Baker-Evans Grain Co. v. Ricord

267 P. 14, 126 Kan. 107, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 31
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 5, 1928
DocketNo. 28,071
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 267 P. 14 (Baker-Evans Grain Co. v. Ricord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker-Evans Grain Co. v. Ricord, 267 P. 14, 126 Kan. 107, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 31 (kan 1928).

Opinion

The opinion'of the court was delivered by

Hutchison, J.:

The question involved in this case is whether a debtor pays the creditor by giving his check on his account in the collecting bank when such bank is insolvent and unable to pay such check.

The plaintiff grain company, of Wichita, shipped corn in carload lots to the defendant, a grain dealer at Otego, Jewell county, sending the bills of lading, with drafts attached, to the Otego State Bank at Otego with instructions to deliver the same upon payment of the drafts. When the defendant was notified by the bank of the arrival of a bill of lading and draft, the defendant called and gave his check for the required amount on his account in that bank, and the bill of lading was delivered to him by the bank. There are three such transactions stated in the petition as three separate counts, in all of which the attempted payment was made by the defendant in the same way, and at each and all of these times he had a credit with the bank for more than the amount of the checks, but the bank at no time attempted to charge his account with these checks or any of them. The answer of the defendant is a denial in a detailed statement of facts, concluding in general with the claim of a full payment of the drafts by delivering the checks to the collecting bank as agent of the plaintiff and alleging the acceptance of such checks by such agent. The cause was submitted to the court on the statements of facts contained in the petition, answer and reply and a short stipulation concerning the financial affairs of the bank during the time these transactions took place. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff for the full amount of the drafts for these three carloads of corn, from which judgment the defendant appeals.

The appellant urges strongly two points: First, that the collecting bank was at all times in each of the three transactions the agent of the plaintiff, and that plaintiff is bound by its acts in receiving the checks on itself as payment; and, second, that there was an actual acceptance of such checks as full payment.

[109]*109On December 3 the first of these transactions took place at the bank, when a draft for $978.21 was received with bill of lading attached. The defendant had a balance to his credit in that bank that day of $5,238.79. The bank had cash on hand that day to the amount of $916.40, and a credit at Kansas City of $1,183.01, or a total of $2,099.41, and had outstanding cashier’s checks and drafts amounting to $3,210.70.

The next transaction took placé December 4. The draft was for $925.58. Defendant’s bank balance was $4,496.56. ■ Cash on hand in the bank was $876.62, and credit at Kansas City $847.30, or total of $1,723.92, with outstanding cashier’s checks and drafts at that time of $3,210.70.

The third transaction took place December 6. The draft was for $785.96, when defendant’s balance was $4,194.39. The cash in the bank was $929, and in Kansas City $814.24, total $1,743.24, with outstanding cashier’s checks and drafts-of $4,580.89.

The record shows the plaintiff 'was holding one of these outstanding checks in the sum of $637.81 for a carload sent a few days earlier than these. The bank officers did not charge any of these three checks given by the defendant to his account nor attempt to transmit by draft or otherwise to the plaintiff, but when the bank closed on December 10 these three checks of defendant were on the counter, and- defendant’s deposit account was not reduced thereby.

It will be seen from the above figures that the bank was unable at any time to cash these checks when they came, in or- pay any of them out of the cash on hand and. the credit it 'had at Kansas City. It is hinted that the last one could have been paid out of the cash on hand, but there were on the counter the two earlier checks not cashed, and it would be unreasonable to cash the last when two earlier ones remained unpaid. In this connection it should be stated that the defendant acted in good faith and had no reason to think he was not paying these drafts out of his deposit as he had regularly been doing. There is no dispute about the collecting bank being the agent for the plaintiff for the purpose of collecting and remitting, but appellee insists that such agency ceases when the agent departs from the instructions given. The distinction can be readily seen in the reference cited by plaintiff to the attempted collection and payment of a car which arrived just a few days earlier. Defendant’s check was received by the bank, [110]*110his account charged with the amount, and a draft sent to the plaintiff. The agent got his money from the defendant’s account and attempted to remit it, but the bank closed its doors before the draft was paid. In that case the plaintiff can only look to the bank to make good its drafts. In the cases involved in this action the bank did just the same thing as in the former case in receiving from the defendant his check in payment of the draft it delivered to him. But the check was worthless, not because of any fault of the defendant, but because the defendant’s money was not available. It was not there nor at the correspondent bank in Kansas City. It had been used for other purposes. A check is an order or request to pay another from one’s deposit. The bank could not comply. The bank took or received the order but did not comply. In this it was acting for the defendant, one of its depositors, and failed to carry out his directions. There is such a situation as an agent changing from one principal to another, and sometimes an agent may' be acting for both parties at the same time. It has been held that the relation of bankers in the transactions of collecting and remitting frequently changes from that of principal and agent to that of creditor and debtor. (Colorado & S. Rly. Co. v. Docking, 124 Kan. 48, 257 Pac. 743.)

It is strongly urged that the act of the insolvent bank amounted to an acceptance of the check as payment, and the intention of the parties was to make a payment. The intention of the defendant was most certainly to make payment, but the bank and its officers could not possibly have so intended. They may have hoped that something might happen in the near future to make payment possible, but when they took the check it was an absolute impossibility.

Cases cited showing that the neglect or failure to make the bookkeeping entries and charge the items to the account of the depositor does not prevent the act of the bank from being a complete acceptance of the checks, or even of a verbal order, to pay a creditor. On the question of acceptance of checks as payment so as to bind the creditor and relieve the debtor, many cases are cited by appellant, but on examination of them it is found that not only did the depositor have the money to his credit but the bank at that time was solvent and able to pay the check—entirely different from the fact in this case. In this list are the following: Baldwin’s Bank v. Smith, 215 N. Y. 76; Nineteenth Ward B’k v. So. Weymouth B’k, 184 Mass. 49; State Nat. Bank v. First Nat. Bank, 124 Ark. 531; [111]*111Trust Co. v. Owosso Savings Bank, 223 Mich. 513; The British & American Mortgage Co. v. Tibballs et al., 63 Ia. 468; Alpena Nat. Bank v. Greenbaum, 74 Mich. 157.

Along this same line, with this same distinction, the two cases against the Hanover State Bank (Tire & Rubber Co. v. Bank, 109 Kan. 772, 204 Pac. 992; Kesl v. Bank, 109 Kan. 776, 204 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
267 P. 14, 126 Kan. 107, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-evans-grain-co-v-ricord-kan-1928.