134 S.W. 831 | Tex. App. | 1910
The recovery was for money remitted to the Memphis bank by the plaintiff bank in satisfaction of two checks which the plaintiff bank had undertaken to collect, and which had been sent to it for collection by the defendant bank. The checks were drawn by the Clarendon Mercantile Company in favor of the Mickle-Burgher Hardware Company, which the latter company had deposited with the Memphis bank for collection, and which were sent by that bank to the plaintiff bank for the same purpose. The checks were drawn on the Citizens' Bank of Clarendon, and the drawer had money to his credit with the drawee sufficient to pay the checks, but on the day following the presentation of the checks it closed its doors on account of insolvency. The plaintiff bank presented the checks for payment on the same day they were received, which was one day prior to the cessation of business by the Citizens' Bank, and accepted in payment therefor drafts upon other banks given by the Citizens' Bank, but these drafts proved to be worthless on account of the insolvency of the Citizens' Bank who issued them. As soon as plaintiff received those drafts, it forwarded to the Memphis bank its own check on the Ft. Worth National Bank; its cashier believing at the time that the drafts so accepted would be paid. Before the Memphis bank received the check drawn by the plaintiff bank, its cashier was notified over he telephone of the insolvency of the Citizens' Bank of Clarendon, and promised to return the same. Relying upon this promise, the cashier of the plaintiff bank took no steps to recall its check sent to the Memphis bank, and later the Memphis bank collected the check, and, having refused to refund the mount thereof to the plaintiff, this suit was instituted to recover the amount so collected by the Memphis bank. The Clarendon Mercantile Company, drawer of the check, *832 on the Citizens' Bank of Clarendon, and the Mickle-Burgher Hardware Company, the payee, were made parties defendant with the Memphis bank, but their demurrer to plaintiff's petition was sustained, and they were dismissed from the suit. Appellant assigns this ruling of the court as error. It had no plea over against its codefendants, who were so dismissed, but it insists that it was acting as the agent only for the Mickle-Burgher Hardware Company to collect the check and that no liability could be established against it, unless the liability of the drawer and drawee of the check was first fixed. The petition charged that appellant had received the money and the facts already recited were set out in the petition. We think that such allegations were sufficient to show liability on the part of the Memphis bank, and, if there was error in sustaining the demurrer urged by its codefendants, we are unable to perceive how the same could be prejudicial to appellant.
The evidence showed that, when the plaintiff bank presented the checks to the Citizens' Bank of Clarendon, the latter bank had money on hand sufficient to have paid the same in currency. The appellee alleged in its petition a custom among banks to accept payment in drafts of checks received by it for collection, and evidence was introduced establishing that custom, which was well known. As a predicate for a verdict in plaintiff's favor, the jury were instructed that they must find that plaintiff exercised due diligence and care in receiving the drafts in payment of the checks which they attempted to collect; that in so doing plaintiff in good faith believed that the drafts so received by it would be paid; and, further, that a demand for cash on the checks would have been refused by the Citizens' Bank. The jury were also instructed to return a verdict in favor of the defendant if they believed that the Citizens' Bank would have paid cash in satisfaction of the checks, if the same had been demanded. Appellant insists that, in the absence of an instruction from it to the contrary, appellee had no authority to accept payment of the checks in anything but money, and upon this question the authorities seem to be in conflict. In National Bank of Commerce v. American Exchange Bank of St. Louis,
The court did not submit the issue presented in plaintiff's petition of the agreement over the telephone by appellant's cashier to return the check mailed to him by appellee's cashier to cover the amount which appellee supposed would be realized upon the drafts accepted by it from the Citizens' Bank. This is a sufficient answer to the assignment complaining of the action of the court in overruling the exceptions to the allegation of those facts in plaintiff's petition. Nor was there error in admitting evidence of that agreement. The testimony shows that the conversation over the phone occurred before the receipt of appellee's check by appellant's cashier, and at a time when appellee's cashier could have stopped payment of it if he had so desired, and thus prevented appellant from collecting it. The agreement thus proven was certainly an admission against the interest of appellant by its duly authorized agent intrusted with the conduct of the business then in hand.
W. H. Cook controlled and managed the business of the Citizens' Bank, and his testimony that the checks in controversy would not have been paid in cash, if cash had been demanded, we think was admissible as against appellant's objection that the same was the expression of an opinion only of the witness, as we know of no other method by which proof of that fact could have been made. In view of our conclusions noted above, we overrule appellant's assignment complaining of the refusal of a peremptory instruction in its favor, which it requested, and also another instruction, in effect, that it was negligence as a matter of law to accept payment of the check in controversy in anything except cash. We are of the opinion, further, that the verdict of the jury is sustained by the evidence.
*833We have found no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.