First Nat. Bank of Evansville v. Fourth Nat. Bank of Louisville

56 F. 967 | 6th Cir. | 1893

SAGE, District Judge,

(after stating the facts as above.) The. assignments of error set forth in the record are embodied in the propositions relied upon by counsel for appellees, in their brief.

Their first, proposition is tha t the transmission by the defendant in error of the certificate of deposit ro M. M. Fool & Co., the makers, for' collection, was negligence, which made the defendant in error responsible for any loss resulting. They cite Bank v. Burns, 12 Colo. 539, 21 Pac. Rep. 714; Drovers’ Nat. Bank v. Anglo-American Packing & Prov. Co., 117 Ill. 100, 7 N. E. Rep. 601; Bank v. Goodman, 109 Pa. St. 424, 2 Atl. Rep. 687. The court below took this view of the law, and approved the eases above cited in overruling a general demurrer to the answer. See, also, Farwell v. Curtis, 7 Biss. 162; Indig v. Bank, 80 N. Y. 100; and Briggs v. Bank, 89 N. Y. 182. The jury were charged that the defendant violated its duty as an agent by sending the certificate to the makers of it for collection, and that it was liable for the damage resulting from that violation of duty. So far. therefore, the plaintiff in error has no ground for complaint. The court went on to state to the jury that the real question in the case was whether the damage claimed was (he result of the negligence complained of. Calling attention to the letters of June 1 and June 22, 1888, and to tint charging back of 1he amount, of the certificate in the July account, ihe court referred lo the fact that there was no conflict of evidence, and instructed the jury that those letters and the charging hack amounted to a renunciation of the defendant’s agency, so far as the defendant could renounce it. But the court added that the defendant could not, by its renunciation, put. an end to the agency, as the fads then were, and relieve itself from liability, without the consent, express or implied, of the plaintiff, and that such consent would be implied from the silence of the plaintiff after being informed of the renunciation. The court added that, if the plaintiff made no objection to ■the renunciation, the defendant, was not liable for damage thereafter, «‘suiting from events subsequent, and not from the sending of the certificate to Pool & Co. for collection. Counsel for plaintiff in error undertake to escape this conclusion by citing Bank v. Morgan, 117 U. S. 96, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 657, in support of their contention Unit, the receipt of the letters and statements of account; by Sclior was not a receipt, by the plaintiff, nor was his knowledge of their contents to be imputed to the plaintiff. The citation is not a fortunate one for them. In that cast' the clerk of Cooper, a depositor with the bank, had raised various checks, the signatures to which were genuine. Those checks were paid, and charged to Cooper’s account. Cooper sent in his pass book from time to time between the 1st of *970October, 1880, and the 20th of January, 1881, and it was written up and returned to Mm with the paid checks, including those that had been raised. The balances were struck as determined by the genuine and the raised checks. It appeared from the evidence that Cooper was in the habit of examining his check book from time to time, but in a casual way, and he did not discover the forgeries until March 1 or 2, 1881. The supreme court held that he was bound personally, or by an authorized agent, and with due diligence, to examine the pass book and vouchers, and to report to the bank without unreasonable delay any errors that might have been discovered in them, and that, if he failed to do so, and the bank was thereby misled to its prejudice, he could not afterwards dispute the correctness of the balance shown by the pass book. Justice Harlan, in announcing the opinion of the court, said that the sending of the pass book to be written up and returned with the vouchers was, in effect, a demand to know what the bank' claimed to be the state of Ms account, and the return of the book with the vouchers was the answer to that demand, and that it imported a request by .the bank that he would, in proper time, examine the account so rendered, and either sanction or repudiate it. He also said that Cooper’s failure to make the examination or to have it made witMn a reasonable time was inconsistent with the object for which he obtained and used a pass book. Citing Perkins v. Hart, 11 Wheat. 237, 256, and Wiggins v. Burkham, 10 Wall. 129, 132, he added that, where a party to'a stated account neglects to examine it or to have it examined within a reasonable time after receiving it, by reason of which negligence the other party, relying upon the account as having been acquiesced in or approved, has failed to take steps for Ms protection which he could and would have taken had such notice been given, he is estopped from questioning its conclusiveness. To apply that case to this: The defendant, in its letter of June 1st, notified the defendant that it had sent the certificate to Pool & Co., the makers; for collection, and that it had no returns, and could get no answer to its inquiries. It then asked the plaintiff to see the in-dorser, and have him investigate, and either obtain a duplicate of the certificate, or, have Pool & Co. remit. There was no answer to tMs letter. The defendant waited until June 22d. Still no answer. The defendant mailed to plaintiff