165 N.Y. 132 | NY | 1900
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The facts, which were either proved without dispute, or were conceded, raised the question of law whether the defendant had made itself liable to the demand of the plaintiff in the amount of the draft deposited with it for collection. The determination, which was made by the court, at Special *136
Term, in favor of the defendant, has been reversed by the Appellate Division solely upon the law. The view of that learned court was that, as between the defendant and the drawee of the draft in collection, the receipt of the check of the latter was a payment of the draft and that the crediting by the defendant of the amount to the plaintiff's account made it his debtor. It was considered that the presumption, that the check of the drawee of the draft was received by the defendant's agent in payment, became absolute, in the absence of any repudiation of the agreement to accept it as payment, or of its return to the South Hutchinson Bank with a demand for the return of the draft. This view was rested upon the proposition that the defendant was bound to return to the plaintiff the draft which he had deposited, or the money, and that, to justify the cancellation of the credit given him for the amount and the refusal to pay him the money, the defendant was bound to return to him the draft properly protested. The discussion of this case at the Appellate Division was very extended; but I think that the question involved resolves itself into this simple proposition: was the defendant not concluded by its conduct from denying that it had rendered itself liable to the plaintiff? If that is true, then that result must be attributed to its negligent conduct of the transaction; which, in its consequences, places it in a position where it can not gainsay its liability. I think that, upon the undisputed facts of this case, there was but the one legal conclusion possible and that is, that the defendant must be deemed to have intended to treat the draft as paid and that that intention was conclusively expressed when it entered the item as a credit to the plaintiff. The question of that intention was, of course, under the circumstances, purely one of law. (Clark v.Merchants' Bank,
The complaint alleged all the facts, upon which to predicate the liability of the defendant, and within the rule, as laid down in Whiting v. City Bank, (
It may be observed that this is not the case of the collection of the simple draft of the plaintiff's debtor; but that it is one where the draft bore the indorsement of another. When the defendant assumed the duty of collecting the draft, it was bound to exercise reasonable care in the performance of that duty and the measure of its responsibility was, if it failed to collect the amount of the draft, to account to the plaintiff for the draft, properly protested for non-payment. Assuming that the defendant was entitled to rely upon the custom among banks of taking the check of the drawee of the draft for the payment of the same, it was bound to the exercise of care for the protection of all of its depositor's rights and, to preserve itself from assuming any further liability to him in the matter, to be reasonably cautious in what it did, that its relation to him of a collecting agent should not be changed. When, on November 3d, it was in receipt of the drawee's check, it might have retained the check until after presentation for payment; when, if payment was refused, it might have caused the check to be returned to the South Hutchinson Bank, in order that, by the return of the draft, and its due protest for non-payment, the plaintiff's rights upon it should be fully protected. But it appears to have rested upon its agent's responsibility in accepting the check of the drawee of the draft, by, immediately upon its receipt, giving credit to the plaintiff as for a collection made. It was not until November 26th, twenty-one days after giving that credit, that it appears to have undertaken to revoke the credit given.
The plaintiff was no party to the proceedings for collection and the agencies selected by his bank to collect the draft were, in no sense, his agencies. (St. Nicholas Bank v. State Nat.Bank,
I think the order should be affirmed and, under the stipulation, that judgment absolute should be ordered against the defendant, with costs.
PARKER, Ch. J., MARTIN, VANN, CULLEN and WERNER, JJ., concur; BARTLETT, J., concurs in result.
Ordered accordingly. *139