26 How. Pr. 1 | NY | 1863
The judge charged the jury, upon the trial of this action, that there was no doubt of the authority of Peck, the teller of the defendant, to certify checks in the manner in which the checks in question were certified, so as to bind the defendant to pay them to holders taking them bona fide and for value, in the usual course of business. The defendant thereupon excepted. The proposition involves
Checks upon banks have most of the qualities of inland bills of exchange. They are drawn for a sum certain upon a person or corporation usually having funds of the drawer sufficient for their payment, and are payable on presentation. If payable to bearer they pass by delivery, and if to the order of the payee by indorsement, in the usual form. They are not payable on time, and are therefore not presented for or subject to acceptance, and in this particular they differ from bills of exchange. The drawer may be made liable as the drawer of a bill of exchange upon presentation within a reasonable time and notice of non-payment. Most of the rules respecting bills of exchange and promissory notes affect checks on bankers. (Chitty on Bills, 515; Harker agt. Anderson, 21 Wend. 372). I assume that the practice of having the drawee mark and certify upon the face of the check, that it is good for the sum therein expressed, is of recent origin, for I find nothing said of it by the early writers, and but few reported cases where the practice is referred to. It is, however, at the present day a prevalent custom. Checks drawn upon banks or bankers thus marked and certified enter largely into the commercial and financial transactions of the country. They pass from hand to hand in the payment of debts, the purchase of property, and in the transfer of balances from one house and one bank to another. In.the great commercial centers they make up no inconsiderable portion of the circulation, and thus perform a useful, valuable, nay, an almost indispensable office. They are enabled to perform these important functions, mainly upon the faith and credit given to the certificate of the drawee that they are good. It is this that gives them credit and currency with commercial men. The object of the drawer who obtains the certificate, and the purpose of the drawee in giving it, is to impart
'This brings me to consider what is doubtless the main question; that is, the authority of Peck, the teller, to make the certificates. He was an officer of the Butchers’ and Drovers’ Bank, a monied corporation with banking powers, and like all other corporate officers was. its servant and
The checks in controversy are dated on the 16th day of February, 1852, drawn and signed by T. A. C. Green, payable to the order of S. W. Spencer, cashier, directed to the Butchers’ and Drovers’ Bank, and certified as good for $1,000, and signed under the certificate, R. Peck, teller. Both before and after the date of the checks, Green was a dealer and depositor of the bank, and had an account upon its books. In July, 1851, the plaintiff received a similar check from Green, certified in the same manner, for $3,400, and in December of the same year a similar check certified in like manner for $1,500, both of which were paid by the defendant to the plaintiff before the checks in controversy were received. Subsequently to the 16th February, 1852, and before the checks in question were presented for payment, Green deposited with the defendant, at various times and in various sums, $6,000, which he drew out upon his certified checks. The proof showed that Peck had express authority to certify the checks of dealers, and he was furnished with a book in which he entered the checks so certified. Robert Buck, a witness in the employment of the defendant ten or fifteen years, testified: That “the paying teller was in the habit of certifying checks. They would be presented to pay debts and take up notes. They were substituted for bank bills. The teller would sometimes write good upon them, and sometimes merely his name. It
The rule that he who deals with the agent of another is bound to look into the agent’s commission for the measure of his authority, must have a qualified application to an agent with a general power coupled with a limitation not patent or open to common observation. Such a limitation, if it could operate, would be destructive of the power. Suppose that Spencer, to whose order these checks were
There are several authorities much relied upon by the counsel for the defendant which I think right to notice. Grant agt. Norway (10 Com. Bench, 665) was a case where the master of a vessel in the Bast Indies had signed a bill of lading in the usual form, declaring that certain goods had been shipped on board his vessel, to be delivered in
I have extracted thus largely from these cases, because I desire it may be seen how little analogy there is between a bill of lading and a certified check designed to pass from hand to hand, and to some extent to supply the place of currency. The primary purpose of a bill of lading is to furnish written evidence that the goods have been actually put on board the vessel, with their quantity and marks, the name of the consignor and consignee, the places of departure and discharge, with the price of the freight, &c. And when it is said that a bill of lading passes by indorsement and delivery, it means that the indorsement and delivery of the bill transfers the property in the goods therein described (3 Kent. Com. 207), and not that it passes from one person to another as a chose in action for the payment of a sum certain. The master’s connection with and power over the property, and to bind the owner in respect thereto, depends upon the fact of its being shipped; and persons intending to acquire title to it by indorsement and transfer of the bill, know, by the universal usage as well as by the terms of the bill, that the act of the master is of no force unless the goods have been put on board the vessel. The North River Bank agt. Aymar (3 Hill, 263) was also referred to on the argument. The defendants were executors of Pexcel Fowler, and were sued on certain promissory notes, some of which were signed by Jacob D. Fowler as follows: Pexcel Fowler, by Jacob D. Fowler, attorney;
The defence in this action is not aided by the decision of this court in the Mechanics’ Bank agt. The N. Y. & New Haven Railroad Co. I notice two of its leading principles : 1st. By the charter of the railroad company the capital was limited to $3,000,000, divided into 30,000 shares of $100 each. “ The entire capital was represented in the
I therefore adopt the conclusion that where the teller or other proper officer of a banking corporation, representing it and doing its business at the counter, certifies the checks of its dealers and depositors drawn upon it in the usual form, under a general power to certify, such banking incorporation is responsible to holders in good faith and for value, notwithstanding private directions not to certify in the absence of funds without special permission.
The judgment should be affirmed.