Thomson v. Bank of British North America

13 Jones & S. 1
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedMarch 3, 1879
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Jones & S. 1 (Thomson v. Bank of British North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomson v. Bank of British North America, 13 Jones & S. 1 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

By the Court.—Sedgwick, J.

The testimony sustains the finding of the learned judge, that the attorney was not the agent either of the plaintiffs or of Mrs. Halpine, in obtaining the money upon the check by means of the forged indorsement, neither had she authorized the indorsement.

The testimony as to the bond and mortgage was important for the purpose only of determining whether there had ever been an actual or constructive delivery of the check to Mrs. Halpine, or whether the indorsement was hers as made by her agent. It is not necessary to give this matter further attention.

When the plaintiffs presented their order for the money to the defendants and received upon it the check in question, drawn to the order of Mrs. Halpine, the mere receiving of this check was not a final or absolute satisfaction of the plaintiffs’ rights as to their [14]*14money deposited with defendants. The plaintiffs had the right still to demand the money on deposit, if at the same time they returned the check, unindorsed, and in such a state that the defendants’ rights had not been changed to their harm, and if the plaintiffs had not dealt with the check in a way that had damaged the defendants. It is to be particularly observed, that the holder is not chargeable with damage for negligence arising only from his keeping the check unpresented, until the day after its delivery.

In the present case, the check is in possession of defendants, without payment, for the payee never indorsed. The bank on which it was drawn took it on the day next its date. If the defendants have suffered damage from a dealing by plaintiff with the check, it has come from the check being certified by the bank, the subsequent taking of that check by the bank, the charging its amount to the defendants, and the defendants acquiescing in that charge, until a time, when, as the learned counsel for defendants argues, the statute of limitation prevents the defendant recovering from the bank the amount improperly charged by the latter.

A scrutiny of these acts shows that for the most part they are either tortious as to the plaintiffs, or voluntary by the defendants and the bank, as not the performance of any valid obligation between them.

The check having been made to a third party, was, to the knowledge of the parties, inchoate, and would be so until delivered to the payee. This affected to a due extent the implied contract. No cause of action could exist on the check as a chose in action, until the payee received it. At no time could the defendant get any right, as if upon a payment, until she indorsed it. The bank had no right to take the check and pay its amount until she had indorsed it.

The bank, in taking that check as it did, and as[15]*15suming the right to pay it, was liable to plaintiffs for a conversion of it. They were the owners of the piece of paper, with the inchoate contract upon its face. It is not necessary to determine the measure of the plaintiffs’ damages for such conversion. It may be that it would be a sufficient reason, under thé circumstances, to place the damages at a nominal amount; that the only value of the check was that plaintiffs must have it in order to bring an action against defendants for the original deposit, and that, as the bank had returned it to defendants, such an action could be brought without possession of the check. The quality of the act of the bank is of importance. It was wrongful to the plaintiffs. The defendants were also liable to the plaintiffs for a conversion of the check, when the defendants assumed dominion of the check, for the purpose of finally extinguishing plaintiffs’ right as to the money deposited with them, in derogation of the true title and right to possession.

In Graves v. American Exchange Bank (17 N. Y. 205), the defendant was the drawee of a bill of exchange, payable to the order of one who afterwards assigned to the plaintiff. A person having the same name as the payee, indorsed and presented the bill to the defendants, who paid it to Mm. The action was for a conversion of the bill, and judgment against defendant affirmed.' Judge Comstock, in the opinion, said: “ The defendant having got possession of it through a false or forged indorsement, and having refused to deliver it up or pay it to the owner, was liable for its conversion.” The learned judge did not, however, mean to say that it would not have been a conversion, if the plaintiff had not demanded it. The check, as in the present case, was never rightfully in possession of the bank, but the original taking was tortious, and no demand was necessary to put an end to a previous rightful holding. The bank and the de[16]*16fend ants were jointly liable as to the act by which the latter received the check from the former (White v. Sweeny, 4 Daly, 223; White v. Mechanics’ National Bank, Id. 225).

When the bank sent the check to the defendants as voucher for charging them with the amount paid upon it, the defendants’ acquiescence in that charge was purely voluntary on their part. By reason of the original understanding and contract, the check was to be paid to the order of a third party. The defendants could not base a right as against the plaintiffs upon a payment to any one else. They suffered the charge, made by the bank unnecessarily and voluntarily (Morgan v. Bank of the State of New York, 11 N. Y. 404, affirming 1 Duer, 434). At this point it is to be seen that the omission of plaintiffs to notify the defendants of the fact does not place the defendants in the better position. The defendants had contracted against paying on a forged indorsement. They did pay, or acquiesced in the payment, within a short time from the actual forgery. The plaintiffs, ignorant of the forgery, at most could only have instigated the defendants to bring an action against the bank, based upon a transaction which, as against the plaintiffs, should never have- taken place.

The only facts left upon which the defendants can rely, as a cause of damage, from neglect or laches of plaintiff, are that the check was actually certified, and remained so for a period of time, viz.: about thirty days before it came into defendants’ possession. It is argued the certification was a discharge of the defendants.

It does not clearly appear at what point the bank certified the' check, or in whose hands it then was. There is no finding as to this. On the testimony it appears that it was certified on the day of its date, but no reason was shown for its being certified by the [17]*17attorney who procured the money upon it, more than by the private bankers, with whom it was deposited by the attorney, and who may either have wished to draw upon it themselves at once, or to protect themselves against its being drawn upon by their depositor. There was, of course, no reason for certifying it for Mrs. Halpine’s protection, as there was clearly no intention of carrying out the matter of the bond and mortgage on her behalf.

It would not, however, in view of the peculiarity of the case, be satisfactory to determine it upon the assumption that the attorney did not have the check certified, and if he did I would hesitate unnecessarily to decide, that, where a person placed a check in possession of another it did not imply to the bank sufficient authority from the owner to present the check for certification. ' The issues here may be determined without passing upon such a proposition.

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Related

First Nat. Bank of Jersey City v. . Leach
52 N.Y. 350 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
Graves v. . the American Exchange Bank
17 N.Y. 205 (New York Court of Appeals, 1858)
Morgan v. . the Bank of the State of New-York
11 N.Y. 404 (New York Court of Appeals, 1854)
White v. Sweeny
4 Daly 223 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1871)
Morgan v. Bank of State of New York
1 Duer 434 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1853)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Jones & S. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomson-v-bank-of-british-north-america-nysuperctnyc-1879.