Bank
may be held liable for forged cheques
High
Court Division ( Civil Original Jurisdiction)
Appeal from Original Decree No. 251 of 1999
Islami Bank and Others (Appellants)
Vs
Dewan Md. Yusuf (Respondent)
Before Mr. Justice Md. Tafazzal Islam and
Mr. Justice AHM Shamsuddin Chowdhury
Date of Judgement: 16.01. 2002
Background
AHM Shamsuddin Chowdhury J: This appeal is directed
against the original judgement and the decree dated 28-2-1999 passed
by the learned Subordinate Judge and Commercial Court No. 1, Dhaka in
Money Suit No. 3 of 1995. By his judgement the Judge granted the relief
the plaintiff asked for by way of monetary compensation to the tune
of Taka 3,52,000 (three lack fifty-two thousand) only.
The
salient facts as narrated in the plaint in this case are that the plaintiff,
who accumulated some money by dint of his hard labour in South Korea,
subsequently returned to Bangladesh with that money. On 20-2-1995 he
opened a current account in his own name at the local branch of the
defendant No. 1 bank. The plaintiff deposited a total of Taka 3,97,000
by making two deposits, on 22-2-1995. He was given a Cheque Book containing
25 pages bearing No. 1130301 to 1130325. On 22-2-1995 the plaintiff
drew a cheque in favour of one Nazrul Islam for Taka 820 on page No.
1130301 of the Cheque Book, who, instead of encashing the cheque, returned
the same to the plaintiff. On 22-3-1995 the plaintiff handed over a
cheque drawn on page no. 11303003, for Taka 3,50,000 to his mother,
Mrs. Khorsheda Aktar Gani, But the cheque was dishonoured by the defendant
No. 1 bank with a memo stating "not arranged for," and returned
on 23-2-1995. On receiving the news of the said bouncing, the plaintiff
approached the defendant No. 2 and asked for the reasons, but the said
defendant was unable to give a worthwhile explanation. A couple of correspondences,
including legal notices, and replies, were exchanged between the parties
afterwards, whereby the plaintiff claimed and the defendants refused
to pay the sum in question. In the face of the defendants' persistent
refusal to adhere to the plaintiff's request, he being left with no
alternative, filed the present suit. The learned judge after hearing
submission and analysing the evidences decreed the case in favour of
the plaintiff.
Deliberation
The learned counsel for the defendants/appellant submitted that the
bank's liability is never absolute. As long as the bank follows the
principle of "due diligence" and resorts to the required degree
of prudence, they are, in the prevailing state of the law, under no
obligation whatsoever, to account for any loss that may be incurred
by a customer in the plaintiff's position. To substantiate the claim
that the bank has taken necessary precaution, and followed the required
rules, and the expected standard of care, he submitted that the differences
in signatures were too obscure to be detected by naked eyes. On the
admitted difference as to the sizes as well as the colour of the two
sets of cheques, his contention was that the variances were so minute
that it was impossible to trace the differences without scientific aid.
He submitted that the bank took recourse to every canon of care in disbursing
the money as are done in the normal course of banking transaction.
The
learned Advocate for the plaintiff/respondent contendeding that the
bank's liability is generally absolute, and that the defences available
to a bank are out of context in the scenario of this case, submitted
that, as the differences in the signatures, in the colours and sizes
of the cheques were not immediately detectable, DW 1 would not be able
to identify the said differences so instantaneously with his bare vision.
He also submitted that the banks bear a particularly distinctive responsibility
as the custodian of the customers' money. This duty requires the banks
to be on their guard in honouring cheques. He submitted further that
in the instant case even a minimum degree of care was not taken. He
further pointed out that the number on two sets of cheques are conspicuously
different in that there is and additional letter "A" on the
forged cheques.
During
the proceedings before us we had an opportunity to examine the cheques
in question ourselves and we encountered no difficulty whatsoever to
identify the difference without any help of any apparatus. We also noted
that a minute, but not invisible, difference also existed in the colour
of the two sets of cheques. The additional letter "A", should
raise suspicion in the mind of any careful personnel involved in banking
sector.
Mr
Razzaq's submission on law point required us to travel deep into the
field of the veritable mine of authority on that point. The obligation
of the bank, so far as those cheques are concerned, which do not carry
the customers' signature at all, the liability is nothing but absolute,
subject only to the defences of estoppel, adoption or ratification.
The legal position in this respect can be succinctly portrayed by reproducing
some passages from the Privy Council's decision in the case of Tai Hing
Cotton Mills Ltd vs Liuchong Bank Ltd (1985 2 All ER 947), in which
case the judicial Committee for the Privy Council, in their decision
on the fundamental premises that 'a cheque without customer's signature
is not the customers' cheque at all'. The business of banking is not
the business of the customer but of the bank. They offer services, which
is to honour their customers' cheque when drawn on an account in credit
or within an agreed overdraft limit. If they pay out on cheques, which
are not his, they are acting outside their mandate and cannot plead
his authority in justification of their debit to his account. A customer
must obviously take care in the way he draws his cheque. And must notice
his bank as soon as he knows that a forger is committed in the account.
