6 Mont. 251 | Mont. | 1887
This was an action brought by the appellants against respondent to recover the amount of a draft drawn by Ealburn on Him, and deposited by plaintiffs with defendant for collection, and alleged to have been collected and the proceeds retained by the defendant. It was tried by the court on an agreed statement of facts, and judgment rendered therein for defendant, from which judgment the plaintiffs appeal to this court.
The agreed statement of facts, among other formal matters, contains the following: “That on the 17th day of September, A. D. 1881, the plaintiffs were the owners and holders of a certain draft for the sum of $325.57, drawn by J. M. Kilburn on William Ulm, at Sun Eiver, Montana territory; that on said date the plaintiffs deposited said draft Avith defendant for collection; that plaintiffs Avére regular depositors with defendant; that on said 17th day of September, A. D. 1881, the defendant forwarded said draft to its customary correspondents, the firm of George Steell & Co., Avho Avere at that time a firm of merchants at Sun Eiver, aforesaid, in good standing, and Avho Avere accustomed to make collections, there being no bank at that place, with instructions to collect and remit; that defendant and said firm of George Steell & Co. at that time had no current account between them; that on September 25, 1881, or thereabouts, the said firm of George Steell & Co. collected said draft, to wit, the sum of $325.57, from the said William Him, but kept the money and failed to remit or account for the same to defendant, and on the 18th day of October, A. D. 1881, became insolvent; that defendant never received the money collected on said draft, but, after the insolvency of George Steell & Co., was informed that the money collected on said draft had been, by said George Steell & Co., credited on their books to it, defendant, at the time of the collection thereof, Avhich was the first knowl
The question of how far a bank is liable for the default of a correspondent or collecting agent in regard to a collection is one which has been solved in at least three different ways by the many courts of last resort in the United States which have at different times had the matter under consideration. One class of cases maintains the absolute liability of a bank for any default of its correspondent or collecting agent, in the same manner as it would be for the default of its own employees, on the principle that the bank, by undertaking the collection, obligated itself to see that every proper measure was taken, and regarding the collector as the agent of the bank, and not as the agent of the owner of the commercial paper. A second class of cases holds that the bank is liable only for the exercise of due care and diligence in selecting a trustworthy agent or correspondent, and that there being in the deposit for collection the implied authority to employ a subagent, that such subagent becomes, when chosen, the agent of the holder, and not of the bank which selected him. The third class of cases draws a distinction between the cases in which the payer resides where the bank is situated and the cases where he resides at a distance; in the first place making the bank liable absolutely for any default or wrongful act, and in the second place only making the bank .liable for the proper selection of a competent and reliable agent, with proper instruction. 1 Daniel, Neg. Inst. § 341.
Inasmuch as there is such a variety of opinions to be found among the highest courts on this important question, it is proposed to examine at some length such of them as are accessible to us, and thence deduce what we consider to be the true rule governing such cases.
There has never been any adjudication on a question similar to this in this court; and, so far as concerns this territory, this is a case of first impression. We will review these cases in their chronological order.
The English cases concur in holding the bank which receives the paper for collection liable, in any event, for the default of its correspondents; and this agrees with the line of decisions rendered by the supreme court of the United States and other national courts, and the doctrine laid down in the court of appeals of New York and the other courts which have followed these authorities. It has been held in the house of lords, that, where Edinburgh bankers transmitted a bill to London bankers who forwarded it to their correspondents in Calcutta, who in turn collected it and failed, that the Edinburgh bankers were liable to the owner of the bill on the ground that they, being agents to collect the bill and the collection being made, their principal could not be called on to suffer any loss by the conduct of their subagents, there being no privity between them. Mackersy v. Ramsay, 9 Clark & F., 818-850; H. of L. R., cited in Broom, Leg. Max. (6th Amer. ed.) 603.
In the year 1827 the supreme court of Connecticut said: “Where Lawrence, residing in New York, having drawn a bill on a person in Stonington, in this state, payable to his
In Mechanics' Bank v. East, 4 Rawle, 385, decided by the supreme court of Pennsylvania in 1834, the bills were drawn and deposited in bank, under a special agreement that they were to be transmitted to Virginia for collection, and the facts show that the bank carried out the contract, and hence the depositor could not recover. Then it cannot be considered a case parallel with the one at bar, though in the opinion the discussion covers the principles involved herein. Mechanics' Bank v. East, 4 Rawle, 384, 385.
