18 Ga. App. 377 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1916
The Empire Cotton Oil Company sued O. D. Sellars for $362 and interest, alleged to be due for cottonseed meal. The defendant filed a plea of payment, setting up that on a day named, prior to the commencement of the suit, he paid the amount sued for; that the plaintiff shipped the meal and drew on him, through the Bank of Whigham, Georgia, for the purchase-price, attaching the draft to the.bill of lading, and he paid this draft to the bank and received from the bank the bill of lading attached thereto. The case was submitted to the presiding judge, without the intervention of a jury, upon the following agreed statement of facts, with the right of direct exception reserved to both parties. The agreed statement of facts was as' follows: “The plaintiff shipped to the defendant, on February 8, 1915, a car of meal, as set forth in the petition. Said ear was shipped ‘ order notify,’ and a draft, with the bill of lading attached, for the sum of $362 was placed in the hands of the First National Bank of Quitman by the plaintiff, said draft being drawn on the defendant. The First National Bank of Quitman sent the draft to the Bank of Whig-ham for collection and remittance, on February 9, 1915. The defendant went to the Bank of Whigham on February 10, 1915, and, following a custom he had with said bank, received said bill of lading and left the draft with said bank to be charged to his account, with instructions to so charge it. He did not give a check on his account, but left the draft to serve as a check, as he had done in similar eases. The defendant had on deposit with the Bank of Whigham at the close of business on February 10, 1915, the sum of $865.22, having deposited on that day $31.93, and having withdrawn by check on that day $89.30, leaving a balance of $865.22 as stated. He had this amount on deposit in said bank to his credit when the bank closed and went into the hands of receivers on February 11, 1915. The officers of the bank did not charge the draft to the account of the defendant, and no entries appear on his account after February 10, 1915. The draft was not marked paid by the bank, and no entry of the transaction was made whatever by the bank. The draft remained in the Bank of Whigham and
Empire Cotton Oil Company
Quitman, Ga., Feb. 8th, 1915.
On demand pay to the order of First National Bank $362, three hundred sixty-two & 00/100 dollars, value received, and charge to account of
O. D. Sellars, Empire Cotton Oil Company
Whigham, Ga. Manager.
Countersigned: Allen Bive, Cashier.
[Endorsements]
Pay to the order of any bank, banker or trust company.
All prior endorsements guaranteed.
Feb. 9, 1915.
First National Bank,
64-186 Quitman, Ga. 64-186.
H.L. Young, Cashier.
The court rendered judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiff excepted.
Ordinarily the bank collecting a note or draft is the agent of the holder, and is in no sense the agent of the maker. Dodge v. Freedman’s Savings & Trust Co., 93 U. S. 379 (23 L. ed. 920). And, as a general rule, when a bank receives a check from a depositor for collection, it must return to him either the check or the money. If the collecting bank surrenders the check to the bank on which it
In the case under consideration it appears that the bank did not comply with the instructions given by the drawee and charge off the amount of the draft against his account. Had the amount been so charged against the. account of the debtor in compliance with the instructions given to the bank by him, a simpler question would have been presented for solution. It is insisted by the plaintiff that the Bank of Whigham was its agent to collect the draft, and also the agent of the defendant to pay the same; that the defendant had on deposit with the bank sufficient funds to pay the draft, and the bank by virtue of that deposit was his agent to hold the funds and pay out or apply the same as directed by him, and, though the defendant directed the bank to apply a part of his funds on deposit with it, and pay the draft, that the payment could not be considered so complete as to discharge the liability of the debtor to the creditor until express assent'on the part of the agent .to so apply the money, since, on account of the fact that bank was also agent of the drawer, a mere direction by the drawee to apply to the draft money which the dual agent held for him would not constitute a legal application of such money, unless there was evidence that the agent expressly or impliedly, as the agent of the drawer, consented to apply the money as directed. Moore v. Norman, 52 Minn. 83 (53 N. W. 809, 18 L. R. A. 359, 38 Am. St. R. 526).
As already said, in the present case there was no such precise affirmative action on the part of the bank, but, in our opinion, the surrender of the bill of lading, under the instruction from the drawee to charge the draft attached thereto against the account of the debtor, who then had on deposit ample funds in that bank to pay the same, was of itself conclusive evidence of the consent of the bank to apply the funds of its depositor as directed by him. In other words, the mere surrender without payment in cash of the bill of lading, which it was the duty of the bank to hold until the attached draft was paid (5 Gyc. 508 (f) ), was in itself an affirmative acceptance of the instructions from the debtor to treat the draft as a check on his account with the bank. We have not been able to find a ruling of the Supreme Court or of this court which covers the precise point involved, but, under the principle laid down in 33 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, supra, that where the agent of the creditor to receive payment is also the agent of the debtor, and is instructed to apply money in his hands belonging to the latter to the payment of the creditor’s claim, the payment is complete and discharges the liability of the debtor to the creditor, if the common agent expressly agrees so to apply money in his hands belonging to the debtor or money received by him for the debtor, “or has done some act showing an acceptance of such money as agent of the creditor,” the surrender of the bill of lading, attached to a draft due on demand, was an affirmative act sufficiently indicating the acceptance by the agent of the creditor of so much of the money on deposit with it as was necessary to pay the draft, in accordance with the instructions then given.
We think the court did not err in holding that the transaction set out in the agreed statement of facts supported the plea of payment, and that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover against the defendant. Judgment affirmed.