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Facts:: Westmont Bank vs. Eugene Ong GR. 132560 1/30/2002

Westmont Bank allowed Eugene Ong's friend to deposit two checks made out to Ong that had forged endorsements. The friend withdrew the funds and disappeared. Ong sued Westmont Bank, arguing they were negligent for not verifying his signature before allowing the deposit and withdrawal. The court ruled that under the Negotiable Instruments Law, a forged signature is invalid and ineffective. As the collecting bank, Westmont Bank was grossly negligent for not confirming Ong's endorsement was genuine and must bear the loss.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
77 views

Facts:: Westmont Bank vs. Eugene Ong GR. 132560 1/30/2002

Westmont Bank allowed Eugene Ong's friend to deposit two checks made out to Ong that had forged endorsements. The friend withdrew the funds and disappeared. Ong sued Westmont Bank, arguing they were negligent for not verifying his signature before allowing the deposit and withdrawal. The court ruled that under the Negotiable Instruments Law, a forged signature is invalid and ineffective. As the collecting bank, Westmont Bank was grossly negligent for not confirming Ong's endorsement was genuine and must bear the loss.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Westmont Bank vs.

Eugene Ong

GR. 132560 1/30/2002

FACTS:
Respondent Eugene Ong maintained a current account with petitioner Westmont Bank
(formerly the Associated Banking Corporation). In May 1976, he sold certain shares of
stocks through Island Securities Corporation. To pay Ong, Island Securities purchased 2
Pacific Banking Corporation managers checks, both dated May 4, 1976, issued in the name
of Eugene Ong as payee. Before Ong could get hold of the checks, his friend Paciano
Tanlimco got hold of them, forged Ongs signature and deposited these with petitioner,
where Tanlimco was also a depositor. Even though Ongs specimen signature was on file,
petitioner accepted and credited both checks to the account of Tanlimco, without verifying
the signature indorsements appearing at the back thereof. Tanlimco then immediately
withdrew the money and absconded. Instead of going straight to the bank to stop or
question the payment, Ong first sought the help of Tanlimcos family to recover the
amount. Later, he reported the incident to the Central Bank, which like the first effort,
unfortunately proved futile. About 5 months from discovery of the fraud, Ong cry foul and
demanded in his complaint that petitioner pay the value of the two checks from the bank on
whose gross negligence he imputed his loss. He insisted that he did not deliver, negotiate,
endorse or transfer to any person or entity the subject checks issued to him and asserted
that the signatures on the back were spurious. Thus, he had no legal personality to sue as he
is not a real party in interest.

ISSUE: 1. WON Eugene Ong should be allowed to recover from the collecting bank.

RATIO:
1. Yes. Under Section 23 of the Negotiable Instruments Law: When a signature is forged or
made without the authority of the person whose signature it purports to be, it is wholly
inoperative, and no right to retain the instrument, or to give a discharge therefor, or to
enforce payment thereof against any party thereto, can be acquired through or under such
signature, unless the party against whom it is sought to enforce such right is precluded from
setting up the forgery or want of authority. In the case at bar, Since the signature of the
payee was forged to make it appear that he had made an indorsement in favor of the forger,
such signature should be deemed as inoperative and ineffectual. Petitioner, as the collecting
bank, grossly erred in making payment by virtue of said forged signature. The collecting
bank is liable to the payee and must bear the loss because it is its legal duty to ascertain that
the payees endorsement was genuine before cashing the check

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