks involved in such settlement before they examine the signature to the checks involved or embraced in the settlement, relying on such indorsements as protecting it in such payment should a subsequent [305]*305and more careful scrutiny of the signatures disclose forgeries in the making and indorsing ' of the checks so paid.

Mr. Daniel, in his work on Negotiable Instruments, after discussing and criticising the cases that are supposed to hold a hank liable at all hazards and to the last extremity, where it pays the check with the signature of its depositor forged, lays down the rule substantially as we have above stated it. 2 Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, Secs.

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Bluebook (online)
6 L.R.A. 724, 88 Tenn. 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-v-franklin-bank-tenn-1889.