its letter of that date, notifying that it charged back to plaintiff’s account the $2,700 credit for the certificate; that defendant had written repeatedly for the item, but could get no returns, and had written plaintiff several weeks before for duplicate, but had not received it; closing, with the expression of the hope that plaintiff could settle the matter without further trouble. Ho answer to that letter. Then, on July 2d, the account current for June, showing on its face the charging back of the $2,700 item, was mailed by defendant to plaintiff, and thereafter, regularly, monthly accounts for nine months, each with that item omitted. All tMs time no word from plaintiff. Finally, on April 24, 1889, came the plaintiff’s objection to the account. Meantime the maker of the certificate had become insolvent, and the *971indorser had been released by opera lion oí law. Here was no merely implied or imported request that the plaintiff should examine the account sent. Attention was directed specifically to the item charging back the credit for the certificate. Had the plain tiff complied with defendant’s request; contained in the letter of June 1, 1888, by furnishing a copy of the certificate, the collection could have been made, if not from the maker, at least from the indorser. Had tin; 1 «lain tiff then declined the request, and notified the defendant that it would be held to the performance of its agency, and to the full measure of responsibility' for any loss resulting from its default;, it could have enforced the collection without regaining possession of the certificate, which Wits only a piece of evidence, and protected itself against loss. As it was. when plaintiff's objection was made the conditions were so changed that collection could not be made, and the loss must fall upon the plaintiff or the defendant. The conclusion is irresistible that the plaintiff, by its silence, acquiesced in the defendant’s renunciation of its agency, and caused the defendant to fail to take such sieps as it might otherwise have 1 alten for -its protection. The facts of this ease are quite as strong to support an estoppel as those shown in Bank v. Morgan. However, counsel foe plaintiff did not cite that case for the application above made, but to call attention to the fact that the supreme court; decided--First, that; if lire bank had been guilty of negligence it would have been liable notwithstanding the depositor's failure to examine the pass book and vouchers; and. second, that as the depositors clerk had no power to bind him by raising the cheeks, he had no power to charge him with the imputed knowledge of the fact: that (hey had been raised. The court did Isold that if the officers of the bank could, by proper care and skill, have detected the forgeries before paying ihe raised cheeks, the bank would be the loser, even if the depositor ■nade no examination of his account. Certainly, because in that state of fact (he negligence of the bank’s officers would have been ¡he proximate cause of the loss. But how does that lay the foundation for maintaining that the court below erred in this case? The jury were instructed that the plaintiff liad the right Lo decline the defendant's renunciation of its agency, and to hold the defendant «‘sponsible, but that, if they found that the bank received the letter, and remained silent, acquiescence in the renunciation was to be interred, and the defendant would not; be responsible for any damage resulting from subsequent emits, and not directly caused by the original negligence of sending the certificate to the makers for collection. Thus we see that lhe court; expressly' charged the jury that the defendant was not in any event to he released from responsibility' for any loss resulting from its negligence, hut only from ■ lie consequences of its failure to act after the plaintiff's acceptance —if found from the evidence — of the renunciation of the agency'. These instructions are in perfect harmony with the decision in Bank v. Morgan. As to the second point; for which counsel cited that; case, it lias no application here. There the raising of (he checks was not, only entirely out of the line of the clerk’s authority, hut it was a *972fraud, and a crime against Ms employer, and therefore Ms knowledge was not imputed to his employer. Here it was the business of Schor, the plaintiff’s bookkeeper, to receive and open and distribute letters addressed to the bank and coming by mail. Hence the court below rightly charged the jury that if they found that the letters mailed by the defendant were delivered to him, they should find that thej- were deli vered to the bank. How, it is claimed that because he secreted those" letters, and kept them from the actual knowledge of the bank, the bank is not chargeable with notice of their receipt or of their contents, because he had no right to secrete t hem, and to keep them. As well- might it be claimed that the bank could repudiate a payment, made to its collecting agent by its debt- or, because he had embezzled it, instead of paying it over. Schor’s authority was to receive the letters for the bank, and the collector’s agency, in the case put, was to receive money for the bank. Delivery in the one case was delivery to the bank, and payment in the other case was payment to the bank, and what Schor or the collector afterwards did concerned only themselves and the bank, so far as the rights and interests of the parties were involved.

