8 W. Va. 500 | W. Va. | 1875
This is an action of assumpsit brought and determined in the circuit court of the county of Ohio, and is brought
“$600.00 May 29, 1868.
Two years after date, we or either of us promise to pay Dr. J. Ii. Cox, or order, the sum of six hundred dollars, for value received.
H. Boose, J. W. Ferrell,
S. S. Jacob, Vm. IT. Anderson.
John C. Ferris, J. A. Curtis,
John IT. Montgomery, Peter Delaplaine,
A. M. McColloch, Jr.”
That said note was given in consideration of money loaned ($600) for the use and benefit of the Masonic Lodge at West Liberty, Ohio county, West Virginia, of which the defendants were members. About the time the note matured, the interest was paid thereon by the Lodge for two years, and $65 upon the principal. In December, 1870, negotiations took place between the plaintiff -and the defendants as to the payment of the note, by which it was agreed that the Masonic Lodge would pay to the plaintiff, by the 27th day of that month, $535.00, the principal then due on the note, upon the receipt of which the plaintiff was to deliver up the note on the Lodge, and look to the Lodge for the payment of the remaining interest then due on the note which the Lodge was to pay him, but no time was mentioned when the interest was to be paid, but it was to stand until such time as the Lodge could pay it. The money was not paid on the 27th day of December, 1870. The defendant, Samuel S. Jacob, one of the makers of the note,
“Fo.- Wheeling, February 22,1871.
Wheeling Savings Institution lay to Dr. John H. Cox or order five hundred and thirty-five dollars (Masonic money). S. S. Jacob, Sec.”
Byles in his work on Bills, 5 Am. ed. 92, says: “We have already observed that checks are in legal effect inland bills of exchange, payable to bearer on demand, and we shall hereafter see that an ordinary bill of exchange, payable on demand, must be presented for payment, or if the parties live at a distance, forwarded for presentment within a reasonable time, which is generally held to comprehend the day after it is issued. Such also is the general rule as to the presentment of checks.” “The result of the cases,” says Tindal, C. J., Rickford v. Ridge to Boddington v. Schlencker, “is, that the party receiving a check has till the following day to present it, where there are the ordinary means of doing so. Formerly it was held, that the check must be presented on the morning of the next day ; it is now, however, firmly established, that the holder has the whole of the banking hours of the next day within which to present it. But there is one material difference between the liability of the drawer of a check and the drawer of a bill pajra-ble on demand. The drawer of a check is not discharged by the holder’s failure to present in due time, unless the drawer has sustained, from the delay, actual prejudice, as by the failure of the banker. The check is an absolute appropriation of a sum of money in the banker’s hands to lie till called for; but by the delay the holder takes the risk of the bank’s failure.” On page 94 he says further: “If the party receiving the check from the drawer do not live in the same place with the drawee, he should send it to his banker or other agent by the next day’s
“1. A check upon a bank niust be presented for payment in a reasonable time,, in order to charge the drawer.”
“2. If a check is presented for payment, and payment-refused, and notice is given to the holder at any reasonable time before the bank fails, the drawer is not discharged, if it be shown that he is not prejudiced by the delay; and if prejudiced he is only discharged pro tanto.”
“3. If the holder of a check fails to present it for payment, when he might do it, until after the bank fails,, the drawer is not responsible, if he had funds in the bank for its pajnnent.”
This is part of the syllabus of the case, as reported. In Bell v. Alexander, 21 Gratt. 1, it was held that “B is not-relieved from the payment of a check by the delay of A to present it; and in any case he would only be relieved to the extent that he was injured by the delay.”
The first question to be considered in this case is, was the plaintiff guilty of negligence under the facts proven and the law in not sending the check to his banker or agent in Wheeling by the mail which closed the morning
In the cáse at bar the Institution failed and ceased payment and closed its doors about 12 o’clock at noon and before the close of banking hours, and on the same evening made a “general assignment of all its assets” to an assignee in trust for the benefit of its creditors of whom the drawer in this case ivas one. Under the 'facts proven in this- cause it cannot be said that the drawer was prejudiced by the failure of the .plaintiff to present the check after the institution had failed, closed its doors and made a general assignment, and ceased to do business — prima fade, at least, the drawer was not injured.
It is not sufficiently shown that the check was received by the plaintiff in satisfaction of his debt against the defendants, or that it was agreed that he should so receive it. I. apprehend the most that can be said in reference to this subject is that the plaintiff took the check as a conditional payment or collateral-security, which was to'be
For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the said circuit court rendered in this cause on the 21st day of January, 1875, must be reversed and the plaintiff in error recover against the defendants in error his costs in this Court in this cause expended. And this Court proceeding to render such judgment as the said circuit court ought to have rendered, upon the facts proven before it, and as certified to this Court, it is considered that the plaintiff recover against the defendants the sum of $-, together with his costs about the prosecution of this suit expended.
Judgment Reveesed and Judgment Rendered-BY ArPELLATE COURT, FOR PLAINTIFF BELOW.