The question came before the supreme court of Connecticut again in 1839, and the case of Lawrence v. Stonington Bank is quoted and confirmed in the following language: “A., residing at Saybrook, in this state, being the holder of a bill of exchange, drawn by B., in London, on C., in New York, and accepted by C., payable to the order of A., indorsed it, and transmitted it, some time before it became
The leading New York case on this subject is Allen v. Merchants’ Bank of New York, decided in 1839, and reported in 22 Wend. 215-244. In that case reference is had to a case decided by Chief Justice Marshall (Bank of Washington v. Triplett, 1 Pet. 25), and from which it is distinguished, and to the English case of Van Wart v. Woolley, 3 Barn. & C. 419, which it follows on the point under consideration. . The court of errors was divided in the case of Allen v. Merchants' Bank of New York, by a vote of fourteen to ten; and the following principle arising out of this case was resolved: “ Resolved, that when a bank or broker or other money dealer receives, upon a good consideration, a note or bill for collection in the place where such bank, broker or dealer carries on business, or at a distant place, the party receiving the same for collection is liable for the
In the first Massachusetts case on this subject (in 1839) it is said by Shaw, O. J., in delivering the opinion of the court, that when a note is deposited with a bank for collection, which is payable at another place, the whole duty of the bank so receiving the note in the first instance is seasonably to transmit the same to a suitable bank or agent at the place of payment; and, as a part of the same doctrine, it is well settled that, if the acceptor of a bill or a promissory note has his residence in another place, it shall be presumed to have. been intended and understood between the depositor for collection, and the bank, that it was to be transmitted to the place of residence of the promisor, and the same rule shall then apply as if, on the face of the note, it was payable at that place; citing Bank of Washington v. Triplett, 1 Pet. 25; Allen v. Merchants' Bank, 15 Wend. 482; Jackson v. Union Bank, 4 Har. & J. 146; Lawrence v. Stonington Bank, 6 Conn. 528; Fabens v. Mercantile Bank, 23 Pick. 332.
In the case of Wingate v. Mechanics’ Bank it was decided by the supreme court of Pennsylvania (in 1848), that where a bank in Pennsylvania received for collection a note payable in Mississippi, under an agreement to collect it for a commission of seven per cent., and transmitted it to a bank in Bodney, Mississippi, where payment was refused,'and the Pennsylvania bank neglected to give information to the owner of the non-payment, and to return the note to him within a reasonable time, so that it was barred by the statute of limitations, it thereby became liable to pay the note and interest, less the seven per cent', commission. Wingate v. Mechanics' Bank, 10 Pa. St. 107. This case turns upon an express contract between the parties, evidenced by the
The supreme court of Massachusetts, in Dorchester & Milton Bank v. New England Bank (decided in 1848), follows the ease of Fabens v. Mercantile Bank, 23 Pick. 330, and confirms it as well founded in principle, and supported by a decided weight of authority. The case of Allen v. Merchants' Bank, 22 Wend. 215, is said to be the only opposing decision, and is criticised severely. Dorchester & Milton Bank v. New England Bank, 1 Cush. 186.
This question was again incidentally before the supreme court of Massachusetts in 1852, in the case of Warren Bank v. Suffolk Bank, and the cases of Fabens v. Mercantile Bank, 23 Pick. 330, and Dorchester & Milton Bank v. New England Bank, 1 Cush. 186, were quoted and followed; and the cases of Baldwin v. Bank of Louisiana, 1 La. Ann. 13,. and Bellemire v. Bank of United States, 4 Whart. 105, were cited with approval. The case of Allen v. Merchants’ Bank, 22 Wend. 215, is referred to, but disregarded. The decision in the case of Warren Bank v. Suffolk Bank is rested, however, on an implied agreement between the parties arising from a known usage of long standing among the banks of Boston. It was held that a bank receiving a note for collection was not liable to its customer for the negligence of a notary to whom the collecting bank had handed the note for demand and protest. Warren Bank v. Suffolk Bank, 10 Cush. 585.
