Sometime in June, 1910, one D. A. Hatfield and one D. M. Peeples borrowed from the appellant, American Savings Bank & Trust Company, the sum of $500, executing a joint note to evidence the same. At the same time and as collateral security for the payment of the note, Hatfield assigned to the bank a note payable to himself for $1,500, secured by mortgage on certain real property, purported to have been executed by A. A. Campbell and Laura H. Campbell. When the note to the appellant bank was about to mature, Peeples sought to find a purchaser for collateral note and mortgage. He took up negotiations with the respondent through his agent, Holland, and succeeded in selling the same to the respondent for practically the face value of the note. In consummation of the sale, Holland paid to the appellant bank, by a certified check, the amount due on the note of Hatfield and Peeples, and.took from the bank an assignment of the collateral note and mortgage, and paid to Peeples the difference between the amount paid on the bank’s claim and the amount he had agreed to pay for the note and mortgage. This transaction was had on September 15, 1910. Later on the same day, Holland discovered that the note and mortgage were forgeries. He thereupon sought out Peeples, and secured a return from him of the sum paid him as part of the purchase price of the note and mortgage, and made a demand upon the bank for the sum received by it, offering at the same time to return to it the note and mortgage. The bank refused to return the money, whereupon this action was begun to recover it. The action was tried in the court below without the intervention of a jury, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the respondent. The bank appeals.
*213The trial court rested its judgment on the finding that the bank knew, at the time it assigned the note and mortgage to the respondent, that the same had been forged and were fraudulent, and that the respondent did not know of the fact, but purchased the same believing they were genuine; finding, also, that he would not have purchased the note and mortgage had he known the truth concerning them. The appellant attacks these findings in this court, contending that they find no support in the record; contending, further, that the evidence shows the purchase of the note and mortgage to have been made from Peeples and Hatfield and not from the bank.
But we think the evidence justifies the conclusions reached by the trial judge. It is admitted that the bank’s officers were informed, prior to the time it made the assignment to the respondent, that the purported makers of the note and mortgage denied their genuineness; and it appears that permission had been obtained from the bank’s officers for an inspection of the original by the purported makers, and that the note and mortgage were assigned by the bank between the time the permission to inspect was obtained and the time appointed for the inspection. It may, be as the officers testify, that they had no positive information of the invalidity of the instruments; but we think, nevertheless, that they had notice sufficient to put them upon inquiry, and that their subsequent actions with reference thereto must be treated as if had with full knowledge of the facts. As to the further contention, it may be that the legal effect of the transaction was a purchase by the respondent of the note and mortgage from Hatfield; but the fact remains that a part of the purchase money was paid to the bank by respondent on the strength of his belief in the genuineness of the note and mortgage, that the bank knew that the purchase was made in consequence of that belief, and knew, moreover, that, if the bank gained by the transaction, the respondent stood to be defrauded of the amount of such gain.
*214These facts clearly justify a recovery on the part of the respondent, and it is unnecessary to pursue the inqüiry further.
The judgment is affirmed
Mount, Ellis, and Morris, JJ., concur.