148 N.Y.S. 654 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
Lead Opinion
This is an action on an assigned claim of the National City-Bank of Akron, 0., to recover damages alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant as a bank employed to collect a certain promissory note payable at the Galesburg National Bank, Galesburg, 111.
This court on an appeal from a former judgment herein in favor of the plaintiff, reversed the judgment and ordered a new trial before the referee whose report is now under review. (138 App. Div. 339.) The material facts then presented by the record are stated in the opinion delivered on that appeal, and need not be restated. The loss has been occasioned by the release of a solvent indorser. On the former trial it was held, in effect, that the proximate cause of the release of the indorser was a letter transmitted by the defendant with the note to the People’s Trust and Savings Bank of Galesburg, 111., containing the words “No Protest.” This court on the former appeal held that it was not necessary to protest the note because it was not a foreign bill of exchange, and, on evidence which is the same as that in the record now before the court, held that the said People’s Trust and Savings Bank of Galesburg, which the defendant employed to collect the note, was guilty of negligence in failing properly to present the note for payment. Since the evidence is precisely the same with respect "to those two points in this record, we adopt the opinion on the former appeal without further discussing them.
On the former appeal it was also held, on the authority of Montgomery County Bank v. Albany City Bank (7 N. Y. 459), that the only theory on which the defendant would be liable to the plaintiff for the negligence of its correspondent or collecting agent is that the defendant was employed by the plaintiff to collect the note; and it was also held that such employment was not shown in that the relations between the Cleveland bank, to which the note was transmitted by the plaintiff’s assignor, and the Chicago bank, to which the Cleveland bank transmitted the note, and between the Chicago bank and the defendant, to
The Court of Appeals in the Montgomery County Bank Case (supra), which has been accepted as the settled law of this State on these questions and often cited with approval (Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania v. Union Bank of New York, 11 N. Y. 203; Naser v. First National Bank, 116 id. 492. See, also, to same effect National Revere Bank v. Nat. Bank of Republic, supra, and cases cited), clearly stated the rule to be that the bank accepting employment from the owner of commercial paper to collect it becomes his agent and is liable for any negligence on the part of any other bank or agent employed directly or indirectly by it to accomplish the purpose; and that if the bank originally employed employs another, such other bank becomes its agent and not the agent of the owner, and is responsible to it alone and not to the owner for any negligence. This rule of law is not uniform throughout the United States, but it is the rule adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States. (Exchange National Bank v. Third National Bank, 112 U. S. 276.) It may be said that it was not necessary for this court on the former appeal to decide the question as to whether, if each bank in the chain preceding the defendant refused to accept the note for collection and merely transmitted it, and the defendant failed thus to limit its liability, the defendant would become the agent of the owner; but in view of the decision of this court on the other questions, that was the only possible theory on which the defendant could be liable, and, therefore, that was the only occasion for the new trial, and whether it was necessary to express a decided view on that question on the former appeal or not, the views then expressed are, I think, sound and logical. If the defendant was the first bank which accepted the note for collection, that
It follows that this judgment is right and should be affirmed.
McLaughlin, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, P. J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
When this case was before this court on the former appeal (138 App. Div. 339) we applied the principle established in the case of Montgomery County Bank v. Albany City Bank (7 N. Y. 459) and expressly held, as I read the opinion, that the defendant could not be liable to the plaintiff on account of the failure of the People’s Trust and Savings Bank at Galesburg, where the note was payable, to present the note for payment and properly protest it. The conclusion at which my brother Clarke arrived in reversing that judgment is as follows: “To sustain the judgment in this case would be to hold that the defendant, without knowledge of the special agreement, though with knowledge of the general rule, was liable not to its immediate predecessor but to a remote principal upon the doctrine of agency of an undisclosed principal and for a negligence not of its own but of its correspondent. If the plaintiff is right, and the chain once broken, all the links fall apart, and it has the right to sue any one, it should have proceeded against the People’s Trust and Savings Bank. If it is not right and the rule has only been affected so far as the Cleveland and the Chicago banks are concerned, it has no privity with the defendant or right to sue it, even assuming, which we do not at all concede, that its act in allowing the words ‘No Protest ’ to appear upon its letter of transmittal was the proximate cause of the loss.”
As to the substantial facts upon which this conclusion was based there is no change upon the new trial. The plaintiff in this action sues as the assignee of the National City Bank of Akron, 0. It discounted this note for a customer, and before
I think, therefore, that the judgment appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.