18 Ind. App. 220 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1897
The court below, at the request of appellant, rendered a special finding of facts with its conclusion of law thereon, and the correctness of the conclusion is questioned by the assignment of errors. The appellant has also assigned as errors the overruling of his demurrer to the second paragraph of reply, and the overruling of his motion for a new trial.
It is urged in argument that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain the finding; but upon examination we find that the evidence, without conflict therein, sustained the finding.
The court stated the facts in substance as follows: On the 23d and 24th of November, 1894, the appellee was the legally elected, acting, and qualified treasurer of Jay county, and was engaged in collecting taxes for said county at the treasurers office in the city of Portland, in said county. On said 23d day of November, the appellant was indebted to said county for taxes in the sum of |191.93, and on that day at said office he asked and received of the appellee, as such treasurer, the appellant’s tax receipts covering said sum, and at the same time, and to pay his said taxes,
In Morse on Banks and Banking, section 543, it is said: “The presumption is that a check is only intended as conditional payment, and if dishonored, and the holder is not guilty of laches, causing loss to thé drawer, the latter is liable upon the original cause, or debt for which the check was given.”
In Boyd v. Olvey, 82 Ind. 294, it was remarked: “Ordinarily, checks do not extinguish debts; if paid they have this effect, otherwise not. * * * We have already seen that bank notes accepted without objection constitute full payment, and we find it equally well settled that a check does not.”
n Born v. First National Bank, 123 Ind. 78, it is said: “In accepting a check instead of money, the creditor dispenses with the necessity of payment in the legal mode, and the reasonable implication is that the check shall be a payment only in the event that it is honored on presentation.” It is further said, that “as only money is payment when there is no express agreement,
It was said in Sutton v. Baldwin, 146 Ind. 361, 364: “The general rule is that a check delivered by a debtor to his creditor does not extinguish the debt for which it is given. If such check is paid, it extinguishes the debt, otherwise not.”
In the case last mentioned it was said, that a check may be given and received, by agreement of the parties, as payment of a debt; that the debt for which it is so given is thereby extinguished, and that in such case, if the check is not paid for any reason, the right of action is on the check, and not on the obligation or indebtedness for which it was given.
In Fleig v. Sleet, 43 Ohio St. 53, it was held, that there is no difference between the case of payment of an account by the debtor’s own check on a bank where he has neither funds nor credit, and the case where the debtor indorses to his creditor a worthless check drawn by a third person who has no funds subject to its payment; and it was said: “In the hands of the debtor before indorsement it was without value. * * * Between the debtor and creditor there is an accord, but no satisfaction. In law, it is like payment in counterfeit money, or broken bank bills. The claim thus intended to be paid remains a subsisting .cause of action.” .
In the case at bar, it does not appear from the finding that there was an agreement that the check in
The burden was upon the appellant to overcome the presumption that the delivery and acceptance of the check constituted merely a conditional payment, and the facts do not indicate an absolute payment.
The bank gave the credit for the amount of the check to the appellee, not by way of honoring the check, or through reliance upon it drawers, but conditionally and temporarily by way of indulgence and accommodation to the appellee himself. The check was not at any time honored by the bank.
It was allowable and proper, for the appellee to treat the check as a mere nullity, and to bring his action, as he did, upon the original indebtedness in the form of a common count for money paid by the appellee for the appellant at his special instance and request, with a bill of particulars.
The answer contained, besides a general denial, a plea of payment stated generally, and a further answer. of payment by said check, it béing alleged that it was accepted in full payment and satisfaction of the claim for taxes, and that on presentation to the bank, it was accepted by the bank, and that the amount thereof was placed to the credit of the appellee on the books of the bank and on the appellee’s deposit book.
The first paragraph of reply was a general denial. In the second paragraph of reply the facts were set out in substance as shown in the special finding.
A separate consideration of the ruling on the de
In has been held that errors in overruling demurrers to pleadings, where there is a special finding or a special verdict, are not material, inasmuch as a correct conclusion of the law upon the facts found, it is said, would correct the errors, if any, in the overruling of the demurrers. Woodward v. Mitchell, 140 Ind. 406; Ross v. Banta, 140 Ind. 120; State, ex rel., v. Vogel, 117 Ind. 188; Louisville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Downey, ante, 140.
It is urged against the second paragraph of reply that it was a departure. But we think this objection not well taken. It did not set up the check as a cause of action instead of the implied contract counted upon in the complaint, but it showed by its averments that the alleged payment set up in the answer was not in truth a payment and satisfaction of the claim declared upon in the complaint.
If the reply amounted only to an argumentative denial, the overruling of the demurrer would not, for such reason, be available error.
The judgment is affirmed.
Wiley and Robinson, JJ., absent.