85 Pa. Super. 52 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1924
Argued October 29, 1924. This is an action of assumpsit in which the statement of claim averred the following material facts: The defendant *55 was a customer of and a depositor in the plaintiff bank. On January 23, 1922, he deposited with the bank for collection checks and certificates of deposit to the amount of $6,500. Among the items deposited were two certificates of deposit, one for $1,500 and the other for $1,000, drawn and issued by the Bank of Conneautville, Pennsylvania, to one Tucker, by whom they were endorsed to the order of the defendant, who endorsed the same and deposited them with the plaintiff for collection and received credit therefor. The plaintiff promptly forwarded the certificates through its regular correspondent, the Security and Savings Trust Company of Erie, Pennsylvania, for collection. That bank credited the plaintiff's account with the amount of the certificates and forwarded them to the First National Bank of Pittsburgh, which in turn credited the amount thereof to the account of the Security and Savings Trust Company and forwarded them to the Pittsburgh branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, which credited the National Bank of Pittsburgh and promptly and in due course presented the certificates for payment to the Bank of Conneautville and accepted in payment a draft drawn by the Bank of Conneautville on its New York depository for the amount of the certificates. The draft was promptly forwarded by the Cleveland bank to the New York bank on which it was drawn; but it was returned unpaid because on January 30th, and before the draft was presented to the New York bank for payment, the Bank of Conneautville failed and made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and the assignee notified the New York depository to stop payment on all outstanding drafts of the Bank of Conneautville. Whereupon, the Cleveland bank charged the amount of $2,500 back to the account of the First National Bank of Pittsburgh, which in turn charged the same back to the account of the Security and Savings Trust Company, which in turn charged the plaintiff's account. Thereupon, the plaintiff charged same to the account of the defendant and *56 notified him thereof and demanded payment by him of his overdraft, amounting to $2,489.51, to recover which this suit was brought. The defendant filed an affidavit of defense raising a question of law. After the court below decided that question against him, he filed an affidavit of defense and a supplement affidavit of defense which averred in substance that the certificates of deposit were accepted by the plaintiff as cash; that it thereby became the owner of them; that at the time he deposited them he had no knowledge that the plaintiff bank would present them to the Bank of Conneautville through the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland for payment, nor any knowledge of the conditions and regulations of the Federal Reserve Board applicable to the First National Bank of Pittsburgh and the Security and Savings Trust Company, which are members of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, as set forth in the fifth paragraph of the statement of claim, viz: that the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland "may in its discretion send all items for payment direct to the banks on which they are drawn or to another agent for collection, and assumes no responsibility for the solvency of any collecting agents, and that it shall be held liable only when proceeds in actual funds or solvent credits shall have come into its possession." It averred further that the plaintiff had knowledge of the conditions and regulations of the Federal Reserve Board and that with full knowledge thereof sent the certificates of deposit to the Security and Savings Trust Company of Erie for collection, with full knowledge that that bank either directly or through its subagent would collect the certificates of deposit from the Bank of Conneautville through the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, subject to the conditions and regulations of the Federal Reserve Board, and further averred that the Federal Reserve Bank would have been able to obtain actual payment of the certificates of deposit in cash if it had been demanded. The court below made absolute a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of *57 defense, basing its decision on two grounds: first, that the plaintiff by accepting the deposit of the certificates did not become the owner thereof, and that the bank whose negligence caused the loss to the defendant was the agent of the depositor and not the agent of the bank; second, that the affidavit of defense did not contain a sufficient allegation of the facts to justify a conclusion that the certificates were received by the bank as cash, or that it became the owner thereof. The defendant appealed.
