42 S.E. 551 | N.C. | 1902
On 4 October, 1900, the plaintiff sold to one Hudson forty-three bales of cotton for cash, $2,064, and took his check therefor on defendant bank. On presentation of check, 6 October, payment was refused, the amount to the credit of the drawer being then only $630. Hudson, after the purchase of the forty-three bales from the plaintiff, sold twenty-three (118) bales thereof, and twenty-seven bales bought from another party, to the Roxboro Mills, for $2,436, and drew his draft on them for said amount, which he deposited in said bank to his credit, with bill of lading for said fifty bales attached. The other twenty bales bought of plaintiff were returned to him by Hudson, after payment of his check had been refused by the bank, and the plaintiff seeks in this action to recover of the bank only $1,127, balance due him by Hudson.
His Honor correctly instructed the jury that, applying the rule, "the first money in, the first money out" (Boyden v. Bank,
The plaintiff had no claim upon the bank by reason of the check drawn on it by Hudson, which it has never accepted or agreed to pay (Bank v. Bank,
It was the plaintiff's own fault that he took an order on another party — a check on the bank — instead of requiring the cash. The credit was extended to Hudson, not to the bank. The $630 to the credit of Hudson when the check was presented was not a special fund, nor, in fact, any fund which could be followed. It was simply an indebtedness from Hudson to the bank, which the latter could discharge by paying subsequently other checks or by charging up to Hudson any indebtedness it held against (120) him. If it did neither, it would remain an indebtedness, for which Hudson could bring action, but not the plaintiff. It would seriously impair the usefulness of banks, which are accustomed to credit to a depositor any proceeds of drafts with bill of lading attached, if, whenever it turns out that the depositor has not paid in full for the property bought by him, the seller can hold the bank responsible for the balance of the purchase money, which is a matter between seller and buyer, and which cannot concern the bank when the seller has turned over the property to the depositor. If the title is defective, that concerns the party in receipt of the cotton, and not the bank. Finchv. Gregg,
In the instructions given, that the plaintiff could reclaim the property or the proceeds thereof in the hands of the defendant bank, there was
Error.
DOUGLAS, J., dissents.
Cited: Mason v. Cotton Co.,
(121)