20 Pa. Super. 196 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902
Opinion by
This is an action of assumpsit to recover the amount of a check, with interest and protest charges thereon, which was made by one, J. R. Eyrich, and indorsed to the plaintiff bank by Thomas H. Strauch, the defendant, who received $150. The defense was that proper demand and protest had not been made by the notary public. The check was dated October 9, 1899, and was cashed by the plaintiff bank the same day, at Pottsvillé, Pa., and forwarded for collection, through its regular channel, to a bank in Philadelphia, and thence to Reading, Pa., where it was made payable, and there it was protested on October 11, 1899, the answer of the bank being “payment stopped.”
The distance of the bank that paid the check from the place where it was made payable relieves the plaintiff bank of any
Notice to the indorser, when duly certified and not contradicted or questioned, raises the presumption in favor of his official act, and requires us to infer that it was given according to law. The fact that the indorser brought suit to the use of the bank and recovered a judgment before a justice did not relieve him from the payment to the bank, nor did it require the bank to surrender the check until it had been paid. Although the amount of a check left with a bank for collection has been credited to a depositor as cash, it may be charged back to him in case it turns out to be worthless, unless the bank has been negligent, or has done something to mislead the depositor, thereby inducing him to act to his own injury on the faith of its goodness; the depositor had no right to be misled by the mere credit of the check as cash (Rapp v. National Security Bank, 136 Pa. 426), and much less could he be misled after he had received the money; and having acted upon his right as indorser to recover from the maker by bringing suit before the justice, either in his own name or to the use of the bank, he cannot now say that he did not receive notice of the nonpayment of the check in due time.
We see no error in the record and the judgment is affirmed.