Weinstein v. National Bank of Jefferson

6 S.W. 171, 69 Tex. 38, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 770
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1887
DocketNo. 2321
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 6 S.W. 171 (Weinstein v. National Bank of Jefferson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weinstein v. National Bank of Jefferson, 6 S.W. 171, 69 Tex. 38, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 770 (Tex. 1887).

Opinion

Gaines, Associate Justice.

The plaintiff in the court below who. is appellant here, was during the years 1885 and 1886, a merchant in the city of Jefferson and depositor in the bank of the defendant corporation. He was absent during the period of the transactions involved in this suit, that is to say, from December, 1885, to August, 1886, but his business was in charge of his brother, A. Weinstein, who was his agent and attorney in fact. On the twenty-seventh of February and also on the twelfth of June, 1886, the cashier of the bank balanced plaintiff’s pass book and returned all checks, which had been paid by the bank up to these dates respectively. In August, 1886, A. Weinstein discovered or claimed to have discovered, that a number of checks of dates extending from December 5, 1885, to June 4,1886, which had been paid by the bank and charged to plaintiff’s account had been forged. The aggregate amount was one thousand and eighty-two dollars and five cents. The checks were embraced in the accounts balanced in the pass book, and were returned to plaintiff’s agent with the pass book when balanced at the dates named above.

Plaintiff made demand of the bank for the money charged against him on the cheeks alleged to have been forged, and payment having been refused brought this suit for its recovery. The defendant pleaded a general denial, and also in substance [40]*40that plaintiff’s agent having at the dates above named received the pass book and checks, and having failed to use due diligence to detect and denounce the forgeries within a reasonable time, plaintiff was thereby estopped from questioning the correctness of the account. The court overruled an exception to the plea of estoppel, and plaintiff excepted to the ruling and now assigns it as error. The ground of the exception was, that the plea did not “allege or show any injury or loss to defendant occasioned by, or resulting from, the delay on part of plaintiff,” in discovering and giving notice of the forgeries. The exceptions were well taken to the original answer. It contained no averment of any loss by reason of the laches of plaintiff’s agent, or that its condition had been in any manner changed for the worse by his negligence. We do not see that such loss or injury was a necessary consequence of the facts set forth in the answer, and hence in our o'pinion in order to make it good as a plea of estoppel, it should have been alleged. But in a trial amendment filed by leave of the court (it is to be presumed after the exceptions had been sustained, though no order sustaining it appears on the record), defendant avers that by reason of the “negligence and failure” to examine and report any errors or forgeries therein it was “debarred the right and opportunity of protecting itself,” and further, that if the account of February 27, had been examined and the forgeries reported, defendant would not have paid the other checks alleged to have been forged. The first part of this allegation is vague and indefinite, but we think it good upon a general demurrer. (May v. Taylor, 22 Texas, 348; George v. Lemon, 19 Texas, 151.) A special exception on account of vagueness and generality should have been sustained, but no such exception was filed.

Appellants second assignment is that:

2. “The court erred in its charge to the jury in paragraphs nine, ten and eleven of said charge, in this, that said instructions debarred plaintiff from any recovery for any amount, notwithstanding all the checks may have been forged, if the jury found a failure on the part of plaintiff to examine and inspect the accounts and checks, which were never returned to him until February 27, 1886.”

We do not think the assignment well taken. It may be that these paragraphs, if they stood alone, would subject the charge to the criticism which is made upon it. In paragraph nine the jury are told that if, by reason of the failure of A. Wei»[41]*41stein to examine the account and report the forgeries, “the opportunity of protection on part of defendant was lost, then plaintiff would not be entitled to recover.” The eleventh paragraph contains substantially the same proposition. We are not prepared to say that, under the peculiar facts of the case, these paragraphs of the instructions, taken by themselves, would not have been calculated to mislead; but in the sixth paragraph the jury had been previously instructed, in effect, that the bank would be liable, unless Weinstein had neglected to examine the account and report the forgeries “for such a length of time as worked an injury to the bank;” and in the seventh they are further charged, in effect, that the bank was injured if, by reason of Weinstein’s negligence and delay, it lost the means of recovering the money, which it would have had if the discovery and report had been made in a reasonable time. Taking the charge as a whole, the jury must have understood that they were not warranted in finding for the plaintiff under any state of facts, unless they found that the bank had not been prejudiced by the negligence of plaintiff’s agent.

In his third assignment of error appellant complains of the action of the court in refusing to give the following instruction asked by his counsel upon the trial:

“If you believe, from the evidence, that the defendant paid the checks purporting to be drawn by the plaintiff between the fifth day of December, 1885, and the twenty-seventh day of February, 1886, the date of the balancing and return of plaintiff’s book, and if you believe that any of such checks so paid within said period of time were false or forged, then the plaintiff is not estopped from' recovering the amount0 so paid on such false or forged checks and charged to plaintiff, even though you should find that plaintiff is estopped by negligence from recovering for any forged or false checks paid after said balancing and return of said pass book on said February 27, 1886. And in such case, you will find for plaintiff the amount of such false and forged checks so paid by defendant and charged to plaintiff from December 5. 1885, to February 27, 1886.”

It will be seen that the charge requested and refused, assumes, as a matter of law, that there could be no estoppel as to the amounts paid on the checks alleged to be forged before the balancing of the pass book and the return of the checks on the twenty-seventh of February, 1886; and appellant is not without authority to support this position. In Daniels on Negotiable [42]*42Instruments it is said: “It seems, further, that the depositor owes the bank no duty which requires him to examine his pass book or vouchers with a view to detection of forgeries of his name, and may therefore repudiate such a charge whenever the forgery is discovered.” (2 Daniels Neg. Inst., sec. 1370.) The learned author refers, in support of his position, to Weisser v. Dennison, 10 New York, 69, and to National Bank v. Tappan, 6 Kansas, 465; the former of which fairly supports his text; though, in our opinion, the latter does not. We think there may be cases in which a bank that has paid forged checks may be put in a worse position by the failure of the depositor to detect the forgery upon return of his pass book within a reasonable time, than he would have been had the fraud been promptly discovered and denounced. In such a case, injury having resulted, the transaction contains every element of an estoppel.

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Bluebook (online)
6 S.W. 171, 69 Tex. 38, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weinstein-v-national-bank-of-jefferson-tex-1887.