121 N.Y.S. 1041 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
This is an action to recover damages for the alleged negligence of the defendant by which the indorser of.á promissory note became relieved of its liability, and, the maker being insolvent, plaintiff’s assignor lost the amount thereof.
On May 10," 1907, the Western Tool Works of Galesburg, Ill.,
The First National Bank of Cleveland forwarded the note to the Commercial National Bank of Chicago, 111., said bank forwarded said note to the Illinois National Bank of Peoria, 111., said bank thereupon forwarded the note to the People’s Trust and Savings Bank of Galesburg, 111. The letter of transmittal from the' Illinois National Bank, the defendant, to the People’s Trust and Savings Bank reads: “ Please find enclosed for collection and returns 8463 Western Tool Works $6432.44. Please do not hold this collection for any reason or excuse. Return at once if not paid.” By mistake of a clerk it also contained the words “No Protest.” The clerk of the People’s Trust and Savings Bank of Galesburg testified: “ I was the collection clerk of that bank. * * * On the day before maturity I called up the Western Tool Works and notified them that we held this note for collection and it
The following day, September eleventh, the defendant sent the note back to the Commercial National Bank of Chicago, with a letter reading as follows: “ Beturned reasons, if any given, endorsed Note Galesburg, 6,432.44.” No reasons were indorsed or stated. The defendant sentno other notice in regal'd to this note to any one at that tithe or for several days thereafter. The Commercial.National Bank of Chicago received this letter from the defendant on September twelfth, and on the same day returned .the note to the defendant with the following letter : “We return herewith note for $6,432.44 payable at Galesburg, Illinois. We regret to inform-you that we cannot accept the return of this item in its present condition. It was sent yon subject to protest and should have been protested if not paid at maturity. We will thank you to secure a remittance for this note and advise us at your earliest convenience.”
On the same day the Commercial National Bank of Chicago telegraphed the First National Bank of Cleveland as follows: “ Galesburg number one fifty-eight fifteen returned without protest we forward
So that on the fourteenth of September the National City Bank of Akron received notice in due course of mail that the note had not been paid. It did not, however, notify the rubber company or demand payment from it as indorser. The defendant received the letter of the Commercial National Bank of Chicago, dated September twelfth, returning the note for protest on September thirteenth, and on the same day sent it back to the People’s Trust and Savings Bank of Galesburg, which received it on September fourteenth, and on that day caused the-same to be presented to the maker, the Western Tool Works, but not at the Galesburg National Bank where the note was payable, and demanded payment, which was refused, and thereupon caused it to be protested and notice of dishonor and protest to be sent to all of the parties whose names appeared on the note, including the plaintiff’s assignor and the original payee and indorser.
The evidence shows that the first notice which the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company received of the dishonor of this note was on September seventeenth. Because of these facts the rubber company has refused to pay the note, although solvent and financially able to do so, and claims that it cannot be held responsible therefor. It is admitted that the Western Tool Works, the maker of the note, is insolvent and unable to pay. The plaintiff claims
In Montgomery County Bank v. Albany City Bank (7 N. Y. 459) the plaintiff was the owner and holder of a draft which it transmitted for’ collection to the Albany City Bank, which in turn transmitted it to the Bank of the State of New York at New York city. That bank did not present the draft for payment.on the day it was due or give notice of non-payment thereof to the drawers of indorsers, by mean of which neglect plaintiff sustained damages to the amount of the draft. A verdict under the instructions of the court was returned against both of the defendants. The Court of Appeals reversed as to the Bank of the State of New York and dismissed the- complaint as to it, holding: “ When a bank receives from the owner a bill for collection payable either at the place where such bank carries on its business or at some distant place, it thereby becomes the agent of the owner for the collection, and in the discharge of its obligations as such, if the bill has not been accepted, it is bound to present the same for acceptance without' unreasonable delay, as well as to present the same for payment when it becomes payable; and if not accepted when presented for that purpose, or not paid when presented for payment, it must take such steps by ■protest and notice as are necessary to charge the drawer and endorser, or it will 'be liable to its principal, the owner, for the damages which the latter sustains by any neglect to perform such duties, unless there be some agreement to the contrary, express or implied. And if it be necessary Or convenient for the bank to employ some other bank or individual to collect the bill, either at the place ’of its location, or at a distant place, where the bill is payable, and it .does employ another bank or individual, to whom it transmits the bill for that purpose,' the latter on receiving the bill and entering upon the discharge of the trust, becomes the agent of the former bank and not of the owner, and in the absence of aiiy agreement to the contrary is answerable to it for any neglect in the discharge of its duties as agent, whereby the 'former bank
The rule laid down is still the settled law of the State of New York ( Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania v. Union Bank of New York, 11 N. Y. 203; Ayrault v. Pacific Bank, 47 id. 570; Naser v. First National Bank, 116 id. 492; St. Nicholas Bank v. State National Bank, 128 id. 26; National Revere Bank v. National Bank of Republic, 172 id. 102), and is the 'rule adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States. (Exchange National Bank v. Third National Bank, 112 U. S. 276.)
