Wingate v. Neidlinger

50 Ind. 520
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 50 Ind. 520 (Wingate v. Neidlinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wingate v. Neidlinger, 50 Ind. 520 (Ind. 1875).

Opinion

Buskirk, J.

This action was commenced by the appellee against the' appellant in the Clay Circuit Court, and was, on motion of appellant, venued to the Putnam Circuit Court, where it was tried by a jury, and resulted in a verdict against [521]*521appellant for fifty dollars, on which the court below rendered judgment, over a motion for a new trial.

The complaint is in three paragraphs.

The first is a common count for personal property, sold and delivered, etc.

The second is upon a settlement of accounts for an ascertained balance due from defendant to plaintiff1.

The third paragraph sets up specifically the facts, in which it is alleged that the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of fifty dollars for personal property, etc., and that in discharge of said indebtedness said defendant paid said plaintiff a fifty-dollar counterfeit United States treasury note, and that plaintiff received the same in the belief that said note was genuine, and upon discovering that it was a counterfeit, he tendered it back to defendant, and demanded payment to said amount in genuine bills.

The defendant answered this complaint in two paragraphs. 1. Denial. 2. Payment.

To which second paragraph of answer the plaintiff replied by general denial, which put the cause at issue.

The trial, as above stated, resulted in a verdict for fifty dollars for plaintiff.

The defendant (appellant here) filed his motion and reasons for a new trial, which motion the court overruled, and the defendant excepted, and thereupon the court rendered judgment for the amount against the defendant.

The reasons for a new trial, as assigned, are as follows:

1. The verdict of the jury is contrary to the evidence.

2. The verdict of the jury is contrary to law and the evidence in the case.

3. The verdict is contrary to the evidence, and against the law of the case as given by the court.

The evidence is in the record, and was all directed to the third paragraph of the complaint. There is a direct conflict in the evidence upon the point whether the appellee received the bill in question from the appellant; and while the evidence may preponderate in favor of the appellant, there is evidence [522]*522in the record which sustains the verdict, and under the settled rule of practice in this court, we cannot disturb the verdict upon the evidence.

The appellant purchased of the appellee one hundred dollars’ worth of clover seed, and paid for the same either in legal tender treasury notes or national bank notes, or in some of both kinds of currency. The transaction took place on the 26th day of February, 1873. The appellee took the money home with him, and in the latter part of August of that year he returned to the appellant a fifty-dollar legal tender treasury note, which he claimed he had received from him in payment for the clover seed. During this time, the- appellee made no attempt to ascertain whether the money he had received was genuine. He presented the bill, shortly before he tendered it back, to a bank in Terre Haute, where it was pronounced to be a counterfeit. It was admitted upon the trial to be a base counterfeit. It is not pretended that the appellant passed the bill with knowledge of its character. The parties stand equally innocent. It is well and firmly settled that a payment in forged bills of third persons, or in counterfeit notes which pass as currency, amounts to no payment in law, and cannot be regarded as a satisfaction of the debt, where the person receiving them has not, by his delay and negligence, forfeited his right to have recourse upon the person from whom he received them. In the present case, the appellee kept the nofe in question over six months without using any diligence or making any effort to ascertain its genuineness, and it is earnestly contended by counsel for appellant that the appellee, by such delay and want of diligence, has elected to regard the payment as valid, and has forfeited his right to recover from the appellant.

The question presented for decision is one of great practical importance, and has received careful and mature consideration. The real question is, whether a person who receives currency in payment is required to use diligence to ascertain whether it is genuine, and, if it is discovered to be forged, to return it within a reasonable time after such discovery, or if it cannot be returned, to give notice of its character.

[523]*523In the recent case of Atwood v. Cornwall, 13 Amer. Law Reg., n. s. 230, the question is very fully considered by the Supreme Court of Michigan, from which we make an extended quotation. The court say:

“A more important question, however, arises concerning the relative duties and liabilities of parties who honestly receive and pay out counterfeit money. The general current of authority appears to sustain the position that a person passing negotiable paper warrants its genuineness to such an extent that he is bound to make it good if found bad, and returned within a proper time. But where paper is genuine but worthless, although not supposed to be so by either party, the authorities are in conflict as to such liability and its extent. The decisions applied to bank-notes have all gone upon the analogy of ordinary negotiable securities. There is no modern decision which we have been able to find, which draws any line in dealing with payments in counterfeits or refers specially to that coin or paper which the law deals with as money—receivable not by currency merely, and by consent, but by statute and by obligation.

The decisions, in giving reasons for their results, were originally based on the ,doctrine that payments by negotiable paper were in a measure conditional, and not absolute in all cases, but depende.' b on the possibility of getting payment by diligence. And the distinction between counterfeit and otherwise valueless paper has not always been kept up, nor always well defined. See authorities in Story Con., sec. 411; Edwards Bills, 205, 206, 207, and notes.

The decisions, however, agree generally that a party who would otherwise be able to recover back the amount of bad money passed upon him, will be debarred of his action by lack of diligence. And it is much to be regretted that upon the whole subject there are more dicta than decisions. It is necessary, in order to discover the real difficulties of the matter, to consider how the doctrines bear practically on the business of the community. The paper which is in controversy is for all legal purposes of currency on a similar footing with coin ;' that [524]*524is to say, it is a legal tender, and all creditors are compelled to receive it in payment. They do not exercise an option in taking it, as they do in receiving other paper. Inasmuch as they refuse a tender at their peril, the law assumes, and business must be done on the basis, that every business man will become generally familiar with the appearance of the money of the country, so as to be able to exercise a judgment upon it. And while those who are constantly handling money in banks and exchange offices cultivate their faculties more thoroughly in a knowledge of currency, all persons are supposed to have some such knowledge, sufficient to enable them to do business with ordinary security.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Ind. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wingate-v-neidlinger-ind-1875.