15 N.W.2d 819 | Wis. | 1944
Garnishment action commenced February 25, 1942, by the Blatz Brewing Company against Richardson Richardson, Inc., principal defendant, and the Marshall Ilsley Bank, garnishee defendant. The Bank of California, National Association, was interpleaded. Judgment in favor of interpleaded defendant. Plaintiff appeals.
The action was tried to the court which found that the garnishee defendant was not liable to the principal and granted judgment in favor of the Bank of California, National Association, and releasing garnishee defendant, Marshall Ilsley Bank from liability.
The defendant Richardson Richardson, Inc., of San Francisco, sold a carload of hops to plaintiff, Blatz Brewing Company of Milwaukee, for the net invoice price of $7,831.82 and drew a sight draft upon the Blatz Company, dated February 17, 1942, for said sum, attaching thereto a bill of lading. The draft was made payable to the. Bank of California, National Association, of San Francisco, the interpleaded defendant. The draft was taken by Richardson Richardson to the bank and upon a usual and customary *569 deposit slip issued by the bank, the amount of the draft was entered and the notation "for discount and collection" made. A. J. Mayman, assistant cashier, then approved the draft by initialing it with the letter "M." Credit was given the account of the Richardson firm for the full amount of the draft. The Richardson firm immediately availed itself of the credit and directly withdrew the entire amount for which credit had been given. The draft was sent by the California bank to its Chicago correspondent who forwarded the item for collection to the Marshall Ilsley Bank, the garnishee defendant. The draft was received at Milwaukee and was paid on February 25th, by the plaintiff. On the same day plaintiff began its suit in garnishment and attached the proceeds of the draft in the hands of the Marshall Ilsley Bank. Subsequently, plaintiff in the principal action recovered judgment against Richardson Richardson in the sum of $20,957.36. The right of appellant to recover in the garnishee action depends solely on whether the principal defendant, Richardson Richardson, Inc., retained title to the draft in its negotiations with the bank. The intervening defendant, the respondent here, showed to the satisfaction of the trial court that the transaction was one of purchase and transfer of the draft and that a debtor-creditor relationship arose between the bank and the Richardson firm.
The trial court was of the opinion that by the weight of authority a draft deposited by a customer who receives credit from the bank as cash and against which the customer is given the immediate right to draw, in the absence of any understanding *570
as to how that deposit shall be treated or proof of circumstances from which a different understanding may be inferred, takes the title out of the customer and passes it to the bank. Support for that doctrine is found in Acme Hay Mill Feed Co. v. Metropolitan National Bank of Minneapolis
(1924),
In the Thomas Case, supra, plaintiff purchased two carloads of potatoes from the Produce Exchange of Maryland. On the day of shipment the Produce Exchange drew its draft upon plaintiff in favor of the Citizens National Bank of Pocomoke City, Maryland. The Citizens bank credited the Produce Exchange in the passbook with the amount of the draft when it was issued and delivered by the Produce Exchange. The Maryland bank sent the draft to the Kellogg bank in Green Bay for collection and it was paid by the McCartney bank which had previously received a check from Thomas for the amount of the draft. Thomas then garnisheed the funds in the Kellogg bank. This court there followed the majority rule and held that the transaction constituted a sale of the draft and that the funds belonged to the Citizens Bank of Maryland and not to the drawer of the draft.
The negotiations making up the transaction now before us occurred in California which follows the majority rule.Plumas County v. Bank of Rideout (1913),
Appellant contends that sec. 16c1 of the Bank Act of California changes this rule so as to compel banks to act as agents of depositors in forwarding checks for collection in the absence of a written agreement between the parties changing that relationship. However, in Bank of America v.Universal Finance Co. (1933)
"We fail to see anything in section 16c or in the history leading up to its adoption which makes the last-mentioned provision a declaration of public policy, as urged by appellant, requiring us to hold that the provisions of the section can only be changed by an agreement in writing. We observe no reason why the written checks drawn by the Sammis-McBrien Company on the account containing the deposit of the check issued by appellant (at a time when there was an insufficient balance in said bank to pay the same without giving credit for such check), together with the circumstance of the *572 acceptance of the checks by the bank and payment thereof, does not constitute as high an order of evidence as any `agreement in writing' between the parties could possibly be, and it might well be treated as such an agreement, changing the relationship from that of principal and agent to that of debtor and creditor."
In the present action, the giving of credit for the amount of the draft and the privilege to draw against it was also sufficient to change the relationship of the parties to that of debtor and creditor.
