75 Mo. App. 211 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
This allegation of the petition was controverted by defendants’ answer. There was a trial before the court, without the intervention of a jury. The plaintiff asked and the court refused an instruction to the effect-: “If the finding of facts shows that the defendant bank was the drawee in the check in suit, and that said cheek was payable at sight or on demand, and that said defendants received the same through the mail in the usual course of business on the 4th day of March and did hold the same until the evening of March the 6th ‘more than twenty-four hours’ and then protest the same, the judgment must be for the plaintiff.”
The finding and judgment was for the defendants. Plaintiff has appealed.
It was declared by the supreme court of the United States in Bank v. Bank, 12 Wall. loc. cit. 647: “Bank checks are not inland bills of exchange, but have many of the properties of such commercial paper; and many of the rules of the law merchant are alike applicable to both. Each is fora specific sum payable in money. In both cases there is a drawer, a drawee and payee. Without acceptance, no action can be maintained by the holder upon either against the drawer. The chief points of difference are that a check is always drawn on a bank or banker. No days of grace are allowed. The drawer is not discharged by the laches of the holder in presentment for payment, unless he can show that he has sustained some injury by the default. It is not due until payment is demanded, and the statute of limitations runs only from that time. It is by its face the appropriation of so 'much money of the drawer in the hands of the drawee to the payment of an admitted liability of the drawer. It is not necessary that the drawer of a bill should have funds in the hands of the drawee. A check in such case would be a fraud.”
“To these maybe added,” says Van Schaack on Bank Checks, page 27: “First. A check is not pro-testable or, in other words, protest is not requisite to hold either the drawer or indorser, except in the case
In a Maryland case — Moses v. Bank, 34 Md. 574— it was said that a check comes within the general designation of a bill of exchange so far that the statute authorizing the protest of inland bills of exchange would include checks; “but it is erroneous,” says Daniels on Negotiable Instruments, section 1566, “to ascribe to a check a necessary inland character. A draft drawn in one state on a bank in another is nevertheless a check.” In Morse on Banks and Banking, section 380, it is said by that author: “To our mind the differential traits decidedly preponderate, and the more correct method is to treat the check as an altogether independent and distinct instrument from the bill of exchange, admit
It must be conceded that there' are respectable authorities that define a check to be a bill of exchange. Randolph on Com. Paper, sec. 8. The reasons given by the supreme court of the United States, in the ease from which we have already quoted, for holding that a check is not a bill of exchange, seem to us to be sound and unanswerable. On all questions of general commercial law the decisions of this great court must be accepted as controlling authority. In looking at the various provisions of chapter 17, Revised Statutes, of which section 724 is a part, we find nothing to justify the conclusion that it was the intention of the legislature to include a check like that in this case within the designation “bill of exchange.” Famous, Etc., Co. v. Crosswhite, 51 Mo. App. 55. It follows from these observations that the statute, section 724, ante, is wholly inapplicable to the case. We think the theory upon which the plaintiff seeks to hold defendants liable is erroneous, and therefore the trial court did not err in rejecting that theory and finding for the defendants.
The judgment is for the right party and will be affirmed.