145 A. 689 | Pa. | 1929
Argued January 22, 1929. The Real Estate-Land Title Trust Company sued to recover the amount of a check issued by defendants to one Lamson, a depositor in plaintiff bank, which claimed to be a holder for value. Defendants alleged that plaintiff *57 did not hold the check for value, but was merely an agent for collection; and, for present purposes, this issue may be taken as the controlling one in the case. Defendants have appealed from judgment entered on a verdict for plaintiff.
On the morning of November 20, 1925, Lamson had a balance to his credit of approximately $77,000 in a checking account with plaintiff bank; also a balance, estimated to be about $20,000 (though it subsequently proved to be materially less), in a collateral loan account with plaintiff. About noon on the day in question, Lamson deposited in the first of the above mentioned accounts the check now in suit, for $20,502, so that he then had an apparent credit of $117,502. On that day checks totaling $117,000, previously drawn by Lamson, were paid by plaintiff bank. Defendants stopped payment on their check, and, as a consequence, Lamson's account was overdrawn to a greater amount than represented by this last mentioned item of deposit therein.
The checks totaling $117,000 came into plaintiff bank through the clearing-house in two batches, one at 8:30 on the morning of November 30, 1925, and the other at 11 a. m. on that day, both prior to the deposit of the check in suit; but plaintiff contends the jurors were warranted in their finding that, though the checks which exhausted Lamson's account were presented to plaintiff bank before the deposit of defendants' check, yet none of the Lamson checks were honored until 2 p. m. on the day in question, and that they were then honored in the belief that his credit balance, made up in part by the amount of defendants' check, warranted their payment.
Defendants offered in evidence a rule printed by plaintiff bank in Lamson's pass book, and in such books generally, providing that checks deposited with it were received "only for collection." Of course, this notice could not be construed as more than a contract between plaintiff bank and its depositor Lamson; the rule was *58 in no sense made for the benefit of one in the position of the present defendants, and they cannot profit by it. Moreover, plaintiff offered evidence (which was received and is not assigned as error) of the common practice of banks in Philadelphia, including the appellee, to permit customers to draw upon noncollected checks deposited in their accounts.
Defendants tendered no evidence to show that the Lamson checks presented to plaintiff bank on November 20, 1925, were paid before the deposit of the check in suit; in this regard, defendants rested their case on the bare facts, already recited, that Lamson's checks, totaling $117,000, came into plaintiff bank prior to the deposit in Lamson's account of their own check, and from these bare facts they sought to have the conclusion drawn that payment by plaintiff of Lamson's checks could in no sense have been on faith engendered by the deposit of their check in the latter's account.
On the other hand, plaintiff called one of its officials to testify that, on the day under investigation, all of Lamson's checks were in fact honored on the strength of the balance then standing to his credit in the bank, including, as an item of deposit, the check for $20,502. This witness said specifically that, under the rule of the clearing-house (which rule is not disputed), his bank had until 2 o'clock on the day in question to honor or dishonor the checks which had come in during the forenoon; and, upon being asked, "When, in fact, did you honor or dishonor those checks?" (meaning the Lamson checks), he answered, "Two o'clock." On cross-examination, this witness said that there was no record to show the precise hour when the Lamson checks were honored on the particular day under discussion, but he explained that "they would be automatically honored by not returning" them as dishonored, and that this occurred at 2 o'clock, not before. The witness further said the Lamson checks were paid because the bank officials, on the faith of the deposits in the latter's account, *59 thought "all these checks were good" and that there was a $20,000 balance in his collateral loan account; though, as previously stated, subsequent events in point of fact, proved that they had over-estimated this last mentioned balance. He still further said, while he could not state with certainty that, before honoring the Lamson checks on November 20, 1925, each check deposited in the latter's account was scrutinized by plaintiff bank, yet, when accounts were being closely drawn upon, as was the condition of the Lamson account on that day, it was the "common practice" to make an examination of the bigger items of deposit, and he was warranted in assuming that such a course had been followed in the present instance. This, considering the fact that the witness was talking about matters which occurred some two and a half years before the trial, was probably about as far as anyone could have gone in giving information as to what had happened in the particular matter under inquiry.
Bank of Phœnixville v. Bonsor,
The judgment is affirmed.