The salient agreed facts in this submitted controversy are these: During the year 1910, the Van Keuren & Thornton Company, a domestic corporation, was engaged in the business of buying, selling and converting cotton fabrics, its principal place of business being at 20 Thomas street, borough of Manhattan. The company’s treasurer was one Vanderoef, who by resolution of the board of directors was “ empowered to execute contracts or other obligations, sign or endorse checks, notes or drafts, and otherwise perform the u'sual duties pertaining to the office of treasurer.” A copy of. the resolution was on file with the Corn Exchange Bank of New York city, where the company had its account. On May 5, 1910, Vanderoef applied at the office of the steamship company for a passage ticket from Rotterdam to New York on one of its steamships to sail August 13,1910, for a Mrs. Johnson *606and party of three persons. At this time he made a deposit of $100 in cash on account of the purchase price of the ticket, which was $600. Subsequently, on May 23, 1910, by a letter upon which were engraved the words “ 20 Thomas Street,” which letter was signed “ P. G. Vanderoef,” the steamship line was advised of the names of the persons for whom the passage was desired. On June 15, 1910, Vanderoef delivered to the steamship company in payment of the balance of the purchase price of the ticket a check of the Van Keuren & Thornton Company for $500, drawn upon the Corn Exchange Bank by himself as treasurer, payable to his own order, which he indorsed to the order of the steamship company. On the same day the check was deposited by the steamship company to its account in the Produce Exchange Bank, and on June 17, 1910, it was paid by the Corn Exchange Bank out of the funds of the Van Keuren & Thornton Company. On August 13, 1910, the steamship line accepted Mrs. Johnson and party as passengers on its steamship Nieuw Amsterdam at Rotterdam and transported them to New York. The steamship company did not make any inquiry of any officer, agent or director of the Van Keuren & Thornton Company as to the business and purpose for which said check was used by Vanderoef further than to make a prompt presentation thereof to the bank upon which it was drawn in the usual course. At the time of the drawing of the said check Vanderoef was in good standing in the business community, but in December, 1911, he confessed to the crime of grand larceny of various sums of money from the Van Keuren & Thornton Company and was subsequently sentenced to imprisonment for a term of years in Sing Sing prison. No demand for the return of the money represented by this check was made upon the steamship line until May 16, 1916. ■ J
Plaintiffs are right in their contention that the defendant was put on inquiry as to Vanderoef s authority to negotiate the check in payment of his personal indebtedness; not, however, because the check was payable to his own order, but because the circumstances clearly indicated that the transaction was for Vanderoefs personal benefit and because the defendant participated in the diversion by using the check in its own business and for its profit. (Ward v. City Trust Co., *607192 N. Y. 61; Bischoff v. Yorkville Bank, 218 id. 106.) Defendant contends, however, that if any duty of inquiry existed, it sufficiently performed its duty when it presented the check to the Van Keuren & Thornton Company’s bank for collection, citing Havana Central R. R. Co. v. Knickerbocker Trust Co. (198 N. Y. 422). That case is essentially different, for the Knickerbocker Trust Company, whose position is claimed to have been similar to that of this defendant, did not receive the unauthorized check from the wrongdoer in payment of his debt to it, a transaction suspicious on its face, unusual and clearly requiring express authorization. Furthermore, the defendant would only be entitled to benefit by such inquiries as the paying bank was bound to prosecute, and it cannot be said that a bank is bound to inquire for the authorization of the treasurer of a corporation to draw the corporation’s check to his own order when there is on file with the bank a resolution of the board of directors of such corporation giving the treasurer the usual general authority to draw and indorse checks. A corporation’s business might frequently require checks to be drawn to the order of one of its officers. Where, for example, an officer traveled as a purchasing agent and required large sums of money for such purposes, certified checks to the order of the officer, readily cashed in any business community, would be a safe and natural way of carrying money to be used in the company’s business. It would be an intolerable burden on business to require an inquiry to be prosecuted as to the purposes or legitimacy of the transaction before a bank would be authorized to honor a check, either by payment or. certification, entirely regular upon its face and signed by a duly authorized officer. Where there are any circumstances indicating that the check is being used or is intended to be used for the officer’s personal benefit, or where the bank in any way participates in the diversion, to its own benefit, the duty of inquiry exists, but the rule should not be unreasonably extended so as to clog business, especially where it is so easy for corporations to protect themselves by strictly limiting the authority given to draw and indorse their checks. Therefore, the defendant can claim no benefit . by relying upon the possible results of an inquiry which the paying bank was not obligated to make.
*608Nevertheless, the facts in this particular case are such as to prevent the plaintiffs from recovering. The passage ticket would never have been issued but for the negligence of the Van Keuren & Thornton Company. It will be noted that while the check was delivered to the defendant on June fifteenth, the passage purchased was for August thirteenth. Although the circumstances were such as to put the defendant on inquiry, it might naturally have assumed that if the transaction were in fact unauthorized, Vanderoeffs lack of authority would develop long before the passage ticket would become effective. So it would have, if the Van Keuren &• Thornton Company had employed ordinary safeguards in auditing or checking up its treasurer’s accounts. This company permitted its canceled checks to be returned to the treasurer who drew them. In such case ordinary business prudence required that some other person should examine them. On or about July 1, 1910, the Van Keuren & Thornton Company’s pass book in the Corn Exchange Bank was balanced and the canceled check dated June 15, 1910, was returned to the company. If these checks had been properly audited at any time within seven weeks thereafter, the diversion would have been discovered in time to enable the defendant to cancel the ticket. Apparently no system of audit was employed, for the fact of the diversion was not discovered until December of the following year. Both parties being innocent, this is a. proper case to lay the loss on the party whose negligence enabled the dishonest treasurer to perpetrate the fraud. Accordingly the defendant is entitled to judgment dismissing the case upon the merits.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Smith and Page, JJ., concurred.
Judgment ordered for defendant as stated in opinion. Order to be settled on notice.