
    Samuel Mitchell, Respondent, v. The Security Bank, Appellant.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term, First Department,
    May, 1914.)
    Negotiable instruments — bills, notes and checks — notice to stop payment on check — liability of bank.
    A cheek is a mere order on a hank to pay from the depositor’s account according to the instructions therein contained, and may be revoked by the drawer at any time before payment or certification.
    A notice to stop payment on a cheek for $196.76, dated December 21, 1910, payable to a designated person, does not describe with sufficient accuracy a check for $196.75, dated December 23, 1910, and payable to bearer, so as to render the bank liable to the drawer for paying it.
    
      Appeal from a judgment of the Municipal Court'of the city of New York, borough of Manhattan, first district, entered in favor of the plaintiff after a trial by the court without a jury.
    I. Gainsburg (Henry Pearlman, of counsel), for appellant.
    Hirschman & Drucker (Edward W. Drucker, of counsel), for respondent.
   Page, J.

Plaintiff claims that on December 21,1910, his bookkeeper drew a check number 4028 for $196.76 which the plaintiff signed and caused to be mailed to the firm of Helfand & Abel to whom he owed the said sum. On the morning of December 22, 1910, Helfand & Abel telephoned to the plaintiff and informed him that their mail box had been robbed the night before and asked him to stop payment on any check he might have sent them through the mail. The plaintiff then called the manager of the defendant bank on the phone and told him of the robbery and instructed him to stop payment on check number 4028 drawn by him for $196.76 to the order of Helfand & Abel, dated December 21, 1910. The manager, after inquiry, told him that the check had not yet been paid and payment would be stopped and instructed him to send a written stop order, and plaintiff thereupon sent the following :•

New York, 12/22/10.
“ Fourteenth Street Bank,
“ City:
Gentlemen.— Kindly stop payment of check made out to the order of Messers Helfand & Abel No. 4028 amount $196.76 dated Dec. 21st 10, and oblige,
"Yours very truly,
Samuel Mitchell.”

At the end of the month plaintiff received his returned checks and found charged against him check number 4028 dated December 23, 1910, payable to bearer for $196.75. The check was- stamped by the bank as paid December 22, 1910.

The plaintiff brings this action to recover the amount of the check from the bank upon two distinct theories. First, he asserts, and he and his bookkeeper .testify, that when the check was signed it was payable to Helfand & Abel for $196.76 and dated December 21, 1910, but that before presentment the check had been washed ” and altered and was therefore a forgery. Secondly, he asserts that since the check as presented was dated December 23, 1910, defendant had no right to pay it on December 22, 1910, and that payment on the check was stopped by him before it became due or had been paid.

As to the alteration of the check, I am of the opinion that the weight of evidence is against the plaintiff. It was drawn on safety paper which turns white if washed with acid, yet it shows not the slightest trace of any alteration. Furthermore, it is inconceivable that the thief in altering the check so as to present it for payment on December 22, 1910, would have changed the date and made it a post-dated check, a circumstance which would be likely to arouse suspicion and also changed the amount, making it one cent less. But the question still remains whether the defendant was guilty of negligence in paying the check after the instructions it had received as to stopping payment. Since the check was dated December 23, 1910, and was not legally payable until that date, if the notice to stop payment given on the twenty-second had exactly corresponded with the check there could be no question but that the payment was unauthorized and the defendant liable. A check is a mere order upon the bank to pay from the depositor’s account according to the instructions therein contained and is subject to revocation by the drawer at any time before it has been paid or certified • by the bank. Where a drawer notifies a bank to stop payment on a check his notification must be explicit and describe the check with reasonable accuracy. The check presented corresponded with the notification in only one, and that the least important particular, to wit, its number. The notice was to stop payment on a check “dated Dee. 21st 10.” The one paid was dated “ Dec. 23rd 1910.” The notice specified a check payable to ‘ ‘ Helfand & Abel. ’ ’ The one paid was payable to ‘bearer. ’ ’ The notice stated the amount to be $196.76. The amount in the check paid was $196.75.' I am of opinion that the notice to the bank to stop payment did not describe the check with sufficient accuracy to render the bank liable to the drawer for paying it. It is not necessary to discuss the effect of the payment on December 22, 1910, of the check dated December 23, 1910, for there is no allegation in the complaint with respect thereto and hence the questions discussed, by counsel for respondent on that proposition are without the issues.

Guy and Whitaker, JJ., concur.

Judgment reversed and new trial granted, with costs to" appellant to abide event.  