It having been established by the evidence that there was a special arrangement or agreement between the Akron National Bank and the First National Bank of Cleveland, under which the obligation of the Cleveland bank was confined to due care in the choice.of its correspondents, it follows that no cause of action by reason of the acts complained of accrued against the First National Bank of Cleveland. The cases which we have examined have considered the liability of the first collecting bank. We have in the case at bar a chain of banks. The responsibility of the Cleveland bank was limited to the proper choice of a collecting agent. It chose the Commercial National Bank of Chicago. Under the doctrine of the Montgomery County Bank case, by the special agreement between the Akron bank and the
The agreement was that the Cleveland bank should be only held liable for due care in its choice of .its correspondents. Its choice was made when it sent the note to the Chicago bank. What relations existed between it and the Chicago bank does not appear from the record.' In the absence of proof of a special agreement, we must assume that the commercial rule laid down' in the Montgomery Country Bank case applies and that it was responsible to the Cleveland bank, from whom it received the note, for negligencé upon its part or that of its agent. But there was no agreement between it and the Akron bank, and there was no authority from the Akron bank to it, or from the Cleveland bank to it,- to choose as the agent of the Alcron bank a proper person, and thereby be exempted from all liability to either of said banks for any .neglect or default of-said agent. The Chicago bank in turn sent the note to the defendant, and again there is in the record no evidence of any special agreement between the Chicago bank and the Peoria bank which affected the general rule of law heretofore indicated. The Peoria bank in its turn sent the note to the People’s Trust and Savings. Bank at Gales-burg, and there is no evidence of any special contract or arrangement between those two banks.
The note was by its terms made payable at the Galesburg National Bank. It was not presented"at said bank for payment, either upon the first occasion of its transmittal to the People’s Trust and Savings Bank, or upon the second time when it was protested. The rule of law in this State is that to hold an indorser the bill or note must be .presented at the time and placé where made payable. (Parker v. Stroud,. 98 N. Y. 379; National Hudson River Bank v. Kinderhook & H. R. Co., 17 App. Div. 232; affd., 162 N. Y. 623.) Formal protest by a notary public is not essential to hold an indorser. . It is mere proof. What is essential is presentment and
So, notwithstanding the words “ No Protest ” in the letter of transmittal from the defendant to the People’s Trust and Savings Bank, it was still the duty of the said bank, having in its possession an indorsed note for collection, to have'presented it upon the due day at the Galesburg National Bank where made payable. If it had been so presented and a notice of such presentation had been sent back down through the line of banks, the rubber company would have been held upon its obligation, irrespective of the fact that the note had not been protested, and it was- the failure to present and notify which relieved the indorser, if it has been relieved. That failure was the failure of the Galesburg bank and not of the Peoria bank, and, it seems to us, it cannot be said, in view of the facts of this case, that the words “No Protest” in the defendant’s letter constituted the proximate cause of the release of the indorser.
So if we assume that the special agreement between the Akron bank and the Cleveland bank had the force and effect of constituting each of the banks in-the chain the agents of the Akron bank, then, each being responsible for its defaults and only .it's own defaults, it follows that the wrong party has been sued, the right of action, if any, being against the People’s Trust and Savings Bank of Galesburg for its failure to properly present the note at the time and place where and when made payable.
If, on the other hand, the special agreement was exhausted when the Cleveland bank exercised its power to. choose an agent and did not confer a similar power upon the Chicago bank, why then the Chicago bank, under the rule in the Montgomery County Bank case, must be considered to be the collecting bank and responsible for any subsequent default. “ The Bank of the State of New York not-having been employed by the plaintiff [bank] as its agent, owed -it no duty in respect to the draft,'and therefore is not liable to the plaintiff for any neglect of duty which it owed to its principal, the Albany City Bank, under its contract with it.” (Montgomery County Bank Case, supra.) The Supreme Court of the United States, adopting the rule of the Montgomery County Bank case, in
It follows, therefore, that the judgment appealed from should be reversed and a néw trial ordered before anothér referee, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
McLaughlin, Scott, Miller and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
J udgment reversed and new trial ordered before another referee, with costs to appellant tó abide event. Settle order on notice.