Bennett v. American Nat. Bank of Enid

1928 OK 51, 264 P. 912, 130 Okla. 23, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 435
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 24, 1928
Docket17449
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1928 OK 51 (Bennett v. American Nat. Bank of Enid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. American Nat. Bank of Enid, 1928 OK 51, 264 P. 912, 130 Okla. 23, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 435 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

REID, C.

In order that the questions pre *24 sented by this appeal may be fully understood, the material facts are here given in the order in which they occurred.

The defendants were engaged in the general brokerage and commission business wiith their principal office in the city of Chicago, Ill., where each of them lived. They maintained a branch office in Enid, Okla., in charge of one Livingston.

On August 20, 1924, defendants, by Livingston, presented to plaintiff a cheek for $650 drawn on the Bank of Ingersoll, of Ingersoll, Okla., by J. W. Proffitt, payable to defendants, and in exchange therefor plaintiff issued and delivered to Livingston its draft for the same amount payable to defendants. And on August 25th, a similar transaction occurred between the parties on Proffitt’s check for $1,500. The drafts to the defendants were paid in due course. In each instance the plaintiff 'bank forwarded the Prof-fitt checks to its correspondent, the Tradesmen’s National Bank, in Oklahoma City, for collection; and it in turn forwarded them direct to the Bank of Ingersoll. Proffitt, the maker of these checks, was doing other business with the defendants through their Chicago office, and, having a balance to his credit, drew a draft on them for $1,500, which was paid at that office on September 2nd. On September 5th, plaintiff received advice from the Tradesmen’s National Bank, saying that it was without returns on the Proffitt checks. This information was immediately communicated to Livingston, who thereupon came to the bank, and after a conference held with the bank officers, a telegram was sent in the bank’s name, at the expense of defendants, to the Ingersoll bank, asking whether the Proffitt checks had been paid a® well as two other checks plaintiff had on that bank, and why payment on all such checks on that bank had been delayed. To this the Ingersoll Bank immediately answered “Tes,” and. this answer was shown to Livingston.

The Ingersoll Bank in payment of the Proffitt checks issued its drafts payable to the Tradesmen’s National Bank on the First National Bank of Woodward, Okla., dated September 5th, though it appeared from the books of that bank that these drafts were in fact issued three or four days later than the dates. On .September 12th, the plaintiff bank received advice from the Tradesmen’s National Bank, that it had then received returns on the Proffitt cheeks. This information was on the same day given to Livingston and by mail to the Chicago office of the defendants. On September 15th, the Chicago office of the defendants paid a draft drawn on them by Proffitt for $1,200; however, in neither instance did the Chicago office communicate with plaintiff or Livingston before paying Proffitt’s drafts. On September 16th„ the Tradesmen’s National Bank informed plaintiff by telephone that the drafts sent it by the Ingersoll Bank in payment of the Prof-fitt checks had been protested for tbe reason that payment had been refused by tbe First National Bank of Woodward, the payee. The evidence upon the trial discloses that the Ingersoll Bank then had an overdraft with the Woodward Bank of many thousand dollars which had been in that condition prior to and ever since the receipt by it of the Proffitt checks; though fluctuating in amounts.

PÍa^ntiff bank ,gav)e the Chicago office of defendants by mail, and Livingston in person, the information it had received as to the protest of the drafts. And being also advised by its correspondent that its account had been charged back with the Proffitt checks, it likewise charged them to the defendants’ account, and demanded payment, which was refused by the defendants.

The plaintiff, American National Bank of Enid, Okla., sued for the amount of the two Proffitt checks; attached and recovered judgment in a trial to a jury, and from an order overruling defendants’ motion for new trial, they bring this appeal.

At the close of all the testimony the defendants requested the court to direct the jury to return a verdict in their favor, and they assign error on the denial of that request by the court.,

To determine the sufficiency of the testimony, another material. fact becomes necessary for consideration. On June 28, 1924, the plaintiff mailed to the local agent of the defendants, and also to their Chicago office, a letter, stating the terms upon which the plaintiff would handle items for customers, and the evidence of Livingston that the Proffitt checks were placed in the bank under the terms stated in the letter, when taken in connection with the fact that no objection was made by the ’ defendants, nor their local agent, to the terms set out in the letter, constitutes an agreement between these parties as to how these items might be handled by tbe plaintiff.

Under the agreement, plaintiff accepted the checks as the agent of defendant, and plaintiff is not responsible for the negligence of the correspondent bank, if any occurred. And under the agreement the cor *25 respondent bank bad the right to send the cheeks direct to the payee and to accept in lien of cash the drafts of the payee, and when these drafts were not paid, it had the authority to charge the same back to the plaintiff bank, and the plaintiff had the right to charge the amount to the defendants, and demand payment of the defendants. provided, that it had not ¡been at fault in the failure to collect.

“Although a bank cannot relieve itself by contract from the consequences of its own negligence, it may thus relieve itself from the consequences of the negligence of others employed by it in making collections. ” 7 C. J. 620.

Ail parties thereto become bound by the conditions of the agreement under which plaintiff accepted these checks for collection, and that eliminated from this case what would have, otherwise, been several serious questions. But we are unable to say, especially in view of this agreement, that the court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendants.

By the express terms of the agreement under which plaintiff accepted the Proffitt checks, it became the agent of the defendants, and it therefore owed to the defendants the legal obligations due by an agent to its principal.

The president of the plaintiff bank on cross-examination testified that in July, 1924, they had some checks on the Bank of In-gersoll that required eleven or twelve days to clear; that for a bank doing business on a proper banking basis this was away out of the ordinary, but was not out of the ordinary for some of these banks; that under ordinary circumstances a bank doing a legitimate banking business, a check clearing in the manner the Proffitt checks were cleared, the transaction should have been completed and the returns had on it within five or six days; that the ordinary way of handling the transaction would have been for the Bank of Ingersoll, on the same day that it received the cheeks, tjo issue its drafts payable to the Tradesmen’s National Bank, and send them to that bank to take up the items. He further testified, in explanation of the expression in the telegram to the Ingersoll Bank, on September 5th, “Why delay in payment of all such cheeks on this bank?” by saying: “I think for at least 90 days we had been having a delay in collecting all such checks.”

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 51, 264 P. 912, 130 Okla. 23, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-american-nat-bank-of-enid-okla-1928.