1. Rights and liabilities on commercial paper issued by the
Government are to be determined by federal, rather than local, law,
and, in the absence of an applicable Act of Congress, the governing
rules must be fashioned by the federal courts. P.
323 U. S.
456.
2. The Government is entitled to recover payments made to a
collecting bank on government checks on which the bank had
expressly guaranteed prior endorsements but on which the
endorsements of the payees were forged, and recovery was not barred
by the negligent failure of the Government to detect the fraud of a
government clerk who, over a period of 28 months, had fraudulently
procured issuance of the checks upon forged vouchers.
United
States v. Chase National Bank, 252 U.
S. 485, distinguished. P.
323 U. S.
457.
3. Negligence of a drawer-drawee in failing to discover fraud
prior to a guaranty of the genuineness of prior endorsements does
not absolve the guarantor from liability where the prior
endorsements have been forged. P.
323 U. S. 459.
142 F.2d 474 affirmed.
Certiorari,
post, p. 692, to review the affirmance of a
judgment for the United States in a Suit against the bank to
recover payments made on government checks.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
One Foley, a civilian clerk in the Paymaster's office of the
Marine Corps, procured the issuance of 144 government
Page 323 U. S. 455
checks, duly signed by the authorized disbursing officials, by
forging pay and travel mileage vouchers in the names of living
Marine Corps officers. These forgeries occurred during a period of
twenty-eight months, beginning shortly before July 14, 1936, and
ending November 16, 1938. The checks were drawn on the United
States Treasury payable to the order of the officers and delivered
to Foley for distribution to them. Foley forged their endorsements,
added his own name as second endorser, and deposited or cashed the
checks at the Anacostia Bank. That bank, without investigating the
genuineness of the payees' signatures, endorsed the checks and
transmitted them to the petitioner bank, which collected on them
from the government. Both banks specifically guaranteed prior
endorsements. About November 21, 1938, the government discovered
the fraud and the forgeries, and, on December 8th, formally
demanded repayment from the petitioner. Repayment was refused. On
August 11, 1942, the government brought this suit in the District
Court to recover the payments made. The complaint contained two
counts, one for breach of express warranty and one for money paid
under a mistake of fact. The bank filed an answer in which it
admitted that it had collected the moneys for the account of the
Anacostia Bank after presenting the checks to the government with
its stamped endorsement guaranteeing prior endorsements. As
defense, it set up the following: (1) the endorsement did not
amount to a guaranty of the payee's signature; (2) issuance of the
checks by the government was a warranty that they were not
"fictitious," but genuine and issued for a valuable consideration,
and this warranty was breached; (3) the government's disbursing
agencies neglected properly to supervise and examine the
transactions both before and after the first and succeeding checks
were issued, thereby delaying discovery of the fraud, and this
neglect, not the bank's guaranty,
Page 323 U. S. 456
caused the government's loss. The District Court granted the
government's motion for judgment on the pleadings, and the Court of
Appeals affirmed, 142 F.2d 474, on the authority of its own prior
decision in
Washington Loan & Trust Co. v. United
States, 134 F.2d 59. Because of a conflict with
United
States v. First National Bank, 138 F.2d 681, we granted
certiorari.
Only recently, in
Clearfield Trust Co. v. United
States, 318 U. S. 363, we
had occasion to consider rights and liabilities of the government
which stem from the issuance and circulation of its commercial
paper. Our conclusion was that legal questions involved in
controversies over such commercial papers are to be resolved by the
application of federal, rather than local, law, and that, in the
absence of an applicable Act of Congress, federal courts must
fashion the governing rules. Some of the questions petitioner
argues here are foreclosed by the
Clearfield decision.
There, we held that presentation of a government check to it for
payment with an express guaranty of prior endorsements amounts to a
warranty that the signature of the payee was not forged, but
genuine. Breach of that warranty, we said, by presenting a check on
which the payee's signature is a forgery, gives the government a
right to recover from the guarantor when payment is made. The
checks in the instant case were presented to the government by the
bank bearing forged endorsements of the payee's name and a specific
guaranty by the bank. Under the
Clearfield rule,
therefore, the government should recover unless other principles
here invoked exempt it from liability.
