243 A.D. 287 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1935
On December 10, 1930, the claimant O’Neill had on deposit with the Bank of United States the sum of $10,100. On that date he drew a check to the order of the National City Bank for the entire amount of his deposit in the Bank of United States and deposited it in the National City Bank. That bank on the same day, by messenger, presented the check for payment to the Bank of United States and received a cashier’s check of the Bank of United States for $10,100. The parties stipulated that this was in accordance with the usual banking practice designed to dispense with unnecessary transportation of cash in interbank transactions. As a result of the transaction O’Neill’s account was ■ debited on the books of the Bank of United States with $10,100 and the account of “ Cashiers’ Checks Outstanding ” was credited with $10,100. On the same day the cashier’s check was transmitted for collection by the National City Bank, but on the morning of December eleventh, and before it was paid, the Bank of United States was taken over by the Superintendent of Banks. Thereafter the check was indorsed and delivered by the National City Bank to the claimant.
The question is whether, upon these undisputed facts, the claimant is entitled to priority of payment of his claim against the Bank of United States. Notwithstanding authorities to the contrary in other jurisdictions (Bauck v. First State Bank, 178 Minn. 64; 225 N. W. 916; Rainwater v. Federal Reserve Bank, 172
All the conditions exist here which would entitle the claimant to priority unless his check, drawn upon the Bank of United States, was “ paid or settled for by the drawee or payor either in money or by an unconditional credit given on its books or on the books of any other bank, which has been requested or accepted so as to constitute such drawee or payor or other bank debtor therefor.”
We are, therefore, required to decide whether the cashier’s check of the Bank of United States, coupled with the entries on its books, constituted an -unconditional credit in favor of the National City Bank. The term “ unconditional credit,” although frequently recurring, is nowhere defined throughout article 19-A of the Negotiable Instruments Law. That article, commonly known as the Bank Collection Code, in many respects has revolutionized the ancient principles pertaining to the collection of commercial paper by banks. (See Brady, Uniform Negotiable Instruments Act, p. 107 et seq.) Construing together all the provisions of that article, the term “ unconditional credit ” can only mean a credit which may not be withdrawn, even if it is eventually found that the item for which it is given is not collectible. It imports a credit which is not “ revocable ” under section 350-a nor “ provisional ” under section 350-b. That it does not include a draft of the drawee upon another bank is very evident not only from the nature of the transaction but from section 350-h, which, in specifying the medium in which a collecting bank is authorized to receive payment, expressly discriminates between an unconditional credit and a draft of the drawee upon any bank other than itself.
The order denying the motion to confirm the referee’s report should be reversed, with twenty dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion to confirm granted.
Martin, P. J., Merrell and O’Malley, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, with twenty dollars costs and disbursements, and motion to confirm referee’s report granted.