Merchants' Bank of Valdosta v. Baird

160 F. 642 | 8th Cir. | 1908

HOOK, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). It was known to both the National Bank and the lumber company that the credit and resources of the former were being used to uphold and further a venture in which it could not lawfully engage. But, the question remains:. How did it appear to the Georgia bank ? Did it have the aspect of legitimate banking business or of a guaranty for another? The letter of September 6, 1904, purported to obligate the National Bank unconditionally to pay all checks of the lumber company up to the amount of $5,000 in any one week. No limitation was expressed in the letter that had regard either to the condition of the company’s account, whether in credit or in debit, or to its future conduct or solvency. The president of the National Bank did not say he was confident the lumber company would not draw checks in excess of its rights as a customer, but that there was no reason for its drawing checks his bank would not honor. There was no pretense of a certification of checks in the customary meaning of that phrase. The certification of a check, like the acceptance of a draft, creates an original liability on the part of the bank upon which an action may be maintained, and it implies that at the time the check is certified the drawer has sufficient funds with the bank and that they have been set apart and will be retained for the holder, whoever he may be, and whenever the check may be presented. The bank undertakes that the check is good at the time it is certified, and that it shall continue so until finally paid. Though an officer may bind his bank by certifying a check in the absence of funds of the drawer Congress has made the act a misdemeanor. U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3497, § 5208. In some respects a certified check is not unlike a certificate of deposit payable to the order of the depositor. The customary and proper practice is for the certifying bank to at once charge the account of the drawer with the amount of the check, and thus protect itself against loss from its assumption of liability by completing the withdrawal of the amount from his further control. Merchants’ Bank v. State Bank, 10 Wall. 604, 648, 19 L. Ed. 1008.

But the letter of September 6 had no reference to checks then in existence. The amount of checks that would be drawn in the future within the prescribed limit was not known, nor was there any definite time limit to the duration of the undertaking evidenced by the letter. The power of the bank to put an end to its continuing promise to oay checks of the lumber company was not a safeguard against loss. Under the terms of the letter a liability would arise in Georgia before it would be known in Minnesota. Regarded most favorably, the letter *645evidenced a transaction that was oí doubtful regularity. Since the proper certification oí a check signifies that the maker has sufficient funds with the bank an agreement to certify checks to be drawn in the future is so out oí the usual banking course as to challenge attention.

The true purpose of the writer of the letter and the real relation between his bank and the lumber company was disclosed by the telegrams of the Oth and 22d of December. In the first of these the limit per week was raised to $10,000, and in the second the limit was entirely- removed. In both telegrams the obligation attempted to be assumed by the letter of September 0th was referred to as a guaranty. Neither of the telegrams authorized the inference that the checks to be drawn by the lumber company were upon its funds then with the bank, or that paymient depended upon funds being placed there by it. The first one is particularly significant, in that tl^e undertaking was to “protect” checks of the lumber company for $5,000 per week in excess of “present guarantee.” Even more significant of the true situation is the telegram of December 22d. It referred to the undertaking as a guaranty, and purported to bind the National Bank to pay all checks that might be drawn upon it within the given period without regard to the amount. This was manifestly beyond the power of the bank as it put at hazard, upon the mere act of the lumber company, the duty of the bank to the government, the interests of its shareholders, and the funds of its depositors. In this connection, it is said that the amount of the eight checks in controversy, $8,000, was within the limit prescribed by the telegram of December 6th, but these checks were drawn between December 27th and 81st, inclusive, and at that time the Georgia bank had before it the letter and both telegrams, and was therefore advised of the character of the obligation which the National Bank was attempting to assume. The letter and telegrams taken together were sufficient to advise the Georgia bank at the time it cashed the checks in controversy that the National Bank was lending its credit to the lumber company. If the latter had the right to draw the checks, and if it was the duty of the bank on which they were drawn to pay them, It would not have agreed to “protect” them or referred to its obligation as a “guaranty.” The term “guaranty” has a different signification, and ordinarily a bank does not agree to protect a check which it is its duty to pay. Both terms employed pointed quite clearly to the real relation between the National Bank and the lumber company, and, if there was otherwise any doubt, the removal of all limit to the obligation attempted to be assumed should have dispelled it.

A national bank may warrant the title to property it conveys, or become liable as an indorser or guarantor of notes or other obligations which it rediscounts or sells because to do so is incidental to the business it is authorized to transact, and to the disposition of property it has lawfully acquired. But it cannot lend its credit to another by "becoming surety, indorser, or guarantor for him. It cannot for the accommodation of another indorse his note or guarantee the performance of obligations in which it has no interest. Such an act is an adventure beyond the confines of its charter, and, when its true character is known, no rights grow out of it. though it has taken on in part the garb of a lawful transaction. Commercial Nat. Bank v. Pirie, 82 Fed. *646799, 27 C. C. A. 171; Bowen v. National Bank, 94 Fed. 925, 36 C. C. A. 553; Id. 87 Fed. 430. An act that is void because beyond the power of a national bank cannot be made good by estoppel. McCormick v. Market Bank, 165 U. S. 538, 17 Sup. Ct. 433, 41 L. Ed. 817; California Bank v. Kennedy, 167 U. S. 362, 17 Sup. Ct. 831, 42 L. Ed. 198. It is urged that the National Bank profited by the transactions to the extent of exchange, and that it retained the benefit. It is difficult to find any profit to the bank in these transactions. If there was any, it was swallowed up in losses.

The judgment is affirmed..

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