In 1852 the court of appeals of the state of New York, in the well-considered case of Montgomery County Bank v. Albany City Bank, reviews all the cases which had been decided in that state up to that time, and Mr. Justice Jewett, in delivering the opinion of the court, uses the following language: “ I consider it a rule of law well settled in this state, that when a bank receives from the owner a bill for collection, payable either at the place where sueh bank
In 1854 the court of appeals of New York again reviewed the cases previously decided, in the case of Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania v. Union Bank of New York. That was a case where the Bank of Wilmington was the owner of a bill of exchange, payable at sight, at. Troy, and indorsed and transmitted to the plaintiff, the Pennsylvania Bank, under an arrangement by which the latter collected and retained the proceeds of paper thus remitted to it, and,
“ The liability of the defendants for the acts and omissions of the Troy City Bank, and their officers and agents, in and about the collection of the draft, is no longer an open question. It was definitely settled by the court for the correction of errors in Allen v. Merchants' Bank of New York, 22 Wend. 215, in which it was resolved that when a bank, broker or other money dealer receives, upon a good consideration, a note or bill for collection, in the place where such bank, broker or dealer carries on business, or at a distant place, the party receiving the same for collection is liable for the neglect, omission or other misconduct of the bank or agent to whom the bill or note is sent, either in the negotiation, collection or paying over the money, by which the money is lost, or other injury sustained by the owner of the note or bill, unless there be some agreement to the contrary, express or implied; and this doctrine was reasserted and directly approved by this court in Montgomery County Bank v. Albany City Bank, decided December, 1852, in this court.”
“ If a liability has been incurred by the defendants, by reason of an omission of dffiy on the part of the bank at Troy, either in the payment of the money collected, or in charging the prior parties to the bill, upon its dishonor by the drawee it is quite evident that such liability is to the plaintiff, which alone can enforce it by action. To this effect is the decision of Montgomery County Bank v. Albany City Bank. It was there held that the plaintiff, who had transmitted a bill payable in New York to the Albany City
“ The doctrine put forth in Bank of Orleans v. Smith, 3 Hill, 560, that where a note payable at a distance is deposited with a bank for collection, and the latter transmits it to another bank for the same purpose, both are to be regarded as agents for the holder, is disapproved in the same opinion. Indeed, it seems to follow necessarily, from the adjudication in Allen v. Merchants’ Bank, that the defendant, being the agent of the plaintiff, is responsible to it, as principal, for the proper discharge of the duties of the agency. The contract of the agent respecting the business
The supreme court of Ohio, in 1858, in the case of Reeves v. State Bank of Ohio, 8 Ohio St. 468, in a very learned opinion by Brinkerhoff, J., reviewed all of the English and American cases up to that date, and elects to follow the decisions of the New York court - of appeals, which, in turn, had followed the English doctrine. In that case the correct rule is stated to be as follows: “ Where a bank in this state i’eceives for collection a draft payable in New York, and, for the same purpose, forwards the draft to its correspondent in New York, the bank here is responsible to the owner for the conduct of such correspondent, and for the proceeds of the draft, immediately upon its collection by such correspondent. Such correspondent is the agent of the bank here, and not the subagent of the owner of the draft; and payment to the agent is payment to the bank, unless there was some agreement or authority between the owner and the bank, beyond the mere fact of the draft being received for collection.” The doctrine laid down in Bank of Orleans v. Smith, 3 Hill, 560; East Haddam Bank v. Scoville, 12 Conn. 303; and Fabens v. Mercantile Bank, 23 Pick. 330, is rejected as not sustained by weight of reason and authority. And the cases of Lawrence v. Stonington Bank, 6 Conn. 521; Bank of Metropolis v. New England Bank, 1 How. 234; Gordon v. Kearney, 17 Ohio, 572; and Wilson v. Smith, 3 How. 763, are distinguished from cases such as that and this by the fact that they were all suits brought by the owners of bills and notes deposited for collection with banks or bankers, against a secondary agent to whom they had been transmitted by the primary agent; and in all of them the plaintiffs were entitled to recover, subject, however, in
This Ohio case has since been followed as a leading case in upholding the doctrine first announced in America by the New York court of appeals.