It is contended that, had it not been for negligence of the
government's administrative officers in detecting the frauds of its
clerk, some, if not all, of the checks would not have been issued,
and that neither the government nor the bank would have suffered
any loss. The answer
Page 323 U. S. 457
alleged facts which, if true, did show negligence in failing to
discover the frauds, and since judgment was entered on the
pleadings without trial, we must treat the case as though
negligence in this respect had been established. This question as
to the effect of the drawer-drawee's negligence prior to a specific
guaranty of endorsements was not directly involved in our
Clearfield case; it was an issue in
United States v.
National Exchange Bank, 214 U. S. 302, a
case on which we largely drew for the principles announced in the
Clearfield decision. In the latter case, we pointed out
that the
National Exchange Bank case stood for the rule
that prompt discovery of fraud was not a condition precedent to
suit in cases like this. The
National Exchange Bank case
presented a situation where 194 government checks had been issued
over a period of ten years as a result of forged vouchers. There,
as here, proper examination and supervision by government officials
would have uncovered the frauds, and thereby prevented or reduced
the loss. The collecting bank defended there, as here, on the
ground that the government's failure to discover the fraud should
absolve the collecting bank from liability. This Court, applying
the general law merchant, rejected the defense. The rule there
applied, as pointed out by the court below in
Washington Loan
& Trust Co. v. United States, supra, has been almost
unanimously accepted by State and federal courts. No persuasive
reasons have been suggested to us why it should not be accepted as
the general federal rule.
Rejection of the defense of the government's negligence here set
up does not, as petitioner argues, conflict with this Court's
holding in
United States v. Chase National Bank,
252 U. S. 485. In
that case, the government brought suit against a bank to recover
payment it made of a government draft which was itself a forgery.
The name of the payee was also forged. Recovery was denied because
the
Page 323 U. S. 458
instrument was a forgery. The holding rested on a long
established exception to the general rule under which one who
presents and collects a valid commercial instrument with a forged
endorsement can be compelled to repay. The reason for the exception
is that a drawee is required to be familiar with a drawer's
signature; if, therefore, the drawee pays to an innocent presenter
on a forged drawer's signature, it has been held that the drawee's
right to the money is not superior to that of the innocent
presenter.
Price v. Neal, 3 Burr. 1354. This exception is
not applicable here, because the signatures of the drawer on these
checks were genuine, while those in the
Chase National
Bank controversy were forged. The fact that these checks were
induced by fraud does not bring them within the reasoning of the
Chase National Bank rule.
There is nothing here to support the petitioner's contention
that the government's conduct in issuing the checks prompted it to
guarantee the payee's endorsement. Such a guarantee no more results
from the issuance of government checks that any other checks.
Government regulations concerning payment of its commercial paper
point the other way. Treasury Regulations have made guarantee of
prior endorsements a prerequisite to payment. 31 C.F.R. 202.33.
This guaranty was a protection which the government sought not only
as to checks which were issued in due course for a valuable
consideration, but as to checks which might have been irregularly
issued. That the administrative officers failed fully to perform
their duty is no reason why the government should be deprived of
the advantage of a guarantee independently made by one who was not
under compulsion of any kind to make it. No equitable principles
require that one who, for his own reasons, guarantees a payee's
signature after issuance of a check shall be relieved of his
voluntarily assumed obligation because others who owed the
government obligations had previously defaulted in their
obligations.
Page 323 U. S. 459
We do not say that there may not be some circumstances, not now
before us, under which the government might be precluded from
recovery because of conduct of a drawer prior to a guaranty of
endorsement. We do hold that negligence of a drawer-drawee in
failing to discover fraud prior to a guaranty of the genuineness of
prior endorsements does not absolve the guarantor from liability in
cases where the prior endorsements have been forged.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS concurs in the result.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.