The observations make it clear, that if a bank pays on a cheque which
does not contain the customer's signature, the bank acts without mandate
and cannot deny liability. The only limitation on bank's liability being
based on customer's lack of care in drawing a cheque as well as on his
deliberate abstention from informing the bank of forgery as happened
in London Joint Stock Bank vs Maemillon (1918 AC 777), as well as in
Greenwood vs Marting Bank Ltd (1933 AC 51 respectively.
In
spelling out the limitation on bankers' liability, Lord Scarman, in
Tai Hing Cotton Mills case expressed the view that in the absence of
express agreement to the contrary, the duty of care owed by a customer
to his bank in the operation of his current account was limited to a
duty to refrain from drawing a cheque in such a manner as to facilitate
fraud or forgery. And a duty to inform the bank of any unauthorised
cheques purportedly drawn on the account as soon as the customer became
aware of it. And that the customer was under not a duty to take reasonable
precautions in the management of his business with the bank to prevent
forged cheques being presented for payment, nor was he under a duty
to check his periodical bank statements so as to enable him to notify
the bank of any unauthorised debited items.
The
Supreme Court of India in Canara Bank vs Canara Sales Corporation and
other (AIR) 1987 SC 1603) approving of the ratio in Tai Hing Cotton
Mills Ltd case in toto. The court stated that whenever a cheque purporting
to be by a customer is presented before a bank it carries a mandate
to the bank to pay. And if the signature on a cheque is a forged one,
it is not the customers' signature and hence, that cheque carries no
such mandate. And as such, the bank can, in such a case, escape liability
only if it can establish knowledge of the customer about the forgery
in the cheque. And that inaction for continuously long period, cannot
by itself, afford a satisfactory ground for the bank to escape liability.
Having
analysed the above legal position as enunciated by preponderance of
authorities, we are unable to be swayed by Mr Razzaq's submission, rhetoric
though it was, that the banks responsibility goes no further than adhering
to the general duty of care in comparing the signatures in the normal
way. And that the bank incurs no liability if it pays on a cheque does
not bear the customer's signature, the liability, subject to the defence
of estoppel, ratification and adoption, none of which falls within the
context of the factual state of the present case, the bank's obligation
is rather an absolute one. The protection as afforded by section 85
of the negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, in respect of payment made
in 'due to course" as defined by section 10 of the said Act, is
relevant only in Macmillan (Supra) type situation, namely, where undetectable
material alternation is caused to a cheque which does, nevertheless,
contain customer's signature.
Mr
Razzaq, when he argued that bank's liability is not absolute, possibly
had sections 10, 85, 87, 88 and 89 of the Negotiable Instruments Act
1881, and the principle of payment "in due course" as is contemplated
by section 85 of the said Act, in mind. But a cheque form, which, when
drawn, is a bill of exchange, cannot attract section 5 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act, as it pre-requires such a cheque to be "signed
by the customer". This follows that none of the provisions of the
said Act can be canvassed in aid by the bankers in respect to a cheque
which does not satisfy section 5 as stated above. Provisions of the
said Act can be availed only in a situation like that of Macmillan case
(Supra), such as, where the amount in the cheque from, which contains
customer's actual signature is enhanced by forgery. But that is not
the case before us.
As
to Mr Razzaq's submission that the plaintiff himself was a functionary
in the process of forgery, we have to say that there is nothing in the
evidence to back up the accusation that the plaintiff was instrumental
to such a horrendous mischief. Mr Razzak may be right, he may not be.
None can dwell on speculation in the absence of concrete evidence. Not
only that the burden of proving alleged fraud and deceit falls squarely
and vertically on the bank, because of the rule "Probandi necessitas
incumbit illi qui agit,". But also, as the House of Lords unequivocally
ordained in the widely acclaimed case of R vs Secretary of State for
Home Department ex parle Khawja and Khera, 1984, AC 74, that although
all questions in a civil case are to be determined on preponderance
of probability, an allegation of criminal nature in a civil case is
to be proved with a higher degree of probability.
Apart
from the legal aspect discussed above, we must also make it clear that
the fate of this appeal would not have been any different even if the
legal position were otherwise, for, the weight of evidence is overwhelming
to dispel the contention that the bank officials resorted to practicable
degree of diligence and that the forgery was not detectable without
the aid of scientific device.
Decision
Having perused the papers and the evidence and analysed the legal position
as above, we are in no hesitancy to hold that nothing would justify
our interference to disturb the judgement and the decree passed by the
learned Court below. In view of above the appeal is dismissed without
any order as to cost.
Advocate
Abdur Razzaq with Advocate Shafiul Alam Mahmood for the appellants;
Advocate Syed AB Mahmudul Huq with Syed Mahmudul Ahsan, for the respondent.