219 P. 814 | Mont. | 1923
delivered tbe opinion of the court.
This is an action brought by the plaintiff, a state banking corporation, to recover from the defendant a balance alleged to be due on a check for $5,356.65 given to the plaintiff bank by the defendant on November 20, 1914.
The complaint, after alleging the making and delivery of the check, sets out that defendant at the time was indebted to the Bankers’ Loan & Mortgage Company, of Billings, on a note in an amount equivalent to the face of the check, and that the check was given to the plaintiff for the purpose of enabling it to pay this note for the defendant, and that it did so, but that defendant had never paid to plaintiff the amount of the check, although demand therefor had been made. It is further alleged that on the eighteenth day of March, 1921, the defendant had on deposit in the plaintiff’s bank the sum of $2,250.34, which amount on that day the plaintiff credited upon the check; that the amount due upon the check at the time of making the credit, computing interest thereon at eight per cent per annum from its date, was $8,039.72, and after applying the credit there remained a balance of $5,789.38, for which sum, with interest, plaintiff asked judgment.
The defendant’s answer denied generally and specifically all the allegations of the complaint, and by way of counterclaim alleged that on March 18, 1921, the plaintiff was indebted to him in the sum of $2,250.34; that he had demanded payment of the same, which had been refused, and prayed for judgment against plaintiff for that amount with interest. The allegations of the counterclaim were denied by plaintiff’s reply thereto.
1. Defendant’s first specification of error is that the court erred in sustaining plaintiff’s motion for a directed verdict; hence it is necessary to examine the testimony introduced at the trial in detail.
To sustain its case the plaintiff produced as a witness W. B. Kennedy, who testified that he was assistant cashier of plaintiff bank and had been such since the fall of 1911; that in the absence of the cashier he acted as general manager thereof, and that one W. J. Wallin had been cashier of the bank from 1911 down to the spring of 1919. Referring to the transaction in question Kennedy testified that the defendant had been a good customer of the bank for a long time prior to November 20, 1914, and on that day came into the bank with a statement from the loan company, showing the amount due on his note,
In connection with the direct examination of this witness, statements from the bank’s books were introduced showing the defendant’s account therewith from January 31, 1914, when he had a balance of $804.06 to his credit, down to March 18, 1921, on which date he had a balance of $2,250.34, which was the amount plaintiff applied on the cheek. These statements show that during this period defendant’s account was credited with thirty-seven different items of deposit, totaling $22,828.87, which, added to his balance of $804.06 on January 31, 1914, gave him a total credit during that period of $23,632.93, against which were charged withdrawals by upwards of one hundred checks, amounting to $21,382.59. The deposits ranged in amount from $7.80 to $3,075, and the withdrawal checks from $1.45 to $3,281.25. The balances show a spread between an overdraft of $2,678.07 on October 15, 1914, to a credit balance of $3,379.29 on April 12, 1919, On
On his cross-examination this witness testified that the only time he ever spoke to Kesl about the check was at the latter’s ranch in the month'of March, 1921, when Kesl claimed that he did not owe it because there should have been money in the bank to pay it at the time the check was issued. Referring to the $5,000 certificate of deposit, on the strength of which he had testified he had accepted the check in question he said: “I don’t remember whether he said it was in the bank or he said that Wallin had it. I believe he said Wallin had it. Kesl said the certificate of deposit was for $5,000, but whether' or not Joe [Kesl] had this $5,000 certificate of deposit in his pocket at the time I don’t know. I don’t remember whether he had it with him in the bank at the time he signed the check; I didn’t ask him.”