It is assigned as error that the court below instructed the jury that it was not the duty of the defendant to sue the indorser of the certificate. Upon this point the jury were further instructed that, while the defendant had no such authority, it was under the duty, or would have been, if the renunciation of its agency had not been accepted by the acquiescence of the plaintiff, to push the matter, and, if it could not make the collection without suit, to promptly inform the plaintiff, so that it might sue for itself, if it thought proper to do so. It was held in Crow v. Bank, 12 La. Ann. 692, that it is not within the scope of the collecting bank’s agency to bring suit upon paper left with it for collection. This view is supported by the text of Morse on Banking, (section 246,) where it is said, upon the authority of Wetherill v. Bank, 1 Miles, 399, that the collecting bank “might be seriously prejudiced by the institution of such proceedings; for the fact might, under some circumstances, be evidence going to show that the bank had itself adopted the paper, and therefore, whether it were paid or not, owed the amount of it to the original holder.” It was said in Sterling v. Trading Co., 11 Serg. & R. 179, that a note given in charge to a bank for collection, and so indorsed as to place the apparent and technical title in the bank, if not withdrawn after nonpayment and protest, might be sued upon by the bank in its own name. In Ryan v. Bank, 9 Daly, 308, it was held that it is no part of the general business of a bank to bring suit upon a draft deposited with it for collection. The authorities are decidedly in favor of the law as given in charge to the jury by the court. It may be, however, that under special circumstances, as where delay to bring suit — the collecting bank being the indorsee — would operate to discharge a surety, and there was not time to wait for advices from the owner of the paper, or where an immediate attachment was necessary to prevent the fraudulent removal or disposition of his property by the debtor to avoid *973payment, it would Re the duty of the collecting bank to bring suit. But there Avas no such contingency here. The loss resulted, not because no suit Avas brought, but because the defendant was induced to believe, by the plaintiff’s, failure, to respond to the letters and statements of account mailed by defendant from time to time, and had the right to believe, that the plaintiff had accepted the renunciation of the agency, and had undertaken the collection on its own. account. It is therefore immaterial whether the instruction complained of was right or wrong.

It is also assigned as error that the court below erred iu charging the jury that, the defendant’s letter of the 22d of June, and the letter of July 2d, inclosing the account current for June, with the charging-back to the plaintiff of the $2,700 credit on account of the certificate, amounted to a, renunciation of the agency, and that, if the plaintiff did not object within a reasonable time, it must be held to have accepted the renunciation; the court adding that, in Its opinion, 'there was no evidence that the plaintiff ever did anything, and, if that was so, the defendant was not liable for any loss that resulted from its subsequent inaction. So far from there being error in this instruction, Ave think that upon the evidence the court would have been justified in directing the jury to find that the agency was renounced by the defendant, that the renunciation was acquiesced in by the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover only nominal damages. It Avas in evidence that the letters were properly mailed, and the presumption is that they reached their destination, and were received by the plaintiff. Rosenthal v. Walker, 111 U. S. 193, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 382. As the court said in its charge to the jury, there Avas no contrariety of evidence, no dispute as to the facts, and there is no doubt that the conclusions of law were correctly stated by the court.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed, with costs.

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