The supreme court of Wisconsin, in 1860, decided, in the case of Stacy v. Dane County Bank, “ that the contract implied from the receipt, by a bank, of a note for collection, payable at a distance from its place of business, is not absolutely to make due presentment of the note, and give due notice of its non-payment, but to place it in the hands of some competent and responsible agent for that purpose, and that, if the bank exercises reasonable care and skill in selecting such agent, it is not liable for his default.” Stacy v. Dane County Bank, 12 Wis. 707.
In the case of Ætna Ins. Co. v. Alton City Bank, decided by the supreme court of Illinois in 1861, Mr. Justice Walker, delivering the opinion of the court, after reviewing many cases, says: “Where a bank receives a bill or note for collection against a drawee or maker, resident at the place of the bank, or where the bank undertakes for its collection by their own officers, there can be no doubt that it would be liable for any loss that might result from neglect; but, when received for transmission, it has fully discharged its duty by sending the instrument in due season to a competent, reliable agent, with proper instructions for its collection.” Ætna Ins. Co. v. Alton City Bank, 25 Ill. 243.
In 1872 the supreme court of Pennsylvania adopts the doctrine before announced in New York. The case of Bradstreet v. Everson, 72 Pa. St. 132, was a case where a collection agency received for collection in Pittsburgh certain acceptances, and transmitted the same to Wood, an attorney in Memphis, who collected, and failed to remit. Bradstreet & Sons, the collection agency, was held liable. The opinion in this case, rendered in 1872, reviews many
The last New York case which has fallen under our notice was decided in 1872. In that case (Ayrault v. Pacific Bank), the court of appeals of New York decided a case under the following state of facts: Ayrault, a customer of the Pacific Bank, deposited with the said bank two promissory notes for collection. They were not paid, and were handed by the bank to a notary for demand and protest. He failed to properly protest the notes, whereby the indorsers were discharged, and collection was lost. The court in its opinion says: “ The doctrine established by the court for the correction of errors in Allen v. Merchants’ Bank, 22 Wend. 216, has been repeatedly reaffirmed, and has never been questioned in this state. Bjr the receipt of negotiable paper for collection the bank or banker receiving it undertakes that the necessary means shall be taken to charge the drawer, indorser, and other parties, upon default, or refusal to pay or accept. A bank receiving a bill or promissory note for collection, whether payable at its counter or elsewhere, is liable for any neglect of duty occurring in its collection by which any of the parties are discharged, whether of the officers and immediate servants, or of the agents of the bank or its correspondents, or agents employed by such correspondents.” Ayrault v. Pacific Bank, 47 N. Y. 573.
In 1874 the supreme court of Tennessee decided the case of Bank of Louisville v. Bank of Knoxville, 8 Baxt. 105, in which it reviews numerous cases, and holds “ that the more reasonable and just construction of the nature of the undertaking of the bank in which the bill is deposited for collection is that, when the bill is payable at another and distant place, the bank so receiving the bill discharges itself of liability by transmitting the same, in due time, to a suit
There seem to have been four cases decided in the circuit courts of the United States, to wit: Bank of Trinidad v. First Nat. Bank, 4 Dill. 290; Hyde v. First Nat. Bank, 7 Biss. 156; Kent v. Dawson Bank, 13 Blatchf. 237; Taber v. Perrot, 2 Gall. 565, in all of which the case of Allen v. Merchants’ Bank is believed to have been followed, though we have only been, able to use these authorities at second hand, the original reports not being accessible.
This brings us to an examination of the cases decided by the supreme court of the United States, in which the English doctrine, which had been previously followed in New York, is adopted, after a full examination of all the leading authorities.
