Yatesville Banking Co. v. Fourth National Bank

72 S.E. 528, 10 Ga. App. 1, 1911 Ga. App. LEXIS 604
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 7, 1911
Docket3147
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 72 S.E. 528 (Yatesville Banking Co. v. Fourth National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yatesville Banking Co. v. Fourth National Bank, 72 S.E. 528, 10 Ga. App. 1, 1911 Ga. App. LEXIS 604 (Ga. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Powell, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) The demurrer was general, but the defendant in error alleges the following grounds why it should have been sustained-; (1) that it is not alleged’that reasonable notice of the forgery was given to the plaintiff, and that reasonable demand for the return of the money was not made; (3) that the cashier’s cheek turned over to the plaintiff was not returned or tendered to the defendant before the suit was brought; (3) that it appears that the money paid out by the Yates-ville Banking Company was repaid by the usees named in the action, before this suit was brought, and that the voluntary payment by the usees furnishes no right of recovery for their use.

1. Certain propositions are undisputed: (1) that the cashier’s check stands as if it were a negotiable promissory note of the bank by which it was issued; (3) that the issuing bank stands thereto in the dual relation of drawer and drawee. It is also conceded (3) that ordinarily the bank issuing the cashier’s check, and having paid it upon forged indorsement, would not be held chargeable with any notice that the indorsement was a forgery, and that ordinarily it could recover, from one to whom it had paid the money on the faith of the forged indorsement, the amount which it had thus improperly paid out on the check. The case before us, therefore, narrows to a decision upon the special points already-mentioned

[4]*42. As to the first point really in issue: The law is that, where a person has paid a negotiable paper to another on a forged indorsement, and the latter is innocent of the forger}*, it is incumbent upon the person so paying to give notice of the forgery to the other person within a reasonable time after discovery of the fact; and he may lose his right of action for failure to give the notice, provided that his laches in this respect has subjected the other to loss. What is reasonable notice in such a case is generally a question for the jury.

After stating a somewhat contrary doctrine, asserted by some of the courts, Daniel, in his work on Negotiable Instruments (5th ed.), § 1372, says: “But there is high authority for the more liberal, and, we think, wiser and juster doctrine that the demand for restitution may be made within a reasonable time after the forgery is discovered, and that the mere space of time is not important, provided it be clearly shown that the holder will be put to no more liability, trouble, or expense by a restoration then than if it had been called for on the day of payment. Nor does the circumstance that there are genuine indorsers prior to the holder, but subsequent to the forged name, seem to us to alter the case. Their indorsement of the instrument being a warranty of its genuineness, they would not be entitled to notice, as it was not genuine in all respects ; and, besides the right to sue them as indorsers, the holder, on being compelled to refund the money, could recover back the amount paid by him to his predecessor, and so on, until the instrument rested where the loss should fall.”

We have no doubt that this states the correct doctrine. The defendant in such a case, having received from the plaintiff, to his use and benefit money to which he is not entitled, would primarily be subject to an action at law (generally to an action in the nature of an action for money had and received), to be brought at any time within the statute of limitations, but commercial usage, as well as a principle of natural justice, would require the person who had thus paid out the money not to remain quiescent when, by so doing, he would deprive the other person who, too, had been an innocent victim of the forgery of any reasonable means by which he might recoup his loss; and a failure to exercise reasonable diligence in giving this notice ought to and will deprive him of the right to maintain his action, if because of his failure in this re[5]*5spect the loss does ensue. But two things (both failure to give the notice and loss on tlie part of the other person, occasioned thereby) should concur before this right of action, arising as it does ex aequo et bono, should be lost to the person who has been caused to pay the money improperly.

The duty to give the notice does not arise until the forgery has been discovered, and may be exercised then, or within a reasonable time thereafter. It does not appear from the petition in this case when the plaintiff discovered the forgery, nor when the demand for repayment was made upon the defendant, though it is alleged in general terms that it was demanded, or, as it is stated in one of the counts, was “formally” demanded. The petition would have been subject to special demurrer on the ground that this information was not given specifically, but the general demurrer raises no such question. Further, we are of the opinion that it is not necessary for the plaintiff in such a case to make it appear that his notice of the forgery and demand for repayment were given at such a time as that no loss to the defendant occurred from the failure, and that the petition would not be subject to general demurrer raising this question, unless the petition on its face affirmatively disclosed that loss had ensued. As Cowan, J., said, in Canal Bank v. Bank of Albany, 1 Hill (N. Y.), 291: “I am not willing to concede that delay in the abstract, as seems to be supposed, can deprive the party of his remedy to recover back money paid under the circumstances before us.” It would be an affirmative defense, which the defendant might set up by way of avoidance of liability, to say that this notice came at such a time and with such lateness that he was subjected to a loss which would not have ensued if it had been given timely. Such a defense is in the nature of a plea of recoupment, in which the defendant sets off damages ensuing from the plaintiffs neglect, against the damages which he caused to the plaintiff by reason of his false presenting of the paper.

3. As to the second reason asserted for the sustaining of the demurrer — that the'plaintiff brought suit without first offering to return the cashier’s check: The defendant in error cites two cases (Coolidge v. Brigham, 1 Metc. [Mass.] 547, and Bassett v. Brown, 105 Mass. 551). The last case cited is hardly in point, except in so far as it lays down the general doctrine that restoration is a condition precedent to rescission for fraud. The Coolidge case is [6]*6'a leading ease (frequently cited, but often distinguished) in support of the proposition that, where one party receives from another a paper which, though it is in some of its features a forgery, nevertheless has legal validity as against some of the parties thereto, there must be a return of the paper before there can be a rescission of the transaction in which it is involved. The point in that case is that such a paper' is not one of those wholly valueless articles which need not be returned as a condition precedent to rescission. In that case the plaintiff, having taken, in payment for a bill of goods, a draft bearing a forged indorsement, but also bearing a genuine indorsement, attempted, upon discovery that his title to the instrument was infected with forgery, to bring assumpsit for the goods without returning the forged paper to the defendant from whom he obtained it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Wesley T. O'Neal
Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2019
Roswell Bank v. Citizens & Southern Dekalb Bank
121 S.E.2d 706 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1961)
J. C. Pirkle MacHinery Co. v. Lester
54 S.E.2d 298 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1949)
Home Indemnity Co. v. State Bank
8 N.W.2d 757 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1943)
Cairo Banking Co. v. West
2 S.E.2d 91 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1939)
First National Bank v. Federal Reserve Bank
294 P. 1105 (Montana Supreme Court, 1931)
Moler v. State Bank of Bigelow
223 N.W. 780 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1929)
Milner v. First National Bank
145 S.E. 101 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1928)
Sligh v. Smith
136 S.E. 175 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1926)
Atlanta Cadillac Co. v. Manley
116 S.E. 35 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1923)
Farmers Bank v. Bank of Abbeville
116 S.E. 204 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1923)
Downing Co. v. Pearson Banking Co.
92 S.E. 968 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 S.E. 528, 10 Ga. App. 1, 1911 Ga. App. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yatesville-banking-co-v-fourth-national-bank-gactapp-1911.