106 Ky. 788 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court.
Cole & Rigsby bad money deposited to their credit in the appellant bank, and they drew a check on it for $100;
The bank filed an answer, in Which it admitted that it had received the check, and averred that “it mailed to him, at Swampton, Ivy., the amount of said check, in currency, by placing same in an envelope addressed to John Conlee, Swampton, Magoffin county, Ky., and putting the necessary amount of stamps on same and placing same in the mail box of the postoffice at Clay City, Ky.”
It will be observed that it is not averred in the answer’ that the envelope containing the money was sent as a registered package. The plaintiff replied to the effect that, if the money was sent at all it was not by registered package. Subsequently the plaintiff filed an amended reply, in which he stated the defendant either did not mail to him the money as averred in the answer, or, if it did do so in the manner claimed in the answer, it neglected to send the same by registered letter; that one of these statements was true, but he did not know which one.
Under section 113, Civil Code of Practice, it was proper to plead in the alternative, as was done in this case, provided the amended reply was not a departure from the original cause of action. A departure in a subsequent pleading is not permissible at common law; neither is it under our Code of Practice.' The cause of action here was the alleged failure to pay the money on the check. The
We are of the opinion that it was the duty of the bank to have delivered the package to the postoffice, and have taken a receipt for it. If a receipt had been taken, then there would have been no difficulty in showing that the package was actually deposited in the postoffice. The taking of a receipt for the package was as much its duty as to have deposited the money; and its failure to do so appears to have been the proximate cause of the loss, if the money was deposited there as claimed by the bank. If a receipt had been taken, then the postmaster would have been compelled to show that he delivered the money to the carrier whose duty it was to take it to the next postoffice, where a record would have been made of it. In the first place, we do not think the evidence of the defendant wás sufficient to exonerate it from liability to the plaintiff for the amount of the check.
The judgment is affirmed.