The minority rule, followed in Bromfield v. Cochran
(1929),
In Davies Vincent v. Bank of Commerce (1925),
It is difficult to lay down any positive rules by which the intent of the parties to such a transaction may be determined. Much of the difficulty is perhaps due to the fact that the parties to the transaction have followed a customary course of conduct without ever expressing an intention to treat the deposit of such drafts in any particular way. But a deposit and the giving of immediate credit seems to suggest more strongly the passing of title to the item and the creation of a debtor-creditor relation than to indicate the relation of principal and agent for collection. The facts in one case, of course, may vary so from those in another, that the trier of fact must reach his conclusion from all the testimony. If the conclusion he comes to is a logical deduction from circumstances, the appellate court must abide by it.
Thus, where the draft was subject to deduction for the amount of freight, the court in First National Bank of Roswellv. Smith Bros. Grain Co. (1925 Tex. Civ. App.)
The rule referred to as the majority rule is, then, in the nature of a presumption which comes into play when a draft is deposited in the bank and the depositor is given immediate *574 credit. It operates in the absence of agreement or facts and circumstances from which a contrary intention of the parties can be found.
The ultimate query is whether the evidence of the circumstances surrounding the transaction and the treatment of the draft item in the account books of the California bank so definitely established the intention of the parties to treat the draft as for collection as to overturn the trial court's finding to the contrary.
The evidence shows that when the employee of the Richardson firm took the draft to the bank she made the notation "For discount and collection" on the deposit slip. The deposit slip also had printed on it in the left-hand corner the following:
"In receiving items for deposit or collection, this bank acts only as depositor's collecting agent and assumes no responsibility beyond the exercise of due care. All items are credited subject to final payment in cash or solvent credits. This bank will not be liable for default or negligence of its duly selected correspondents nor for losses in transit, and each correspondent so selected shall not be liable except for its own negligence. This bank or its correspondents may send items, directly or indirectly, to any bank including the payor, and accept its draft or credit as conditional payment in lieu of cash; it may charge back any item at any time before final payment, regardless of whether or not the item itself can be returned, also any item drawn on this bank not good at close of business on day deposited."
It also appears that the bank did not charge interest till after the draft was honored and that subsequent to commencement of the garnishment action it charged to the account of the Richardson firm $1.05 for a phone call and $.75 for a telegram notifying the firm of the action. It was also a custom of the bank and appeared on the front cover of depositor's passbook that any credit allowed for the items was only provisional and until proceeds are actually received by the *575
bank, such items may be charged back to the depositor's account regardless of whether or not the item itself could be returned. The appellant argues that these circumstances, especially the notation on the bank passbook and the deposit slip, giving the right of charge-back to the bank indicate that the transaction was one for collection, the bank merely becoming the depositor's agent. The appellant maintains also that since the bill of lading and detailed invoice were attached to the draft so that the bank knew the hops must meet certain specifications if the draft was to be honored, the inference would be that the bank would not risk purchase of the draft but had merely taken it for collection. However, the right of charge-back cannot indicate the intention of the parties to treat the item as one for collection only, since the bank is only expressing its right to compel repayment by the drawer in case of the draft's dishonor. See Holmes Barnes v.Shawnee Milling Co. (1926.)
On the other hand, and in support of the conclusion reached by the trial court, the passbook in which the amount of the draft was credited had one section in which items "For collection" were listed, and the draft involved in this action was not so listed, although other entries for collection did appear. It also appears that it was the, duty of the cashier who handled the draft to deal only with discount transactions. And he testified positively that had the transaction been one for collection, it would not have gone through his hands. Forms used in the accounting system were of two kinds, one used for *576 collection items and one form used for discount transactions. This draft appears on the forms used for discount transactions.
From an examination of this evidence, it is considered that the trial court's finding that "it was the intention of Messrs. Richardson Richardson and the Bank of California, National Association, at the time of the original transaction, that the ownership of the draft was to pass to the. Bank of California, National Association, when the Bank of California credited the account of Richardson Richardson with $7,831.82, the bank at the time permitting the depositor to immediately make substantial withdrawals from the amount deposited to its credit" cannot be set aside.
The bank, having taken title to the draft, the proceeds thereof are not subject to garnishment by the appellant.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Liability of forwarding bank. . . . Until the proceeds of any check, note or other instrument providing for the payment of money shall have been actually received by the bank allowing such credit, in actual money, or in solvent credit on the books of any federal reserve bank, or on the books of any bank designated as a depositary by the forwarding bank, such check, note or other instrument may be charged back to, or collected from, the depositor from whom it was received regardless of whether or not the check, note or other instrument itself can be returned. . . .
Any provision of this section may be modified or set aside by an agreement in writing between any such bank and any party from whom any check, note or other instrument is received for collection, deposit, or other purpose.