131 Iowa 444 | Iowa | 1906
— • One J. H. Bamsey executed to the defend ant O. E. Erskine a bond for the payment of $1,800, dated February 1, 1899, payable in five years, with interest at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum, evidenced by coupons attached to the bond, and secured by a mortgage on one hundred and twenty acres of land in Adams county. The bond and coupons were made payable at the Corning State Savings Bank at Corning, Iowa. In October, 1900, S. H. Manatrey, as owner of this land executed a contract of sale thereof to the plaintiff, in which the latter expressly assumed and agreed to pay the above mortgage. In July, 1903, plaintiff entered into a contract of sale to D. J. Gibbons, in
Prior to the last-mentioned date Erskine, who resided in Wisconsin, transmitted the papers to the Coming'' State Savings Bank, “ with directions and special authority to collect the amount due and to remit the proceeds.” to him, and these remained there until the failure of the bank and Andrew’s appointment as receiver on the 22d of that month. On January 26, 1904, the plaintiff remitted a draft of $90, in payment of the last interest coupon, to the bank, and this was acknowledged by “ W. H. Clark, Cashier,” who added: “ How about the principal, which is also due, 2-1-04 ? ” Clark was then cashier and Frank L. La Rue president of the bank. Negotiations with the latter for a new loan having failed, the Cromwell Savings Bank, through its cashier, and acting for plaintiff, transmitted a draft for $1,800 issued by it on the Bankers’ National Bank, Chicago, 111., to “ Frank La- Rue, Pt.,” accompanied by the following letter: “Cromwell, Iowa, Jan. 30, 1904. Mr. Frank La Rue, Corning, Iowa — Dear Sir: Enclosed you will find a draft for $1,800 to pay off the Ramsey loan. The parties could not stand so steep interest as you wrote about. Yours respectfully, E. N. Dougherty.” This letter was subsequently returned to the Cromwell Savings Bank, with reply written on the bottom: “ Received above amount and will send for papers to-day. Am sorry we could not give your customers a better rate. Yours truly, F. L. La Rue, Pres.” This draft was indorsed: “ Pay to order of the Security Trust & Savings Bank, Des Moines, Iowa. Frank La Rue, Pt.” and sent to the Security Trust & Savings Bank of Des Moines accompanied with this letter: “January, 30, 1904. D. G. Edmundson, President — -Deai* Sir: Herewith find drafts aggregating $5,285 to cover W. O. Mitchell loan. Kindly send me all papers,
As La Rue was discharging the duties. ordinarily exacted from the cashier, these decisions are in point. Regardless of these considerations however, the entire question has been settled in this state by the enactment of the nego
In the former case it was said by Bindley, L. J., that “ if an agent is merely to collect money, taking a check from a person having a banking account is not a departure from his authority; that is, in the ordinary case of collecting money. If the check is not paid, the person who gives it can be sued; and in ordinary cases no one is prejudiced by taking' a check. But it is by no means always within an agent’s authority to take a check' instead of money. Let us take a case that lawyers are familiar with- — -the sale of real property. Let us take the case of a solicitor who is intrusted by the vendor with the completion, of the transaction. Is that solicitor justified by the ordinary course of business or the ordinary habits of men in parting with the conveyance and title deeds in exchange for a promise to pay or a check? Certainly not.” There the agent had upon the receipt of a check for arrears in rent delivered license permitting an assignment of the lease, and upon its
There is dicta in numerous cases to the effect that the delivery of a check or draft which is subsequently honored constitutes payment; but few decisions directly pass upon the point.. The adjudicated eases generally concern transactions in which such papers have been dishonored. In view of the universal custom of using drafts and checks as a’ means of payment, we think an agent may receive a draft or cheek as conditional satisfaction of the claim placed in his hands, unless instructed to the contrary, whenever he has good reason to believe that it will be paid upon presentation. In the case at bar the bank was required by Erskine to remit the money to him in North Carolina, and the evidence shows that this was expected to be done by the ordinary bills of exchange. He was charged with knowledge of the general custom in' the matter of collecting notes and mortgages, such as those sent to the bank, and must be assumed, in the absence of other instructions, to have intended that the bank should execute the duty imposed upon it in the usual and customary way. This being so, it is not necessary to inquire how the bank disposed of the drafts. It was equivalent to money and could have been used as such by his agent, and was no more likely to be misappropriated by the officers of the bank than had money been paid instead. We are of opinion that, under the circumstances disclosed, the bond and mortgage were satisfied by the delivery and subsequent payment of the draft.
The decree will be reversed, and thje relief in the petition awarded.— Reversed.