74 Colo. 309 | Colo. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the court.
A. C. Cunningham' drew his check on the defendant Fleming State Bank for $1000, payable on demand to L. A. Poinsett. Poinsett left this check with the plaintiff, the First National Bank of Eads, to hold for-further instructions, later given, which were that, if plaintiff was satisfied that the check was good, to supply the endorsement thereof, and remit the amount of the check to the Hartman State Bank to the credit of Dean Doyle — apparently as a payment on a land deal. Pyles, the cashier of plaintiff, told Poinsett he had received from the defendant drawee a telegram that the check would be honored, whereupon he endorsed the same for Poinsett, sent his cashier’s check for the amount to the Hartman Bank as directed, forwarded the Cunningham check to its correspondent, the First National Bank of Pueblo, and the latter presented it to the drawee for payment, which was refused by direction of the
Plaintiff’s theory of the case, upon this state of facts, is that the transaction was a sale, not a deposit for collection merely, and therefore plaintiff became the owner of the check and held the legal title which enabled it to maintain this action against the acceptor upon its failure to pay on presentation. Defendant’s theory is that the transaction was not a sale, but a deposit for collection only, but, if a sale, and if the check which was dishonored by. the acceptor, caused a loss to the plaintiff, the latter was fully reimbursed and obtained full compensation for the loss by charging the amount thereof to the account of Poinsett, which, in legal effect, was a payment by Poinsett to the plaintiff of $1,'000 in money.
Trial was to the court without a jury, upon whose findings in defendant’s favor the action was dismissed. No specific findings of fact were made, but the opinion of the trial court brought up in the record shows that the court concluded that plaintiff was not the real party in interest, had no interest at all in the check when the complaint was filed, having been fully paid for the loss it sustained in sending its cashier’s check by charging back the same to
1. The authorities are not in harmony upon all of the legal questions argued by counsel. The undisputed facts do not bring the case within the rules invoked by the defendant. When, as here, a check is endorsed in blank by the payee, and placed in a bank other than the one on which it is drawn, whether such a transaction constitutes a sale of the check to the first bank or is merely a deposit for collection, depends upon the facts and circumstances attending the transaction. If it is a sale, title passes to the bank in which the deposit is made. If it is for collection only, or the check is deposited as a check, the relation of debtor and creditor does not arise, and the check remains the property of the depositor, and is in the hands of the bank ‘as his agent for collection, with title still in the payee, and not in the endorsee. 7 C. J. § 245, pp. 597-599, where it is said in such circumstances: • “As a general rule, checks and other papers deposited in a bank for collection remain the property of the depositor.” Downey v. National Exchange Bank, 52 Ind. App. 672, 96 N. E. 403; Morris-Miller Co. v. Von Pressentin, 63 Wash. 74, 114 Pac. 912.
In this state the general custom and understanding is, that when a customer deposits in his bank checks drawn on another bank, they are received for collection, and are charged to the customer’s account if dishonored. Some banks, by way of precaution, print upon their deposit slips
2. The acts and conduct of Poinsett, the payee, and of the plaintiff endorsee, are inconsistent with a sale, but are consistent with a deposit for collection. When the check was left with plaintiff the direction was to hold for further instructions. It was not then endorsed. • The further instruction was that if plaintiff was satisfied the check-was good, to endorse it and remit the proceeds as stated. When the check was returned to plaintiff dishonored by the acceptor, it was charged back to Poinsett’s account. Plaintiff, at Poinsett’s direction, sent it a second time to the drawee for collection, and when it was returned again dishonored, charged it back a second time and cancelled it as paid. Under our decision in the Manitou Case the plaintiff had a right to charge back the check. Poinsett’s objection thereto is not important, for the bank did what it had a legal right to do without his consent. If the plaintiff bought this check, it would not be likely to follow Poinsett’s instructions how to handle its own business and how to deal with its own property. The conduct of both of them is inconsistent with a sale. Their acts and conduct show that they recognized that the deposit was for collection and they consistently adhered to that theory until later this action was brought by the plaintiff bank evidently for the protection of its own depositor. Upon either of the find
When the drawee, the Fleming Bank, returned the check dishonored to the plaintiff bank, endorsee of the payee, Poinsett, plaintiff had its election to sue the drawer, Cunningham, the drawee, Fleming Bank, which failed to pay after acceptance, or the payee, Poinsett, on his endorsement, either jointly in one action, or separately in different actions. Naturally the bank chose the cheaper and speedier remedy out of court and charged back the check to the account of its customer, Poinsett, for the amount of the loss it sustained. Where a creditor has a remedy against two or more debtors and gets full satisfaction from one, whether the debt be joint or several, this operates as a discharge of all. It makes no difference if the satisfaction against the one is received without a lawsuit. Satisfaction in that way is just as much satisfaction, and as effectually releases or discharges the other debtors as if obtained through a paid judgment rendered in a lawsuit. Physical possession of the check by the plaintiff and the other facts in evidence may show at one time a prima facie title in the plaintiff, and its right to bring suit upon it, had it seasonably exercised its right, or had it not waived the same; but when the plaintiff brought this action it had no title or interest in the check. As to it, the check was paid. Poinsett was entitled to it on demand, and the evidence sufficiently discloses that plaintiff tendered it to him and stands ready to deliver it at any time. The trial court thus aptly illustrates-the injustice of permitting the plaintiff, who had no interest in the check, to maintain this action, even if it was at the request of, and for the benefit of, Poinsett. “A defendant may have a complete defense as against the action, when brought by the real party in interest, and would be without any defense to an action when brought by some other person. A clear example of that appears in this case. The defendant in this case may have a perfect defense as against s Poinsett, but apparently has no defense at all against the plaintiff who brought this action, if the plain
Mr. Chief Justice Teller and Mr. Justice Sheafor concur.