Ebrada Case
Ebrada Case
Ebrada Case
*
No. L-40796. July 31, 1975.
* FIRST DIVISION.
681
holder thereof, it can recover the amount paid from the said holder.—One
who purchases a check or draft is bound to satisfy himself that the paper is
genuine and that by indorsing it or presenting it for payment or putting it
into circulation before presentation he impliedly asserts that he has
performed his duty and the drawee who has paid the forged check, without
actual negligence on his part, may recover the money paid from such
negligent purchasers. In such cases the recovery is permitted because
although the drawee was in a way negligent in failing to detect the forgery,
yet if the encasher of the check had performed his duty, the forgery would in
all probability, have been detected and the fraud defeated. x x x Similarly, in
the case before us, the defendant-appellant, upon receiving the check in
question from Adelaida Dominguez, was duty-bound to ascertain whether
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the check in question was genuine before presenting it to plaintiff Bank for
payment. Her failure to do so makes her liable for the loss and the plaintiff
Bank may recover from her the money she received for the check.
Same; Same; Fact that the person who encashed the check wherein the
signature of the payee was forged turned over the proceeds to the one who
indorsed said check to the said holder would not exempt the encasher from
liability as by doing so he acted as an accomodation party.—The fact that
immediately after receiving the cash proceeds of the check in question x x x
defendant-appellant immediately turned over said amount to Adelaida
Dominguez (Third-Party defendant and the Fourth-Party Plaintiff) who in
turn hand the amount to Justina Tinio on the same date would not exempt
her from liability because by doing so, she acted as an accommodation party
to the check for which she is also liable under Section 29 of the Negotiable
Instruments Law
MARTIN, J.:
682
1
Escolta, Manila. The check was issued by the Bureau of Treasury.
Plaintiff Bank was later advised by the said bureau that the alleged
indorsement on the reverse side of
2
the aforesaid check by the payee,
“Martin Lorenzo” was a forgery since the latter had allegedly died
3
as of July 14, 1952. Plaintiff Bank was then requested 4
by the
Bureau of Treasury to refund the amount of P1,246.08. To recover
what it had refunded to the Bureau of Treasury, plaintiff Bank made
verbal and formal demands upon defendant Ebrada to account for
the sum of P1,246.08, but said defendant refused to do so. So
plaintiff Bank sued defendant Ebrada before the City Court of
Manila.
On July 11, 1966, defendant Ebrada filed her answer denying the
material allegations of the complaint and as affirmative defenses
alleged that she was a holder in due course of the check in question,
or at the very least, has acquired her rights from a holder in due
course and therefore entitled to the proceeds thereof. She also
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alleged that the plaintiff Bank has no cause of action against her;
that it is in estoppel, or so negligent as not to be entitled to recover
5
anything from her.
About the same day, July 11, 1966 defendant Ebrada filed a
Third-Party complaint against Adelaida Dominguez who, in turn,
filed on September 14, 1966 a Fourth-Party complaint against
Justina Tinio.
On March 21, 1967, the City Court of Manila rendered judgment
for the plaintiff Bank against defendant Ebrada; for Third-Party
plaintiff against Third-Party defendant, Adelaida Dominguez, and
for Fourth-Party plaintiff against Fourth-Party defendant, Justina
Tinio.
From the judgment of the City Court, defendant Ebrada took an
appeal to the Court of First Instance of Manila where the parties
submitted a partial stipulation of facts as follows:
“COME NOW the undersigned counsel for the plaintiff, defendant, Third-
Party defendant and Fourth-Party plaintiff and unto this Honorable Court
most respectfully submit the following:
_______________
1 ROA, p. 2.
2 ROA, p. 2.
3 ROA, p. 2.
4 Exhibit “F-1”.
5 ROA, p. 5.
683
2. That on January 15, 1963 the Treasury of the Philippines issued its
Check No. BP-508060, payable to the order of one MARTIN
LORENZO, in the sum of P1,246.08, and drawn on the Republic
Bank, plaintiff herein, which check will be marked as Exhibit “A”
for the plaintiff;
3. That the back side of aforementioned check bears the following
signatures, in this order:
1) MARTIN LORENZO;
2) RAMON R. LORENZO;
3) DELIA DOMINGUEZ; and
4) MAURICIA T. EBRADA;
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warranted that she has good title to6said check; for under Section 65
of the Negotiable Instruments Law:
(a) That the instrument is genuine and in all respects what it purports
to be.
(b) That she has good title to it.”
xxxxxx
(a) The matters and things mentioned in subdivisions (a), (b) and (c) of
the next preceding sections;
(b) That the instrument is at the time of his indorsement valid and
subsisting.”
It turned out, however, that the signature of the original payee of the
7
check, Martin Lorenzo was a forgery because he was already dead
almost 11 years before the check in question was issued by the
Bureau of Treasury. Under Section 23 of the Negotiable Instruments
Law (Act 2031):
_______________
685
signature unless the party against whom it is sought to enforce such right is
precluded from setting up the forgery or want of authority.”
686
detect the forgery, yet if the encasher of the check had performed his
duty, the forgery would in all probability, have been detected and the
fraud defeated. The reason for allowing the drawee bank to recover
from the encasher is:
“Every one with even the least experience in business knows that no
business man would accept a check in exchange for money or goods unless
he is satisfied that the check is genuine. He accepts it only because he has
proof that it is genuine, or because he has sufficient confidence in the
honesty and financial responsibility of the person who vouches for it. If he is
deceived he has suffered a loss of his cash or goods through his own
mistake. His own credulity or recklessness, or misplaced confidence was the
sole cause of the loss. Why should he be permitted to shift the loss due to
his own fault in assuming the risk, upon the drawee, simply because of the
accidental circumstance that the drawee afterwards failed to detect the
8
forgery when the check was presented?”
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_______________
687
“Where a check is drawn payable to the order of one person and is presented
to a bank by another and purports upon its face to have been duly indorsed
by the payee of the check, it is the duty of the bank to know that the check
was duly indorsed by the original payee, and where the Bank pays the
amount of the check to a third person, who has forged the signature of the
payee, the loss falls upon the bank who cashed the check, and its only
remedy is against the person to whom it paid the money.”
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_______________
10 Sec. 65, par. (b). Negotiable Instruments Law (Act 2031). Every person
negotiating an instrument by delivery or by a qualified instrument warrants:
(a) x x x x x x
(b) That he has a good title to it.”
688
“An accommodation party is one who has signed the instrument as maker,
drawer, acceptor, or indorser, without receiving value therefor, and for the
purpose of lending his name to some other person. Such a person is liable on
the instrument to a holder for value, notwithstanding such holder at the time
of taking the instrument knew him to be only an accommodation party.”
Decision affirmed.
——o0o——
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