76 Pa. Super. 304 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1921
Opinion by
At the time of the occurrence that becomes the foundation of this action, and for many years before, the plaintiff, a resident of the City of Philadelphia, had a checking account in the Commercial Trust Company, the defendant. He had never had any banking account of any kind in any other institution of the city. He was a traveling salesman. In November, 1917, being then in the course of his business in the City of Chicago, he issued and delivered to the hotel at which he was stopping a check for $50 on the said trust company. At the time that check for $50 was issued, his bank balance with the defendant bank was approximately $380. If that check was duly presented to the defendant bank, there is no question but that it would have been the legal obligation of the defendant to pay the check. It was not paid. It was returned through the ordinary channels to the hotel in Chicago which had cashed it, and the situation thus presented was followed with circumstances decidedly unpleasant to the drawer of the check. Now although the record of the trial in the court below, as it comes here, indicates that twenty-one points or more for charge were presented by the defendant to the court below, and we have before us twenty-one assignments of error, it is apparent to all of us that if one question of fact was rightly submitted to the jury by the learned trial judge, and if the verdict of the jury was supported by evidence, there is but little else in the case to which we need give serious consideration.
The facts we are now about to recite are either admitted or so well supported by the evidence produced by the plaintiff, that the verdict of the jury requires us to regard them as established.
The check which the plaintiff issued was deposited by the hotel company in the Fort Dearborn National
Now the defendant offered testimony to prove that it had received through the clearing house on the date in question the envelope marked No. 109, containing many checks drawn upon the Commercial Trust Company. Among them were five, and only five, of such checks in
It might be as well to say here what we have said before, that the commercial business of the world has long ago outgrown the conditions upon which many of what were once considered basic rules of evidence were founded. If it were now regarded as necessary to have the direct and positive evidence of some witness who of his own knowledge could trace the records accompanying the sale of a small quantity of merchandise from seller to buyer, or from shipper to consignee, it would be impossible for a railroad company to recover its freight, a bank to recover because of an advancement upon a foreign check, a department store to obtain the price of a book it had sold, nor could any such transactions be successfully carried on. We endeavored to point out the more modern conception of rules of evidence, owing to
Judgment affirmed.