Pindall's ex'ors v. Northwestern Bank
Pindall's ex'ors v. Northwestern Bank
Opinion of the Court
I think there can be no reasonable doubt at this day that if a debtor, in payment of an antecedent debt, pays to his creditor a piece of counterfeit money, or a bank note usually received as money, but which turns out to be counterfeit, it is not a good payment. Jones v. Ryde, 5 Taunt. 488. Young v. Adams, 5 Mass. Rep. 182. Markle v. Hatfield, 2 Johns. Rep. 458.
Although, however, this general proposition is true, yet the policy of the la.w requires that after the detection of the counterfeit character of the money (whether coin or bank notes) there should be no negligence or want of diligence on the part of the creditor who receives it, in giving information to the payer of the true character of the money, and in returning it to him and demanding payment. Indeed, justice to the debtor requires it. By giving him this notice, and returning it to him in a reasonable time, he will be perhaps enabled to ascertain from whom he received it, and to trace it back from holder to holder, till it shall be returned either to the original forger, or to him who passed it
In Young v. Adams, the note was ascertained to be counterfeit on the day after it was received; and on the day after the detection it was sent to the payer, and he was required to give a true bill in lieu of the counterfeit, which he refused to do, or to make compensation for it. In Markle v. Hatfield, the counterfeit note was paid away by the plaintiff on the same day he received it, to a third person, and soon afterwards it was discovered to be counterfeit, and returned to the plaintiff; and though the report does not state in what space of time it was sent back to the defendant, no objection was made of any delay in returning it to him, and it is to be presumed that the demand was speedily made. Recoveries were had in those cases, on the general principle that a payment in counterfeit money was not good, no laches being imputable to the plaintiffs.
There is a class of cases in which the receiver of bank notes in payment of antecedent debts is held to greater strictness than in the cases which I have mentioned, and in which the very reception of them, being founded in laches, is deemed a ground for excluding the receiver from any right to recover from the payer. I allude to the cases of United States bank v. Bank of Georgia, 10 Wheat. 333. and Gloucester bank v. Salem bank, 17 Mass. Rep. 33. in both of which the payments were made in notes purporting to be the notes of the very bank to which they were paid. The foundation of the judgments in those cases was, that the receiving officers of the bank were bound to know whether notes purporting to be its own notes were genuine or not, and if they do not use the means which they possess of de
In the case before us, the note deposited with the bank was not one purporting to be its own, and I do not mean to say that the mere reception of the counterfeit note proved such negligence on the part of the Northwestern bank as would defeat its right of action. It had not the same means of detection as the banks had in the two above mentioned cases, and consequently it was not a violation of public duty in the receiving officers of the bank to fail in the detection. But the same general principle which runs through the cases will apply to this, namely, that laches will defeat the right of action.
The note deposited by Tindall with the Northwestern bank was paid to the Cincinnati bank, and by the latter bank was returned to the Northwestern bank on the 8th March 1825 as a counterfeit note. A period of two months afterwards elapsed before the Northwestern bank returned it to Tindall, and there is no proof that Tindall had any notice of it before that time. Here the neglect began, and it seems to have been gross neglect. The distance was not so great but that. Tindall might have been notified of the fact, and the note returned to him, within a few days after the note was returned to the bank. Why then this unreasonable delay of two months ? If the bank had within a reasonable time applied to Tindall to take back this spurious note, he might have ascertained to a certainty whether Jackson or some other person had passed it to him, and thus have relieved himself of the loss : but by the delay the opportunity might have been lost to him forever.