The question at bar first came directly before the supreme court of the United States in 1875. In the case of Hoover v. Wise, 91 U. S. 308, Mr. Justice Hunt, delivering the opinion of the court, discusses a long line of cases, English and American, and concurs in the principles laid down in the case of Reeves v. State Bank of Ohio, 8 Ohio St. 466, and in Allen v. Merchants’ Bank, 22 Wend. 215, and in other New York cases, and in Bradstreet v. Everson, 72 Pa. St. 124, and other cases to the same effect. This case presents the following state of facts: An account was delivered by its owners, Wise & Co., to Archer & Go., a collection agency in New York, with instructions to collect. Archer & Oo. sent it to McLennan, in Nebraska. Oppenheimer, the debtor, ivas in failing circumstances, and had already committed several acts of bankruptcy, when McLennan pre
The supreme court of Iowa, in 1881, reviews a large number of cases, and arrives at the following conclusion: “ Where the holder of a bill of exchange, payable at a distant place, deposits it with a local bank for collection, he thereby assents to the course of business of banks to collect through correspondents, and the correspondent of the local bank to which the bill is forwarded becomes his agent, and is responsible to him directly for negligence in failing to present the bill for payment within the proper time.” Guelich v. National State Bank of Burlington, 56 Iowa, 434. The cases of Hyde v. Planters' Bank, 17 La. 560; Baldwin v. Bank of Louisiana, 1 La. Ann. 13; Tier-
The case of Britton v. Niccolls, decided by the supreme court of the United States (104 U. S. 757), does not fall parallel with the cases at bar. It was decided in accordance with the decisions of the supreme court of Mississippi, and on the force of a local statute of that state prescribing certain duties for a notary public, and treating him as a public officer; and this case merely holds that the notary was not, in this matter, the agent of the bankers, and that for any failure to perform his duties he alone was liable. 104 U. S. 766 The decision was not made upon any general principle of commercial law, and establishes none, and is clearly distinguished from the later case of Exchange Nat. Bank v. Third Nat. Bank, 112 U. S. 284-287; S. C. 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 141, where it is discussed, and from the case now under consideration, where no such questions as were there decided are involved.
The latest discussion and decision of the question presented in the case at bar by any court of last resort was had in 1884 by the supreme court of the United States, in the ease of Exchange Nat. Bank of Pittsburgh v. Third Nat. Bank of New York, 112 U. S. 280. The doctrine of the liability of the bank receiving a draft for any default of its correspondent is thoroughly discussed, and clearly enunciated. In that case the Pittsburgh bank had sent to the New York bank several unaccepted drafts for collection. The New York bank sent them to a bank in Newark. The Newark bank failed to take the proper acceptances, and by this negligence the payment of the drafts failed to be made.
The reasoning of this opinion effectually obliterates all distinctions between the cases of the second and third classes which have been attempted to be drawn in some of the
The foundation for all the differences of opinion among the learned judges who have had the matter under consideration appears clearly to rest in the interpretation of the implied contract between the depositor and the bank at the time the negotiable paper is deposited for collection. Where there is an express contract, it must, of course, be followed, and there is no room for a difference of opinion; and all of the decisions herein styled cases of the second and third classes are founded on the idea that the course of.business or the customs of bankers, or the necessities of the case, or the peculiar circumstances, raise some other presumption than the one that the bank receiving the deposit for collection undertakes to collect it, and assumes all the risks from the negligence or default of the agents which it employs. We do not believe that any other contract can be inferred from the mere tender and acceptance of negotiable paper for collection. No matter where the debtor may reside, nor what agencies are necessary to employ in the collection, the depositor is not supposed to be acquainted with the methods to be employed by the bank in collecting its paper, or the carefulness, skill, solvency or honesty of the agents whom it may be necessary to employ in such collections. Besides, it is the universal custom of banks, on receiving collections, to pass them to the credit of the owner, and to indorse and transmit them to their correspondents, where they are in like manner passed to the credit of the indorser, and so on
On mature consideration of the authorities, supporting all shades of opinion on this subject, we fully agree with the views expressed in 1 Daniel, Neg. Inst. 342, and hold that, in the absence of a special contract, a bank is absolutely liable for any laches, negligence or default of its correspondent whereby the holder of negotiable paper suffers loss. By such a rule alone can the depositor who intrusts his business to a bank be secure against carelessness or dishonesty on the part of collecting agencies employed by banks to carry out their contracts. Banks can easily avoid the effects of this stringent rule by making special contracts in special cases, or declining to undertake collections at points where they have any fears as to the reliability or solvency of the agents whom they will be obliged to employ;. but when they undertake collections, either at their own location, or at distant points, without a special contract limiting their liability, they must be held to do so for a sufficient consideration, and to be responsible absolutely to the owner of negotiable paper for the payment of all money collected thereon, and for all losses occurring through the negligence of the agent, resulting in a failure to make such collection.
In accordance with these views, the judgment is hereby reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.