On behalf of the plaintiff, J. R. Middleton testified that he had been cashier of the plaintiff bank since June, 1919 ; that in the fall of 1919 he made a demand upon the defendant for payment of the check which was refused, and on cross-examination said that at the time demand was made Kesl insisted that he did not owe the bank anything. Further, on cross-examination he said that he had gone over the statements in Kesl’s account and everything pertaining thereto and audited what he had found; that- he “made a minute, detailed examination of the records as to the condition of the bank generally with the bank examiner,” whereupon the following question was asked: “Q. That would include the Kesl records? The fact is you found $17,000 shortage, didn’t you?” This question was objected to on the ground that it
In his own behalf the defendant testified that he was eighty years old and could neither read nor write. Leading up to the circumstances of giving the cheek in question and making provision for its payment, he said he had been down to Billings and ascertained that he owed the loan company $5,356.65; that he had had money placed in the bank to pay the cheek nearly two months before that time; that in addition to about $2,000 to his credit on open account he had turned into the bank two certificates of deposit, one for $4,000 and one for $3,000, issued to him by the bank and which had been drawing interest for about eight months; that when he turned those two certificates of deposit into the bank he had another one for $5,000 which was not turned in. Further on defendant testified: “To find out what became of that check— the next year after that check had been issued in the bank * * * I lost • that check. I asked him what was done with the cheek. Mr. Wallin says, ‘You got it. * * * ’ I asked Mr. Wallin what he had done with the check. He says, ‘You got it.’ I say, ‘I not got it.’ ” These statements were reiterated by defendant, and he said: “He never gave that check to me. Then I came to look where that check disappeared.” The record affirmatively shows that Wallin ivas present at the trial of the case as a witness, but he was not called upon to testify; hence there was no denial of the above statements alleged to have been made by him. The defendant had no witness other than himself.
In rebuttal the witness Kennedy testified that the bank kept a book known as the register of certificates of deposit, which he produced and said it was the one which had been used during the entire time defendant maintained an account with the bank and showed all of the certificates of deposit issued, paid or renewed, and from this record testified that the first certificate of deposit issued by the bank to the defendant was one for $3,201.62, dated December 31, 1912;
The above is a substantial statement of all the evidence in the case.
By statute the jury is the trier of facts in causes of this character, and unless the evidence is so clear and convincing that the court would be bound to set aside any verdict rendered contrary to it the cause should be submitted to the jury. (Bean v. Missoula Lumber Co., 40 Mont. 31, 104 Pac. 869.) The circumstances of this case detailed in the evidence are quite unusual. According to plaintiff’s contention, the defendant, who carried a considerable bank account with it for a long term of years, gave it a cheek for upward of $5,000, on the strength of which it paid out a like amount for the defendant. Plaintiff claims that defendant agreed to turn in a certificate of deposit to cover the amount of the check, but did not do so; yet plaintiff made no effort to get it. Plaintiff carried the check for five years before making any demand for its payment, and, when demand was made, met with a flat denial of any liability thereon by the defendant, and then delayed nearly another two years before taking any steps whatever to bring about a settlement. During all the years that plaintiff held the check, defendant was a large depositor of money with it; yet the check was never charged to Ms account, and, so far as disclosed, no record was ever made of it upon the books of the bank.
If what the defendant stated to explain this unusual situation was' correct; if his statement that he had turned over to the bank certificates of deposit aggregating $7,000 to take care of the cheek in question before the same was issued, was true — then he had made a complete defense to the plaintiff’s
2. The court should have allowed the witness J. R. Middle- ton to answer the question propounded to him on cross-examination which is quoted in his testimony. The witness had just testified to the fact that he had made a detailed examination of the plaintiff’s books in company with the bank examiner. The accuracy of the bank’s books was directly involved in the case. If the answer to the question had disclosed that a shortage of $17,000 was, in fact, discovered in the course of the examination of the books, further inquiries might have shown a connection between this shortage and the certificates of deposit which the plaintiff claimed to have turned in. “The right of cross-examination is a substantial one, and should not be unduly restricted, but the fullest scope should be allowed to the end that the jury may be advised of all facts having a legitimate bearing upon the issues presented.” (Moss v. Goodhart, 47 Mont. 257, 131 Pac. 1071.)
Reversed and remanded.