203 N.W. 46 | Minn. | 1925
The only defense pleaded was that plaintiff had failed to present the checks for payment within a reasonable time.
The school in which plaintiff taught was about 4 1/2 miles and the place where she boarded about 5 1/2 miles from the village of Badger. When not teaching she lived with her parents in the village. She taught school on April 10, 11, 12 and 13. April 14 was Good Friday. The bank was not open for business and plaintiff did not teach on that day. Plaintiff testified that in the morning of Saturday, April 15, she learned that the bank had been closed and that she could not cash her checks. In these circumstances, should it be held that as a matter of law plaintiff failed to present the checks within a reasonable time after she received them?
The Negotiable Instruments Act, section 186 (section 7229, G.S. 1923), provides that 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; and section 193 (section 7237, G.S. 1923), provides that, in determining what is a reasonable time, regard is to be had to the nature of the instrument, the usage of trade or business (if any) with respect to such instruments, and the facts of the particular case.
Defendant relies on the rule that, in the absence of special circumstances, due diligence requires a person who receives a check drawn on a bank located at the place where he resides or does business, to present the check for payment not later than the next business day after it is received. 5 R.C.L. 509; 8 C.J. p. 540. In Richardson G.S. Co. v. East Hennepin State Bank,
The circumstances of this case are peculiar. It was plaintiff's duty to teach every week day except Saturday and legal holidays. Section 2872, G.S. 1923. The school's closing hour was 3:30 p.m. and the bank's 4 p.m. She could not make presentment of her *359 checks before Saturday, April 15, unless she employed some one to go to the bank for her or closed her school for a day and went herself. It can hardly be assumed that the defendant expected or intended that she should suspend teaching in order to go to Badger to cash the checks, or that she would employ a messenger to present them for her.
Whether an act was done within a reasonable time is usually a question for the jury, and the facts of this case would not justify the withdrawal of the question from the jury.
The statute does not say that the holder of a check must present it for payment at the earliest opportunity. It requires presentment to be made within a reasonable time, and it declares in effect that the facts of the particular case must be considered in determining whether the presentment was made within a reasonable time.
Business usages are also to be considered, but none were proved. Moreover, it would be unreasonable to charge a young woman teaching a country school with the knowledge of usages which might properly be ascribed to men actively engaged in business.
Judgment affirmed.