Bank of the Metropolis v. Weber

41 F. 413, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2649

This text of 41 F. 413 (Bank of the Metropolis v. Weber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of the Metropolis v. Weber, 41 F. 413, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2649 (circtsdny 1889).

Opinion

Lacombe, J.,

(orally.) In view of the uncontradicted testimony in this case as to the arrangement between the bank and its customers, and of the decision of Judge Brown, (U. S. v. Nassau Bank,1) I see no other way than to hold that these country checks were not deposits of money, subject to payment by check or draft, until the time that they ripened by collection into something other and different from what they were when deposited. I am still unable to reach the same conclusion as Mr. Choate, touching the sufficiency of the proof, but, in view of the fact that that is something which should be determined on a close inspection of the figures and proofs, am satisfied that the proper disposition to make of this branch of the case is to direct a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the amount it claims, with interest. Thereafter, when the testimony is written out, and all the exhibits are before the court, examination may [415]*415be made, upon a motion for a new trial, to see if the error which I think exists in the plaintiff’s calculations does in fact exist, or if I have misconceived entirely what the testimony is upon that branch of the ease.

With regard, however, to the other part of the case, to-wit, the claim for deduction on account of average balances held by the Union Bank, I must direct a verdict for the defendant. These average balances, as I understand them, are themselves made up from cheeks and drafts upon city hanks deposited with the plaintiff' by its customers. As to these, there was an arrangement between the banks, by which they were sent to the Union Bank to be cleared, and it may be that as the result of such arrangement the ’same amount of money has paid twice as a deposit; hut it has so paid because it has lived twice as a deposit, once in each bank. Tt certainly was a deposit in the Bank of the Metropolis while in the shape of checks deposited by its customers, and was retained by it until the morning when it was sent down to the Union Bank, l’f, after that, it was so treated by the Union Bank as to become a deposit there, that fact is immaterial. Verdict directed accordingly.

ON MOTION FOR NEW TRIAL.

(February 5,1890.)

Lacombe, J.

The views expressed upon the trial as to the non-taxable character of country checks during transit, and as to the taxable character of the deposits sent to the Union Bank for clearance, are unchanged. Upon the reserved point, a careful examination of the various exhibits, and of the testimony in the case, has led to the following conclusions: The claim of the plaintiff is that it should have been required to return only the average net deposits, after deducting the average amount of country cheeks outstanding; in other words, that the returns it made should have been similar to those it did make prior to 1881. It concedes, however, that at some time the country checks should pay. What is to be ascertained, then, is whether the country cheeks would escape altogether, or to a considerable extent, if plaintiff’s method of making returns were adopted. To do this, we may first take up the inquiry independent of the circumstance that the plaintiff has in fact paid, and now seeks to recover back. Assuming that for the mouths in question plaintiff is preparing its returns, is the method it asks to adopt the correct one? Inasmuch as the question concerns averages, it may he assumed that the amount of each item for each day is the average amount. So, too, it may be assumed that the time required to realize on each country check is the average time for all, and any particular time may be assumed, as, for instance, 10 days. If 820,000 of country chocks are deposited each day, and 10 days are allowed for their transit, the amount of them outstanding each day will be 1200,000, — a sum not, of course, composed entirely of the same checks for two successive days. We may then construct the following table:

[416]

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Bluebook (online)
41 F. 413, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-the-metropolis-v-weber-circtsdny-1889.