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[270 U.S. 527, 528] The Attorney General and Mr. Gardner P. Lloyd, of New York City, for the United States.
[270 U.S. 527, 530] Messrs. G. Ridgely Sappington and Charles G. Baldwin, both of Baltimore, Md., for defendant in error.
Mr. Justice HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought by the United States to recover the difference between the amount to which a check paid by it had been fraudulently raised and the amount for which the check was drawn. The case was heard upon a demurrer to the declaration and the judgment was for the defendant both in the District Court and in the Circuit Court of Appeals. 1 F.(2d) 888. The facts alleged are as follows: A disbursing clerk drew a United States Veteran's Bureau check upon the Treasurer of the United States in favor of one Beck, for $47.50. After it was issued the check was changed so as to call for $4750. Beck endorsed it to a bank of South Carolina and received the amount of the altered check. That bank endorsed it: 'Pay to the order of Any Bank, Banker, or Trust Company. All prior endorsements guaranteed, June 3, 1922,' negotiated it to the defendant, and received the same amount. The defendant endorsed the check, 'Received Payment Through the Baltimore Clearing House, Endorsements Guaranteed, June 5th, 1922,' delivered it to and received the same amount from the Baltimore Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, the agent of the plaintiff, which forwarded the check to the Treasurer of the United States and was given credit for $4,750. The Baltimore Branch had no notice of the fraudulent change.
The Government argues that acceptance or payment of a draft or check although it vouches for the signature of the drawer does not vouch for the body of the instrument, Espy v. First National Bank of Cincinnati, 18 Wall. 604; that this rule is not changed by section 62 of the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law; Article 13, section 81, Maryland Code of Public General Laws: 'The acceptor, by accepting the instrument, engages that he will pay it according to the tenor of his acceptance;' that the drawer and [270 U.S. 527, 534] drawee of the check were not the same in such sense as to charge the drawee with knowledge of the amount of the check, and that therefore the United States can recover as for money paid under a mistake of fact. The defendant urges several considerations on the other side, but it is enough to say that the last step in the Government's argument seems to us, as it did to the Circuit Court of Appeals, unsound. If the drawer and the drawee are the same the drawer cannot recover for an overpayment to an innocent payee because he is bound to know his own checks. Bank of United States v. Bank of Georgia, 10 Wheat. 333. In this case there is no doubt that in truth the check was drawn by the United States upon itself.
The Government attempts to escape from this conclusion by the fact that the hand that drew and the hand that was to pay were not the same, and some language of Chief Justice White as to what it is reasonable to require the Government to know in paying out millions of pension claims. The number of the present check was 48218587. United States v. National Exchange Bank, 29 S. Ct. 665,
Judgment affirmed.
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Citation: 270 U.S. 527
No. 222
Argued: March 16, 1926
Decided: April 12, 1926
Court: United States Supreme Court
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