Woodward v. Savings & Trust Co.

100 S.E. 304, 178 N.C. 184, 5 A.L.R. 1561, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 418
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 1, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 100 S.E. 304 (Woodward v. Savings & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodward v. Savings & Trust Co., 100 S.E. 304, 178 N.C. 184, 5 A.L.R. 1561, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 418 (N.C. 1919).

Opinion

AlleN, J.

The weight of authority is in favor of the proposition for which the plaintiff contends, that a bank, the drawee of a check, accepting it unconditionally and passing it to the credit of the depositor, in the absence of special custom known to the depositor, cannot charge it back against the account of the depositor on the ground that it is an overdraft.

The Court says in Bank v. Burkhart, 100 U. S., 689: “In Morse’s well-considered work on Banking, p. 321, it is said: ‘But if at the time the holder hands in the cheek he demands to have it placed to his credit, *186 and is informed that it shall be done, or if he holds any other species of conversation which practically amounts to demanding and receiving a promise of a transfer of credit, as equivalent to an actual payment, the effect will be the same as if he had received his money in cash, and the bank’s indebtedness to him for the amount will be equally fixed and irrevocable.’

“We regard this as a sound and accurate exposition of the law upon the subject; and it rests upon a solid basis of'reason. The authority referred to sustains the text.

“When a check on itself is offered to a bank as a dej)osit, the bank has' the option to accept or reject or to receive it, upon such conditions as-may be agreed upon. If it be rejected, there is no room for any doubt or question between the parties. If, on the other hand, the check is-offered as a deposit and received as a deposit, there being no fraud and. the check genuine; the parties are no less bound and concluded than in the former case. Neither can disavow or repudiate what has been done-This case is simply one of an executed contract. ' There are the requisite-parties, the requisite consideration, and the requisite concurrence and assent of the minds of those concerned. It was well said by an eminent. Chief Justice: ‘If there has ever been a doubt on this point there should, be none hereafter.’ Oddie v. The National City Bank of New York. 45 N. Y., 735.

“When a bank credits a depositor with the amount of a check drawn1 upon it by another customer, and there is no want of good faith on the-part of-the depositor, the act of crediting is equivalent to a payment in money, and the bank cannot recall or repudiate the payment because,, upon an examination of the accounts of the drawer, it is ascertained that he was without funds to meet the check, though when the payment was made the officers labored under the mistake that there were funds sufficient. In such a case the bank could have received the check conditionally, and have come under obligations to account to the holder for it only in the event that on an examination of the accounts of the drawer it was found he had funds to meet it, or in the event that he provided funds for its payment. Or it could have asked for time to examine the accounts, that it might determine whether it would accept and pay or dishonor the check. It would have been within the option of the holder to have accepted or rejected either of these propositions. But when the holder presented the check with his pass book, that the check might be entered as a deposit to his credit, it was a request for the payment of the check; and there can be no distinction between a request for payment in money and a request for payment by a transfer to the credit of the holder.” 3 R. C. L., 526.

*187 To tbe same effect see 7 C. J., 681; Levy v. Bank, 4 Dall., 142; Bank v. Barnes, 44 A. R., 142; Bank v. Gregg, 32 A. R., 173; Wasson v. Lamb, 16 A. S. R., 345.

And tbe authorities also sustain tbe position that tbe same rule applies when tbe check is a forgery.

“A bank is bound to know tbe signatures of its customers; and if it pays a forged check it must be considered as making the payment out of its own fuiids, and cannot ordinarily charge the amount so paid to the account of the depositor whose name was forged.” 7 C. J., 683.

“In pursuance of the rule that a bank as between itself and the bona fide holder of a check is bound to know the signature of- its depositors, and cannot recover from such a holder money paid to him upon the subsequent discovery that the drawer’s name was forged, if a depositor presents a cheek, which he holds in good faith, drawn on the bank by another depositor, and the check is credited to him in his account and charged to the drawer, this is in effect a payment of the check, and the bank cannot strike off the credit.” 3 B. C. L., 527.

This principle was first declared by Lord Mansfield in 1762 in Price v. Neal, 3 Burrows, 1355, and has been adopted in U. S. v. Bank, 10 Wheat., 333; Neal v. Coburn, 92 Me., 145; Bank v. Bank, 107 Iowa, 337; Bank v. Bank, 90 Ky., 15; Bank v. Bank, 30 Md., 21; Bernheimer v. Marshal, 2 Minn., 82; Bank v. Bank, 46 N. Y., 77; Bank v. Bank, 60 Minn., 198; Bank v. Bank, 10 Vt., 145; Yarborough v. Trust Co., 142 N. C., 381, and indeed in all the States except Pennsylvania, where it has been changed by statute. Bank v. Bank, 66 Pa. St., 438.

These principles rest upon the presumption that the drawer knows the signature of its customer, and upon the necessity of fixing some time when there shall be no further inquiry by the one upon whom it is drawn into the integrity of commercial paper with which so much of the business of the world is done today, but the courts recognize that they are establishing a rule at variance with the principle that money paid under a mistake of fact may be recovered, and the one depositing the check, if both the payee and endorser of the check, is held to knowledge of all other facts except the signature of the drawer, and he can take no benefit from the transaction if he actively participated in the forgery, although without fraudulent intent.

This is true because the payee in the check is necessarily brought inclose touch with the drawer, and has every opportunity to inquire into the regularity and genuineness of the paper.

“It would be an exceedingly harsh rule to permit one who negotiates with the forger, and obtains his check payable to the use of’ the party advancing the money, who then endorses it to a bank, to hold on to the money when the payee has himself contracted with the forger, and given *188 credit to tbe paper by liis endorsement that led the bank to believe the paper was genuine.” Bank v. Bank, 90 Ky., 10.

“The drawee bank is held to a knowledge of the signature of the drawer, but the payee-endorser is held to a knowledge of all other facts.

“The discounting bank and the drawee bank in such a case have the right to rely upon the endorsement of the payee, and as to him, are not required to exercise any diligence to discover the -fact that the check had been raised. These facts are conclusively presumed' to be within the knowledge of the payee. Under such circumstances the money paid can be recovered back in assumpsit,

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.E. 304, 178 N.C. 184, 5 A.L.R. 1561, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodward-v-savings-trust-co-nc-1919.