The first contention before us is that when the plaintiff credited the account of the defendant with the amount of the certificates of deposit it became the owner of them. It is familiar law that "when a bank credits a customer with the amount of a check, endorsed by him in blank, deposited in his account, the bank does not in the absence of a special agreement from this fact standing alone become a holder of the paper for value; the title to the check remains in the depositor..... The relation arising from such a transaction, as between the bank and the depositor, is that the former becomes the agent of the latter for the purpose of collection": National Bank of Phoenixville v. Bonsor,
The second contention is that the affidavits of defense sufficiently aver that the certificates of deposit were not received by the plaintiff for collection, but were received as cash, and that the plaintiff became the owner thereof. The averment is that the certificates were endorsed and deposited with the plaintiff and accepted by it as cash; that the amount thereof was unconditionally credited to the defendant's account; and that the plaintiff paid the checks drawn by the defendant against the account and thereby became the owner of the certificates. The statement that the certificates were accepted as cash and that the bank became the owner thereof is to aver a conclusion. All of the facts stated exist in the ordinary case of a deposit of commercial paper in a bank by its customer for collection. It is not averred that the bank agreed to buy the certificates or to accept them as cash. If there was such an agreement the time when it was made, the persons by whom it was made and all of the facts, should have been stated. If the defendant desired to raise that defense, it was his duty to state the facts so that the court could determine whether, if proved, they were sufficient to warrant the conclusion. This is familiar law. (Leuten Brick Co. v. Killen,
Lastly, it is urged that the affidavits of defense were sufficient to prevent judgment by reason of the averment that the selection by the plaintiff of the Security and Savings Trust Company of Erie was not the selection of a suitable and competent agent for transmission of the *62 certificates for collection, because the plaintiff knew that that bank would either directly or indirectly present the certificates for collection through the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, and knew that under the regulations of the Federal Reserve Board the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland could send the certificates directly to the Bank of Conneautville for collection and that the Federal Reserve Bank could accept from the drawee bank a New York draft instead of money, without incurring liability for that action. An examination of the affidavit of defense discloses that it does not aver that the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland was authorized by the rules and regulations of the Federal Reserve Board to accept from the Bank of Conneautville a New York draft instead of money. It merely avers knowledge by the plaintiff of a regulation authorizing the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, through which the plaintiff would make the collection, to send the certificates of deposit to the bank on which they were drawn, and limiting its liability to cases in which proceeds in actual funds or solvent credits shall have come into its possession. A regulation authorizing a bank to send checks for collection to the bank on which they were drawn was considered by the Supreme Court of the United States in Reserve Bank of Richmond v. Malloy, cited. It was held that such a regulation does not expressly or by implication permit a collecting agent to accept for the debt of his principal anything but money; that a check may be sent for collection to the drawee bank without entailing the necessity of remitting the amount in the form of exchange; that currency itself may be sent; and that there is nothing to prevent the sending bank from requiring the drawee to remit the currency as a condition upon which the check may be satisfied and charged to the account of the drawer. We adopt the conclusion here. That brings us to the consideration of the regulation providing that the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland shall be liable only when proceeds in actual funds or solvent credits *63 shall have come into its possession. The clear effect of this regulation is to relieve the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland of the obligation which the law imposes to collect only in money. The defendant says that the plaintiff knew of this regulation. In fact the plaintiff's statement pleads it as an excuse for the taking of the draft by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland. The question arises whether the obligation which the law imposes to collect in money may be varied by a regulation so providing and relating only to the banks inter se. The depositor is not bound by the knowledge of his agent of a regulation which provides for a variation of the settled law. On what principle of law may such a regulation bind a depositor? Clearly, only if the depositor has knowledge of the regulation when he makes his deposit. The plaintiff avers no such knowledge on the part of the defendant and the defendant denies that he had such knowledge. The plaintiff is not entitled to recover unless it alleges and proves that the defendant had knowledge of the regulation limiting the liability of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland to cases in which proceeds in actual funds came into its hands. It follows that it was error for the court below to enter judgment for the plaintiff on the pleadings.
The judgment is reversed and the record is remitted for further proceedings.
PORTER, J., dissents.