Bank of New Hanover v. . Kenan

76 N.C. 340
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 76 N.C. 340 (Bank of New Hanover v. . Kenan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of New Hanover v. . Kenan, 76 N.C. 340 (N.C. 1877).

Opinion

ByNUM, J.

The defendant had drawn from the plaintiff" Bank a considerable amount exceeding his deposits, and the-Bank called upon him to make good the deficit. The defendant had sold but not delivered to Moffit & Co. 300 barrels of rosin for $864, and to enable him to meet the demand of the Bank on the 6th of September, 1873, Moffit drew and delivered to the defendant his check upon the Bank for the purchase money of the rosin, payable on the 9th of September. This check the defendant offered to the- Bank as a payment on the balance against him. .The President of the Bank received the check and it was pinned to a deposit slip, which read thus, “Bank of New Hanover, deposited by W. R. Kenan, September 9th, 1863, currency-cheeks, $864.00.”

The plaintiff in his replication to the answer, avers that. ■ the check was received for collection only, and the defendant insisted that it was received as a payment on his bank debt. How that was, was upon the evidence submitted to the jury and they found that the check was received for collection. The check was neither collected nor attempted to be by the Bank, and on the 13th of September, Moffit failed, and on the evening of that day the defendant received notice that the check had not been paid. By the admission of the plaintiff then, and the finding of the jury, the-Bank received for collection this check, which was payable-at its own counter, on the 9th of September and retained the same, without presenting it for payment of any effort for its collection or any notice to the defendant of its non-pay *342 ment, until after the failure of Moffit, on the evening of the 13th of September, when the debt was lost. Eor that neglect the Bank is responsible. The Bank however insists 'that on the 15th of September and after the failure of Moffit, the defendant promised to pay the balance due it which the check was deposited to meet, and that that promise con■stituted a waiver of any claim on the Bank for its failure to '■collect the check. This defence is unavailing. There is no •evidence of such a waiver. On the 15th of September the Bank requested the defendant to arrange the balance of his ■overdraw. He replied that “he would pay it,” but immediately added, “but what about Moffit’s check?” and in answer to that the President said he thought Moffit would arrange it during the day. So far from being a waiver, here was an express notice to the Bank, that it was looked to, and its answer was certainly evasive but did not deny its liability. But suppose the defendant had then and there, promised absolutely to pay the balance due the Bank; The express promise was only what the law implied without it; it neither added to the validity of the debtor his obligation to pay it. It was nudum pactum,; vox et prceterea nil. Suppose the check'had been placed in one Bank for collection, and the overdraw had been in another. The failure to collect by one Bank would have been no answer for a failure to pay in the other; and the payment of the balance due in one would have been no waiver of the other’s liability for a neglect to collect. The fact that the whole transaction was in one Bank cannot change the relations or lessen the liability ofthe parties. We, therefore, put o.ut of view the question of waiver and come to the main question, the liability of the Bank as an agent for the collection of the check. An important and profitable part of the regular'business of banking is the collection of commercial paper. The advantages ■arising from business associations and the temporary use of ■ the money for .purposes of discount or exchange, form a val *343 uable consideration for the undertaking. Hall v. Bank of the State, 3 Rich. 366 ; 1 Daniel on Neg. Instruments, 324-5. .The Bank at which paper is made payable and at which it is deposited for collection, is the agent of the depositor to receive the money at its maturity. "When .a bill, note or . check is placed in its hands for collection, it is the duty of the Bank to take the necessary steps to its prompt payment by making presentment for payment at maturity. If itfjbe not then paid, the Bank must at once fix the liability of the drawer, by having it protested and by giving due notice of its dishonor to the depositor for collection. If the Bank fail • in any of these duties it becomes immediately liable in dam- ■ ages to the holder or depositor. West Branch Bank v. Fulmer, 3 Barr. 399 ; Ivory v. Bank of State, 36 Mo. 475 ; 1 Daniel on Neg. Instruments, § 327 ; Costin v. Rankin, 3 Jones, 387. The agent must use such skill and diligence as are necessary to the due execution of his trust. This check was. .questionable and the Bank knew and acknowledged it to be ■so. Here then was superadded to its duty a spur to the most active vigilance in pressing the collection and giving prompt notice of its dishonor. If .by this neglect or delay , to give notice the payee was prevented from taking such immediate.measures against the drawer as might possibly have secured the payee in some way or other, the Bank must be held responsible at least to the amount'of the damage . received. Nor is it an excuse that if the check had been presented for payment it would not have been paid or that "there were not sufficient funds in Bank to meet it at maturity. That, is not for the consideration of the-agent. For it ..might well be, that had due notice been given the depositor, an immediate demand on Moffit with such other legal .measures as their business relations might render advisable, would have led to the payment of the check.

, ‘‘Our whole system of negotiable paper and its responsibilities., formed as ,it is by long '.experience- admirably..adap- *344 fed to the varied uses of commerce, rests upon the single principle of strict punctualitjr in demands, presentments and notices, as well as payments.” Allen v. Suydam, 20 Wend. 321. Notice of non-payment of the check, should have been, given on the 9th and at farthest on the 10th of September. Up to the 12th the rosin for which the eheck'had been given remained on board the Bark Osterlide, in the port; $20,000' had been paid into the Bank and checked out again by Mof-fit, between the 6th and the 13 th of September; Moffit himself testifies that had the defendant demanded payment of' the check he should have been compelled to pay it or have failed some days sooner than the 13th, and it is evident that he was straining every nerve to keep up his credit as long as it was possible It is therefore possible, if not probable, that prompt notice by the Bank would have resulted in securing the debt or its payment.

The Bank is presented to us in another unfavorable attitude. It voluntarily assumed the agency to collect this-, check, when itself was a large creditor of Moffit; had secured most of his effects; was aware of his embarrassment and was. making exertions to save itself from loss. The undertaking therefore to collect this debt, was antagonistic to the duties- and purposes of the Bank, to.save itself by seizing the only plank in the shipwreck. The natural if not the intentional result was that the interests of the defendant were prefer-mitted and he became the victim of censurable neglect. When the interests of the plaintiff and defendant conflict and the plaintiff voluntarily assumes the agency and trust to manage the interests of the other, the rule of.

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.C. 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-new-hanover-v-kenan-nc-1877.