Allen v. Kramer

2 Ill. App. 205
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2 Ill. App. 205 (Allen v. Kramer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Kramer, 2 Ill. App. 205 (Ill. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

Bailey, J.

This suit was brought by appellants, to recover the amount of a bank check given them by appellees, in payment of certain indebtedness from appellees to them. The facts upon which the liability of appellees is sought to be established, are substantially as follows:

Oh the 27th day of Rovember, 1877, the date of the check, appellees were merchants, doing business in Chicago, as co-partners, under the firm name of Kramer Brothers. Át the same time, appellants were engaged as co-partners, under the firm name of J. & B. Allen, in the business of manufacturing and dealing in hosiery goods, having their manufacturing. establishment and principal place of business at Philadelphia, and also having a store in Rew York, where some of their goods were sold. Appellants both resided in Philadelphia; one of them, however, having charge of their business at that place, and the other of that at Rew York. The only bank account kept by the firm was with the Rational Bank of Germantown, and all their banking business was done at that bank.

The merchandise for which the indebtedness in question accrued, was purchased of appellants, either at tlieir Rew York house, or of traveling agents in the west. It appears that customers who bought goods at the store in Rew York, usually corresponded with appellants at that place, and made remittances to them there. Accordingly, all the correspondence between appellees and appellants, had been earned on with the Rew York House, and all the remittances made by appellees prior to sending the draft in question, were sent to Rew York.

The balance due from appellees to appellants on the 27th day of Rovember, 1877, being §1,006.71, appellees drew their check for that amount In favor of appellants, on Messrs. Greenebaum Bros. & Co., bankers, of Hew York city, with whom they then had a deposit, and sent the same by mail to appellants at Hew York. This check was received by the Hew York partner on Friday, Hovember 30th, and was by him, on the same day, forwarded to the other partner at Philadelphia, where it was received Saturday, December 1st. It was thereupon immediately indorsed by the Fhiladelphia partner, and deposited in the Hational Bank of Germantown, and on the same day forwarded by that bank to the Central Hational Bank of Hew York, for collection. At about one o’clock in the afternoon of Monday, December 3d, the check was presented by a messenger of the last named bank, at the counter of Messrs. Greenebaum Bros. & Co., for payment. The messenger was known at the banking house of Greenebaum Bros. & Co., but the payment of said check was refused, upon the ground that the bank teller to whom it was presented was in doubt as to the genuiueness of the signature of Kramer Brothers thereto.

It appears that the teller before refusing payment, took the ■check and showed it to David S. Greenebaum, a member of the firm, remarking that he did not recognize the signature, and asked him what to do. Mr. Greenebaum told him to return the check and he would ascertain by telegraph, whether the signature was genuine. This conversation, however, does not appear to have been in the presence of the messenger, nor is there any evidence tending to show that he was in any way advised of Mr. Greenebaum’s purpose to telegraph for information in relation to the signature. On the same day, after banking hours, the check was again presented to Greenebaum Bros. & Co. by the paying teller of the Central Hational Bank, for the purpose of protesting it if not paid. He was informed that there was something wrong with the signature, but does not appear to have been notified of any intention to inquire as to its genuineness. The check, not being paid, was duly protested, and notice of protest given to appellees.

The evidence shows that on the first or second day afterwards, Mr. Greenebaum received information that the signature was genuine. The check, however, was not again presented for payment, nor does it appear that the Central Hational Bank, or other holders of the cheek, had any notice of the result of Mr. Greenebaum’s inquiries, or of his readiness to pay the check. On the 6th day of December, Messrs. Greenebaum Bros. & Co. suspended payment and became insolvent, and so have ever since remained. ' At the time the check was drawn, and from thence up to the time of the failure, appellees had on deposit with Greenebaum Bros. & Go. an amount of money,sufficient to pay the check.

On the trial, the jury rendered a verdict for appellees, and the court below, after overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial, rendered judgment against them for costs. Appellants now ask for a reversal of the judgment, on the ground that the verdict was against the evidence, and that the court erred in its charge to the jury.

Let us first consider whether the evidence charges appellants with laches in the matter of duly presenting the check for payment. The law is well settled that all drafts, whether foreign or inland bills, must be presented to the drawee within a reasonable time, and in case of non-payment, notice must be given promptly to the drawer to charge him. But what is a reasonable time under all the circumstances, is sometimes a most difficult question. . The general doctrine is, each case must depend on its own peculiar facts, and be judged accordingly. Montelius et al. v. Charles, 76 Ill. 303; Stevens v. Park, 73 Id. 387. In the absence of any qualifying circumstances, the holder should present the bill to the person or bank on which it is drawn, if within reach of such drawee, within business-hours of the day next succeeding the receipt of the paper, and give notice of the dishonor to the drawer. Bickford v. First National Bank of Chicago, 42 Ill. 238; Strong et al. v. King, 35 Id. 9. This rule applies to bank checks as well as to bills of exchange, strictly so called. But in case of either, the rule is modified to a limited degree by the relations of the parties, their circumstances, manner of doing business, and facilities for making prompt presentation of the paper for payment.

We think the transmission of the check in question by appellants to the bank in Philadelphia, was fairly justified by the circumstances of the case, and that there was no unreasonable delay of presentment for payment. It should be remembered that appellant’s principal business operations were carried on at Philadelphia, and the only bank with which, they were in the habit of transacting business, was located at that place. In that bank it is to be presumed the funds of the firm were kept, and it appears to have been their custom, in accordance with the ordinary and well known usages of business men, to collect their bills receivable through the agency of their own bank. It is not pretended that in the transmission of the check to Philadelphia, and its subsequent presentation for payment through that channel, there was any unnecessary delay. In point of fact, it seems to have been transmitted to Philadelphia and back in the shortest time possible, and the transmission involved a delay of only about one-half of a business day, of which appellee could, in any event, have a right to complain. Had the Hew Tork partner of appellant’s firm retained the check in his hands, he would have been entitled to all of Saturday to present it for payment. It was actually presented on Monday, the next business day, at about one o’clock n. m. We think, under all the circumstances, the delay was not unreasonable, and that consequently, the presentment for payment was made in apt time.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ill. App. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-kramer-illappct-1878.