107 N.E. 693 | NY | 1915
The plaintiff, the Carnegie Trust Company, is insolvent and in liquidation. It was closed by the superintendent of banks on January 7, 1911. One of its correspondents was the German National Bank of Cincinnati, Ohio. It had sent checks or drafts to that bank for collection. On January 5, 1911, the bank in Cincinnati had collected $2,953.92. To remit the proceeds, it sent the plaintiff its check for that amount drawn on the defendant, the First National Bank of the city of New York. It did not know at that time that the plaintiff was insolvent. When it made the remittance, it had on deposit with the plaintiff in New York an amount largely in excess of the collections which it had made as the plaintiff's correspondent. The superintendent of banks, on taking possession of the plaintiff's assets, found in the mail the check for $2,953.92. He presented it to the defendant, and the defendant certified it. Later in the day the German National Bank of Cincinnati learned of the plaintiff's insolvency. It promptly telegraphed the defendant that payment of the check must be stopped. The defendant, having already certified the check, gave notice of these instructions to the superintendent of banks. It informed him that the bank in Cincinnati claimed the right to offset the check against its deposit with the trust company. The check was afterwards presented *304 to the defendant for payment, and payment was refused. This action is brought on the defendant's contract of certification.
Two questions have been argued at our bar. The first is whether the German Bank in Cincinnati had the right before it made the remittance to apply the collections against its deposit with the plaintiff. The second is whether the failure of the bank in Cincinnati to take advantage of a right of set-off, entitles the defendant to refuse payment of a check which it has certified.
For the purpose of this appeal, we assume, though we do not find it necessary to hold, that the first of these questions should be answered in favor of the defendant. On the one side, it is insisted that the right to apply one liability in cancellation of the other may be deduced from the principles of equitable set-off (Scott v. Armstrong,
Whatever right the bank in Cincinnati may once have *305
had, either because of its lien, or by force of the rules of equitable set-off, to hold the collections as security for its deposit, was lost when the defendant certified the check. A new set of relations sprang up with that act. The drawer of the check was discharged from liability (First Nat Bank of Jersey City v.Leach,
Any other conclusion would be destructive of the value and efficiency of certified checks. By common use such checks are treated for most purposes as the equivalent of cash (White v.Eiseman,
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and that of the Trial Term affirmed, with costs in all courts.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., HISCOCK, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK and MILLER, JJ., concur; WERNER, J., absent.
Judgment accordingly. *308