Stumpp v. Bank of New York

212 A.D. 608, 209 N.Y.S. 396, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9516
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 1, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 212 A.D. 608 (Stumpp v. Bank of New York) 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
Stumpp v. Bank of New York, 212 A.D. 608, 209 N.Y.S. 396, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9516 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Dowling, J.:

This is an action by the appellants as depositors to recover a sum of money claimed to have been paid from their account by the respondent bank on forged checks. The bank pleaded as a defense to the first two checks that notice of the forgery was not given within a year, as provided in section 326 of the Negotiable Instruments Law. The appellants concede this defense to be valid. As a defense to the remaining forged checks the bank pleaded that the depositor was guilty of negligence in examining the statements of account rendered by the bank, which negligence contributed to the payment of these forged checks. The depositor then raised the contention that the bank was itself negligent in paying these checks, which negligence defeated such a defense. The trial court directed a verdict for the defendant upon the stipulation by both parties to move fór a directed verdict, thus finding the depositor negligent and the bank free from negligence.

The only issues, therefore, to be decided upon this appeal are: (1) Was the trial court correct in finding the depositor negligent in examining the statements of account rendered by the bank? (2) Was the trial court correct in finding the bank free from negligence in paying the forged checks?

The copartnership of August Stumpp & Company was a depositor in the defendant bank, and had been such for some years prior to May 1, 1916. It had in its employ as a bookkeeper one Herbert Pratt, who had charge of the copartnership’s check book and made the entries on the stubs thereof. On January 6, 1909, the appellants designated Pratt as the person to receive and receipt for the statements and canceled vouchers of their account with respondent, such designation being in writing and bearing on its face a specimen signature of Pratt. Thereafter Pratt received the appellants’ vouchers from respondent.

Pratt conceived a plan for defrauding his employers, which was possible of execution because of his knowledge of the way in which they checked up their statements and vouchers returned through [610]*610him by the bank. This consisted in falsifying the additions of the deposits in the bank by making them as much less than they really were as would represent the total of the forged checks drawn during the period by him. Thus, though the balance shown on the check book would correspond with the balance returned by the bank, the result would be reached by Pratt by reducing the deposits as entered by him on the check book by so much as he had withdrawn on forged checks which, of course, he did not enter on the stub side of the check book. Knowing how slight was the risk he ran because of the appellants’ lack of examination of the returned vouchers and their failure to compare the same or the statements with their books in detail, he guarded against accidental detection by drawing the forged checks either in even hundreds or in such a way that two forged checks together made an even thousand, thus reducing the chances of detection of the erroneous additions. The first forged check was one for $400, dated May 22, 1916. In the record are shown the stubs of the checks drawn from May twentieth to May twenty-third. There is no $400 check shown thereon. The record also shows the opposite page of the check book, whereon were entered the deposits from May twentieth to May twenty-second, inclusive, and the addition made in Pratt’s handwriting, including the previous balance, shows a total of $11,364 of deposits. In point of fact, the deposits there shown add up $11,764. It was by this falsification that Pratt concealed the cashing of the forged $400 check. He also eovez’ed up his forgeries by increasing the totals of checks drawn as under date of May 23, 1917, when four checks aggregating $3,476.51 were entered as totaling $4,076.51, thus covering a $600 forgery not entered. Pratt under his authority from the plaintiffs obtained the vouchers from the Bank of New York monthly, and on each occasion abstracted from the bundle of vouchers, before turning it over to plaintiffs, the forged checks which had been paid to him in cash over the counter of the bank during the preceding month.

The Bank of New York adopted many years ago a system by which the bank book of the depositor was not balanced, but an itemized statement of checks and credits was made out at the end of each month and sent to the depositor with the vouchers. A copy of the statement for May, 1916, appears in the record. The tabulation of the checks is made in double columns. Where there were checks cashed on a given day, they were in many instances, though not always, entered in the first column of amounts, and then the total of such checks carried into the second column of amounts. The forged check for $400 of May 22, 1916, was cashed on that date and appears under that date in the bank’s statement. [611]*611When Pratt in this instance brought the voucher checks back from the bank along with the statement, he abstracted the $400 check from the eighty-nine canceled checks the bank had handed to him, and after doing so gave the bundle and statement to Mr. August Stumpp, the senior partner of the" plaintiff firm. Mr. Stumpp then took the check book and compared the vouchers so handed him with the stubs. These tallied exactly with the entries on the check book of checks drawn, leaving some few checks still outstanding. Stumpp then added the amount of the outstanding checks to the balance shown on the check book, and found that the sum thus reached checked exactly with the balance shown by the bank. Finding that the two corresponded exactly, he made no further examination.

The method of checking the bank balance and the returned vouchers with the check book, followed in June, 1916, was followed by Mr. Stumpp in each succeeding month.

The testimony of Mr. August Stumpp on this point is as follows: “ Q. What was your system that you used when vouchers came back from the Bank of New York of checking up your account with the bank vouchers? A. I checked every voucher with my check book, and then I compared the balance of the Bank of New York with our balance, and of course some checks may not have been paid which we already had written out, so I added these unpaid checks to their balance, and then made it agree, that is tried to make it agree, and when I found it agreed, I said it is all right.”

And again, under cross-examination he testified: “ Q. Now did you take any pains, or did you, in fact, ever add up the totals of the checks on any page of stubs? A. I did not except now and then I probably did, but at the time when I received those vouchers I only compared them with my check book, but I did not make the additions. Q. You did not verify the additions at the foot of the check book? A. I did not. * * * Q. These monthly statements attached to the stipulation were quite similar, were they not, in general form to those that you had been in the habit of receiving for years? A. Well, I do not know for how many years, it may be only three or four years. It is a novel way, and I did not understand the purpose of it, I received them, looked at the balance, and then I had my vouchers and I compared my vouchers, and then of course I made the balance, whether it agreed with your final statement.”

And again: “ Q. Now did you compare the items on these statements under the heading ‘ Credits ’ with the items shown in the check book? The Court: May I call your attention to the fact [612]*612that this gentleman has already told me he did not compare anything with that statement; he did not examine the statement at all, directly or indirectly, on the credit or debit side.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 A.D. 608, 209 N.Y.S. 396, 1925 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stumpp-v-bank-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1925.