209 N.W. 444 | Iowa | 1926
This case was submitted on the following statement of facts: It is stipulated and agreed that the only question to be determined is whether or not the appellee exercised due diligence in presenting the check sued upon, for payment at 1. BILLS AND the State Savings Bank of Logan, Iowa, the bank NOTES: upon which the check was drawn. In this presentment: connection, it is agreed that the check was checks. dated May 14, 1923, and that there was some mistake in the terms thereof; that the check was corrected in its terms on the 18th day of May, 1923, after banking hours, in the town of Logan; that said appellee took the check home with him to his farm, and the same was not presented to the State Savings Bank of Logan for payment until after the said bank had closed, on the 25th of May, 1923.
It is further stipulated and agreed that the appellant, at the time the bank closed, had an account with said bank which lacked sufficient funds to fully cover said check, but that appellant had made an arrangement with D.E. Cottrell, an officer of *93 the bank, under and by virtue of which the said Cottrell, acting for and on behalf of said bank, agreed, on the part of the bank, to honor the said check and to pay the same when presented.
It was further stipulated that the only question to be determined by the district court was whether appellee was negligent in presenting said check for payment; and if the court found that said appellee was negligent, then the petition was to have been dismissed, and appellant was to recover his costs. If not, the court was to enter judgment for the amount of the check and interest from the date of presentment, and costs.
It will be noted in this statement of facts that it is stipulated that there were not sufficient funds on hand to meet the check, but that due arrangements had been made on the part of the bank to pay the check when presented. These facts having been agreed upon, the fact that there were insufficient funds to meet the check becomes wholly immaterial, and the drawee is bound to present the same for payment. Hamlin v. Simpson,
Section 9647, Code of 1924, reads as follows:
"A check must be presented for payment within a reasonable time after its issue, or the drawer will be discharged from liability thereon to the extent of the loss caused by the delay."
The question before us, therefore, is whether or not appellee presented the check within a reasonable time.
We have frequently announced the general rule that, under facts similar to these, the question of what is "a reasonable time" is a question of fact. However, there are 2. BILLS AND exceptions to this rule; and one is that, where NOTES: the facts are undisputed, it then becomes a presentment: question of law. 3 Ruling Case Law 1194, Section checks: 415, and cases there cited; Turner v. Iron Chief
reasonable Min. Co.,
"Where the facts are in dispute, `reasonable time' is a question for the jury; otherwise for the court," — citingSheffield v. Cleland, 19 Idaho 612 (115 P. 20); First Nat. Bankv. Korn (Mo. App.), 179 S.W. 721; Commercial Nat. Bank v.Zimmerman,
In determining what is "a reasonable time," all the facts and circumstances of the case must be taken into consideration. Section 9654, Code of 1924. In Northern Lbr. Co. v. Clausen,
"It is a well settled proposition of law that, where a person receives a check in the town where the drawee bank is located, it must be presented before the close of the next business day."
It seems to be pretty well settled that, where the drawee of a check and the bank are located in different places, the check must, in the absence of unusual circumstances, be forwarded for presentation on the day after it is received, at 3. BILLS AND the latest. 8 Corpus Juris 542, Section 754. NOTES: This doctrine has been affirmed by this court in presentment: Hamlin v. Simpson, supra, Northwestern Coal Co.
checks: v. Bowman Co.,
When we turn to the record, it is apparent that the check was received by appellee on the 18th day of May, after banking hours. The record, however, is a little uncertain as to just when the check was, in fact, presented to the bank. The statement in relation thereto is ambiguous. The bank appears to have closed sometime on the 25th of May, and as to whether the check was presented on the 25th of May or later, we have some question. If we assume that it was presented on May 25th, after the bank had closed, the time which elapsed would be 7, or possibly 6, days. While the record states that appellee received the check in Logan and took it to his farm, there is nothing to indicate where his farm was located. It may have been just outside the corporate limits of Logan, or it may have been many miles away; but as to its exact distance from the bank, we are not advised. The fact that appellee lived on a farm is the only circumstance in the case, aside from the lapse of time, that can in any way affect this question. Under the rules we have above laid down, it is our judgment that, as a matter of law, this check was not presented within a reasonable time. Under this conclusion, it follows that appellee was negligent. We are not to be understood *95 as saying that the fact of negligence would necessarily defeat the appellee from any recovery upon the check, if the amount thereof exceeded the amount lost by the drawer as the result of the failure to present the check. The appellant would be entitled only to recover to the extent of the deposit lost by him in the failing bank. There is evidence indicating that the amount of the check was greater than the amount of the deposit lost by the failure. On this question, we make no pronouncement.
For the reasons stated, the judgment for appellee for the full amount of the check was error. — Reversed and remanded.
De GRAFF, C.J., and EVANS, and MORLING, JJ., concur.