38 Mo. 60 | Mo. | 1866
delivered the opinion of the court.
The facts in this case are mainly these: The plaintiff kept his regular deposit account with defendant, and in accordance with a uniform custom, delivered to it a negotiable promissory note for collection. The note was for $2,500', made by Henry L. Clark, payable sixty days after, date to the order of Lewis Y. Bogy, and by Bogy endorsed to plaintiff, who endorsed the same and delivered it to defendant for the purpose above stated. The note not being paid at maturity, was delivered by defendant to a notary public for protest, and to give notice of presentment, demand, and refusal to pay, to the endorser. The notary was appointed by the defendant to do all its notarial business, and it had required
The sole point here is, whether the defendant is liable for the negligence, inefficiency and carelessness of the notary, acting as its agent. The question has often been determined in other courts, but the decisions are so conflicting and contradictory, that it cannot be said that any rule can be positively deduced from the weight of authority.
It is not doubted that it is the usual custom of banks, in receiving notes on deposit for collection, to hand them over to a notary to make demand and protest against the maker, and give notice to the endorser, in default of payment at maturity. And therefore it has been held that, where a party, cognizant of this custom, deposits a note for collection, and payment is not'made when the same becomes due, and it is regularly delivered to a notary, and he omits to give notice to the endorser of non-payment, the bank, having discharged • its entire duty, will not be responsible, but the remedy will be against the notary.
The best considered case that we have met with, holding the banks exempt from liability, is Bellemire v. Bk. of U. S., 1 Miles, 173, affirmed on appeal in 4 Whart. 105. It was there said that the bank should be regarded as having undertaken to collect the note in the customary mode, and that the holder of the note must be understood to have consented to the arrangement; consequently, on default of payment by the maker, it became the duty of the bank to call to its aid the notary, and entrust to him the performance of whatever was necessary to secure the responsibility of the endorsers. And it was moreover declared that the notary being a public officer, he and his securities on his pfficial bond as notary, were liable to the parties injured by his
But, on the other hand, the bank is held liable for all the acts and omissions of the notary or other agent to whom it delivers the notice. The leading case on this side of the question is Allen v. Merchants’ Bk., 22 Wend. 215, in the New York Court of Errors and Appeals, where the whole subject is most elaborately considered, and discussed with masterly ability by Senator Yerplanck. In the course of his opinion, that learned jurist said :
“ It is well settled in this State that there is an implied undertaking by a bank or banker receiving negotiable paper, deposited for collection, to • take the necessary measures to charge the drawer, maker or other proper parties, upon the default or refusal to pay or accept—Smedes v. Bk. of Utica, 20 Johns. 372; s. c. in this court, 3 Cow. 663; McKinster v. Bk. of Utica, 9 Wend. 46 ; 11 id. 473, s. c. The ground of this rule is that the acceptance of negotiable paper thus deposited for collection, forms an implied undertaking to make the demands and give the notices required by law or mercantile usage for the perfect protection of the holder’s rights against all previous parties; for which undertaking the use of the funds thus temporarily obtained' or of the average balances’ thereof for the purposes of discount or exchange, forms a valuable consideration. Had we no express authority on this head, I should hold the acceptance by a bank of paper for collection from a customer, in the usual course of his business, as sufficient evidence of a valuable consideration. The whole ordinary business of a bank with its dealers is one of mutual profit or accommodation, and it must be taken together (unless some part is separated by express understanding), and it is not for a bank to allege,*65 or for a court to consider, that a collection in a particular place must be regarded as a gratuitous favor. If accepted at all, the general profits and advantages of the business, of which this may, perhaps, be an unproductive part, form a good consideration for the undertaking: This, however, is not an open question, after the decision of this court in the two cases against the Bank of Utica. What, then, is the ordinary undertaking, contract or agreement of a bank with one of its dealers, in the case of an "ordinary deposit of a domestic note or bill, payable in the same town, received for collection ? It is a contract made with' a copopate body having only a legal existence, and governed by directors, who' can act only by officers and agents ; or if it. be with a private banker, he too is known to carry on his business by clerks and agents. The contract itself is to perform certain duties necessary for the collection of the paper, and the security of the holder. But neither legal construction, nor the common understanding of men of business, can regard this contract (unless there be some express understanding to that effect") as an appointment of the bank as an attorney or personal representative of the owner of the paper, authorized to select other agents, for the purpose of collecting the notes, and nothing more. There is a wide difference made, as well by positive law as by reason of the thing itself, between a contract and undertaking to do a thing, and the delegation of an agent or attorney to procure the doing the same thing — between a contract for building a house, for example, and the appointment of an overseer or superintendent, authorized and undertaking to act for the principal, in having a house built. The contractor is bound to answer for* any negligence or default in the performance of his contract, although such negligence or default be not his own, but that of some subcontractor or under-workman. Not so the mere representative agent, who discharges his whole duty if he acts with good faith and ordinary diligence in the selection of his materials, the forming his contracts, and the choice of his workmen. Now, in the case of the deposit for collection of*66 a domestic note, or bill payable, in the same town, no one can imagine that this, instead of being a contract with the bank to use the proper means for collecting the paper, is a mere delegation of power to act as an attorney for that purpose. If this were so, and it should happen that by the fraud, the carelessness, or the ignorance of a clerk or teller, the only responsible parties were discharged, or the note itself lost or destroyed, it would be a sufficient defence for the bank if it could show that the directors had employed ordinary care and caution in selecting their officers, or any similar defence which would be good in the mouth of an attorney in fact, or a steward acting in good faith for his principal who has been defrauded in any transaction. If such were the understanding of this business, and the merchant had to look to the responsibility of the teller or clerk through whose hands his paper may pass, and not to that of the bank who employs them, few deposits for collection would be made, and it would soon be found expedient to deal only with banks or bankers who would guarantee their officers. But the natural understanding of men of business is surely not this ; it is of an implied agreement with the bank itself, of whose officers and agents they hare no knowledge, and with whom they have no privity of contract.”
And in the Montgomery Co. Bk. v. Albany City Bk., 7 N. Y. 459, it is laid down with great cleaniess and emphasis, that “ when a bank receives from the owner a bill for collection, payable either at the place where such bank carries on its business, or at some distant place, it thereby becomes the agent of the owner for the collection, and in the discharge of its obligations as'such, if the bill has not been accepted, it is bound to present the same for acceptance without unreasonable delay, as well as'to present the same for payment when it becomes payable; and if not accepted when presented for that purpose, or not paid when presented for payment, it must take such steps, by protest and notice, as are necessary to charge thet drawer and endorser, or it will be liable to its principal, the owner, for the damages which
If the subject of the controversy were a foreign bill of exchange, it might presentan entirely different aspect; but it is a negotiable promissory note. A mere private person could have made the demand and given the notice, and the employment of a notary was not necessary. Our statute authorizes and permits a notary to act, but does not require his official action to the exclusion of any other individual.
The defendant having appointed the notary by the year, and required a bond for the faithful performance of his duties, made him its agent and an officer of the bank. Upon recognized and general principles, the principal is “ held liable to third persons in a civil suit for frauds, deceits, concealments, misrepresentations, torts, negligences, and other malfeasances or misfeasances, and omissions of duty of his agent, in the course of his employment, although the principal did not authorize, or justify, or participate in, or, indeed, know of such misconduct, or even if he forbade the acts or disapproved of them” — Sto. Agen. § 452.
The notary, in this instance, was not acting in the charac-of an independent officer, in the discharge or execution of a duty devolved upon him by law, but as the agent of the defendant.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.