It has, however, been argued that Tindall waived the objection to the delay in returning him the note, and waived his right to claim protection from the neglect of
This case comes to us on an appeal from a judgment of the court below, rendered on a demurrer to evidence. On the 19th of November 1824, Pindall deposited in the Northwestern bank 354 dollars 35 cents. Of this, a note of 100 dollars was afterwards found to be forged. The bank soon passed off the money, it not being a special deposit to be returned in the same notes. Pindall checked for the full amount, and the bank paid it. After this, on the 8th March 1825, this 100 dollar note was returned to the bank as forged, and taken back. There is no doubt of its being a forged note. In the month of May following (we are not told on what day) the note was sent by the bank to Pindall, with a declaration that it was forged, and a request that he would return to the bank the amount in good money. He did not do so. He died soon after; and this suit is to recover against his representatives this sum. The court below has given judgment for the plaintiffs: we are to say whether correctly or not. The question presented is, of two persons equally innocent and ignorant of the forgery, and equally free from fault in failing to detect that forgery, which shall bear the burden ? This case is different from Price v. Neal, 3 Burr. 1354. because there, “ it was incumbent” (says lord Mansfield) “ on the plaintiff to be satisfied that the bill drawn upon him was the drawer’s hand, before he accepted or paid it, but it was not incumbent on the defendant to inquire into it.” In our case, it was not more incumbent on
In the examination of this question, I shall consider, first, whether a party who passes a counterfeit note in the course of business or in payment of an antecedent debt, is responsible for the amount to the person to whom he passed it. Upon this point although we have no adjudication of this court, yet we have the advantage of express decisions both of the courts of Great Britain and of our sister states. Without encumbering this opinion with a review of the cases which have turned upon forged bills of exchange and other mere securities for money, I shall pass at once to those which have had immediate reference to bank notes, which pass as money, which constitute a part of the common currency of the country, and are not, like bills of exchange, considered as mere securities or documentary evidences of debts. 1 Burr. 457. To begin with
At first view, perhaps it may seem that this course of adjudication is inconsistent with the just and well established principle, that as between parties equally innocent and ignorant, a loss shall remain where the chance of business has placed it; for there can be no reason for throwing a loss from the shoulders of one innocent man upon another who is equally innocent. Price v. Neal, 3 Burr. 1354. 17 Mass. Rep. 42. But it must be recollected that, in the eye of the law, diligence is meritorious and negligence is a fault; and the law will not hold him guiltless who has not exercised proper care and circumspection in the conduct of his affairs. Therefore, in the circulation of these counterfeit bank bills, he who has been negligent must yield to the superiour diligence of those with whom he deals. I incline to think that this is the true principle upon which the responsibility proceeds. He who passes a counterfeit bill in payment, or receives value for it, gets something for nothing, and upon principles of natural justice must refund, unless he be exempted upon the ground that he is equally innocent with the person to whom he passed it. But to put the parties on an equal footing, both must have been equally diligent. Waiving the remark that he who has detected a counterfeit bill and arrested its circulation, has more merit than the man who passes it without examination, it may be more broadly stated, that he who, in receiving a counterfeit bill, is vigilant and circumspect in taking the proper means for fixing the passing of it to himself upon the proper person, is more meritorious than the man who takes no such precaution. Besides the probability that such a course of diligence might lead to the detection of the original circulator, and tend mainly to arrest the
Secondly, I shall inquire whether he will lose this right by neglecting to give notice to the payer in a reasonable time, that the bills are spurious. The affirmative of this proposition seems to be a necessary consequence of the very principles we have just been laying down. The right of the payee to recover, and to throw the loss back upon the person who passed the note to him, though such person may have been equally innocent and ignorant of its spurious character, arises from the obligation upon the conscience of the party to refund that which he has received without value. But the conscience of the payee, on the other hand, binds him, in the assertion of this demand, to use all diligence to protect the payer from loss on his part. There is a privity between them, arising out of the obligation to refund, which demands that the payee should leave nothing undone for his safety. Now the most obvious means of saving him from loss is immediate notice that the bills are spurious, to enable the payer to ascertain, while the transaction is yet recent, from whom he received them. Accordingly we find, in the cases before cited of Gloucester bank v. Salem bank, and United States bank v. Bank of Georgia, the principle is recognized, that-the right of recovery may be lost by the unreasonable delay of notice. In those cases the authorities were elaborately reviewed, and the conclusion to which the courts arrived was, that the payees of the notes were
It is obviously impossible to lay down any precise rule, or to fix any precise time within which notice must be given. It is sufficient to say that it must be reasonable. Now in this case I think it was not so. When the base character of the paper, was discovered, does not appear; but it was before the 8th of March, and Tindall had no notice till the 19th of May. An earlier notice might have enabled him to fix liability upon Jackson or some other person, and though (to use the language of Parker, C. J.) “there is no evidence from which it can be ascertained that he could have saved himself if he had received earlier notice, yet the law itself will presume that a change of circumstances had taken place which justified him in resisting the action.” The law will not cover the neglect of the bank, by taking it for granted that Tindall would not have been bettered by earlier notice. It is against its analogies to enter into an inquiry whether a surety or guarantee is injured
As to the supposed waiver of notice, I think there is no pretence for the application of the principle; and upon the whole I am of opinion to reverse the judgment, and enter judgment for the defendants below.
Judgment reversed, and judgment entered for the plaintiffs in error.
Reference
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- Pindall's ex'ors v. The Northwestern Bank
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