Pollard v. Wellford

99 Tenn. 113
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 99 Tenn. 113 (Pollard v. Wellford) 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
Pollard v. Wellford, 99 Tenn. 113 (Tenn. 1897).

Opinion

McAlister, J.

Complainant, Pollard, filed his bill in the Chancery Court of Shelby County against the defendants for the collection of three notes, each for the sum of $800. These notes were executed by A. K. Ward and J. L. Wellford, payable to the order of S. C. Toof, .and were indorsed by Toof. The first note was dated September 23, 1895, the second September 30, 1895, and the third October 3, 1895, each payable thirty days after (date. [115]*115Complainant, believing these notes to be genuine, and to represent a real business transaction, purchased them at a discount from A. K. Ward. In payment of the first note complainant, 'on September 23, 1895, gave Ward his .check on the Union & Planters’ Bank, wherein Pollard was a depositor, for $790,’ payable to the order of S. C. Toof, the payee and indorser of the note. On September 30, 1895, complainant, Pollard, purchased the second note from Ward, similarly indorsed, and gave him a check for $790, on the same bank. On October 3, 1895, complainant purchased the third note, and gave Ward a similar check in payment on said bank. The three checks were presented to the bank and were paid. Toof’s name was apparently indorsed thereon, with Ward’s name also indorsed under it. The payments were all made to Ward. Complainant, Pollard, in the meantime, deposited the three notes so purchased by him in the Union and Planters’ Bank for collection. As the said, notes severally matured they were presented to the makers for payment; and payment refused. Thereupon, they were protested for nonpayment, and notice given to Toof, the apparent indorser. It then became known that Wellford’s signature as one of the apparent makers of the note, and Toof’s signature as indorser, as well as Toof’s indorsement, had all been forged by Ward.

It further appears that on October 15, 1895, Ward fled to Honduras, and three days thereafter [116]*116Pollard’s account was balanced by the bank, and these three checks were returned to him canceled and paid. Pollard thereafter, on the twenty-first of .October, demanded payment of the bank of the balance of his account, including these three checks, which amounted to $2,370. Payment was refused by the bank, and thereupon, on the ninth of November, 1895, this bill was filed against Wellford as maker, and Toof as indorser, of the notes, and against the Union & Planters’ Bank, to recover $2,370, the amount paid by the bank on the checks with Toof’s forged indorsement. Wellford and Toof pleaded non est factum to their signatures on the notes. The Union & Planters’ Bank filed an answer in which it denied all -liability on account of the .payment of said checks. The Chancellor, on final hearing, sustained the plea of non est faeturn and dismissed the bill so far as any relief was prayed against Wellford and Toof. A decree, however, was pronounced against the bank for the amount of the three checks improperly paid. The bank ' alone appealed. The law is well settled in this State that a check drawn in favor of particular payee or order is payable only to the actual payee or upon his genuine indorsement, and if the bank mistake the identity of the payee, or pay upon a forged indorsement, it is not a payment in pursuance of its authority, and it will be responsible.

The proof in this case is clear that the indorsement of S. C. Toof upon the check was a forgery, [117]*117and counsel for the bank do not gainsay its liability if there is nothing else in the way. Their insistence, however, is, that complainant, Pollard, is not entitled to a decree against the bank, because his own negligence was the proximate cause of the loss to the bank. The negligence of Pollard is alleged to consist in the following facts: That complainant’s transactions with Ward covered a period of about a year and a half; that during this period he had turned over to Ward, from time to time, thirty-five checks, all payable to the order of S. C. Toof; that thirty-two of these checks had been paid on indorsements exactly similar to the indorsements on the checks in suit, and all of which complainant alleges were forgeries; that during this time his account had been balanced three times, but Mr. Pollard testifies that notwithstanding his account had been rendered him by the bank, he never examined it until after this litigation arose. He further testifies that he knew Mr. Toof’s signature, and that the signatures on all the checks were forgeries, except possibly two of them. The argument is, that complainant, Pollard, knew Mr. Toof’s signature, and if he had examined the thirty-two checks when they were returned to him with his stated account, he would have discovered the forgeries that were being committed, and would have saved the bank the loss of the present checks. It is therefore insisted that, under circumstances like these, the failure of Pollard to examine the statements of his accounts and the canceled checks [118]*118attached thereto, was such negligence as will defeat a recovery.

We think this position untenable. There had been no loss to Pollard or to the bank on account of the thirty-two checks, and hence there was no cause to challenge an inspection of Toof’s indorsement of these checks. We cannot see that any duty is imposed by law upon a depositor to examine his canceled checks when returned, with a view to detect forgeries in the indorsements. As stated by the New York Court of Appeals, in Welsh v. German American Bank, 73 N. Y., 424, "A depositor has a right to assume that the bank, before paying his checks, will ascertain the genuineness of the indorsement.”

The next assignment of error is, that the Court erred in striking the cross-bill of the Union & Planters’ Bank against the Continental National Bank from the files upon the motion of complainant. The cross bill was brief, and is as follows:

“Complaining, showeth your orator, the Union & Planters’ Bank, that two of the checks mentioned and described in the bill of complainant, copies of which are filed therefor, and marked Exhibits “D” and “E, ” respectively, were paid by it through the clearing house to the Continental National Bank, and indorsed by the aforesaid bank. That, on a claim being made to it that the signatures thereon were forged, it notified the Continental National Bank of such claim, being advised that if it was liable to the said drawer, [119]*119the complainant herein, the Continental National Bank, was liable to it.
‘ ‘ Wherefore, in consideration of the premises, it prays that copy and subpoena do’ issue to the Continental National Bank on this cross bill, that it may be made a defendant hereto, to the end that the controversy set forth in the pleadings may be fully and finally settled in this suit, and if, on final hearing of this cause, it shall be adjudged liable to pay to the complainant herein the amount of the aforesaid checks, copies of which are marked Exhibits “ D ’ ’ and ‘ E ” to the bill of _ complaint herein; that it have a decree over against the Continental National Bank, and such other and further relief as may appear suitable and proper in the- premises.
“Union & Plantees’ Bank,
By S. P. Read, Cashier.
“I am security for costs. S. P. Read.’’

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Bluebook (online)
99 Tenn. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollard-v-wellford-tenn-1897.