— This was an action of replevin to recover the possession of a certain quantity of oats and corn contained in certain cars under the control of defendant. There was a trial and judgment for the plaintiffs. Defendant has appealed. The facts which the evidence tends to prove are that the two cars of corn and one of. oats in controversy were purchased by plaintiffs and shipped to them from points in Kansas. After the arrival of the two cars of corn which came to Kansas City by the Union Pacific Railway Company, they were by plaintiffs ordered to be turned over to the defendant company and plaintiffs obtained from defendant bills of lading made out to their own order which were delivered to them on the evening of November 8, or on the morning of November 10 (November 9 being Sunday), 1890. The car of oats came into Kansas City over the defendant’s railroad, but the bill of lading which plaintiffs received when they made the purchase was surrendered to the defendant company, and a new bill of lading issued to their order, which was delivered to them about the same time that they received the bills for the two cars of corn.
Where no time is stipulated by the contract for payment of the purchase price, its payment is a condition precedent implied by, law, and the property does not vest in the vendee until he performs the condition unless the seller waives it. Railroad v. Phillips, 60 Ill. 190; State v. Brewing Co., 32 Mo. App. 276. The real question here presented is whether there was an unconditional constructive delivery of the grain to Nathan, or, in other words, did the plaintiffs waive the condition of cash payment on the delivery or accept Nathan’s check as absolute payment. They had the undoubted right to waive this condition, also to waive payment in cash and' accept the check as unconditional payment; : but we do not find anything in the facts to authorize the conclusion that they do so. A check is not payment, but is only so when the cash is received on it. There is no presumption that a creditor takes a check in payment arising from the mere fact that he accepts it from his debtor. The contrary is the case. Nor that it is a waiver of cash payment. National Bank of Commerce v. Railroad, 46 N. W. Rep. 342; Hodgson v. Barrett, 33 Ohio St. 63; Matthews v. Cowan, 59 Ill. 311; Shelby v. McCullough, 26 Mo. App. 66; Holmes v. Briggs, 131 Pa. St. 233.
When payment is made by check drawn by a debtor on his banker, this is merely a mode of making cash payment and not giving or accepting a security; such payment is only conditional or a means of obtaining the money. So the rule is that the holder of the check in one sense becomes the agent of the drawer to collect the money on it; and, if it is dishonored, there is no accord and satisfaction of the debt. 2 Parsons on Contracts, sec. 623; Benjamin on Sales, sec. 731. And
According to the principles just stated, the delivery of the grain was conditional upon payment of the check. If the check was not paid if presented in a reasonable time, then the delivery did not become absolute and the title to the grain never vested in Nathan. The plaintiff could retake it. It does not appear that Nathan negotiated the bills of lading. This is not a case where defendant claims any right of possession to the grain on the ground that it is a bona fide purchaser or indorser of the bill of-lading for value. Nor is it claimed that defendant is in possession of or sustains the relation as carrier to anyone making such claim. Nothing occurred in the transaction between plaintiffs and Nathan, or between Nathan and any other person, by which the plaintiffs’ right to reclaim and retake the grain was cut off. No such question arises in the case. The evidence tending to show that
The court did not err in refusing to instruct the jury for defendant, that if they believed from the evidence in the case that plaintiffs sold to Nathan the grain in question, and indorsed and delivered him the bills of lading therefor with the intention of thereby putting him in possession of said grain, and took from him a check for the price thereof, then the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover, unless there was an agreement between plaintiffs and Nathan, at the time said check was taken, that the title should not pass to said Nathan until said check should be paid. According to the authorities already referred to there is no presumption that the plaintiffs took the check in payment arising from the mere fact that they accepted it, nor that they intended to waive the cash payment and thus change the contract and the cash character of the transaction. If the payment had been made in cash, the delivery would have been absolute, but, since the payment by check was a conditional payment, the delivery was likewise rendered conditional. These conditions became mutual and dependent. The performance of the one rendered the other absolute. No court would be authorized to tell a jury as a matter of law in a case where a sale is for cash, that the taking of a cheek, merely, would operate as a waiver of this fundamental condition of the sale, i. e., the payment of the cash.
It follows the judgment must be affirmed.