Blachly v. Andrew

1 Disney (Ohio) 78
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedNovember 15, 1855
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Disney (Ohio) 78 (Blachly v. Andrew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blachly v. Andrew, 1 Disney (Ohio) 78 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1855).

Opinion

Storer, J.

The plaintiffs bring their action to recover the amount of a check drawn by the defendants upon their bankers, Milne & Co., dated November 11th, 1854, and payable on the 18th of November. It is in evidence that the plaintiffs received the check from the person to whom it was delivered, on the 14th, and that they presented it' the same day for payment, and were refused. It is also admitted that Milne & Co. stopped payment on the 14th, and notice of the dishonor of the check was given to the defendants in due time.

The check was drawn on Saturday, after bank hours, and at the request of the payee, made payable on the next Monday. We are' asked to hold that it should have been presented on the day it was made payable, and if the day was permitted to transpire, without presentment, no presentment could be made on the subsequent day to charge the drawers. On. the other hand, the plaintiffs contend that they were guilty of no laches, and ought to recover.

The whole question is resolved into this: did the insertion of a day for the payment of the check, in the check itself, vary the ordinary rule applicable to checks payable on demand?

In England, by a regulation of parliament, there is an essential difference between checks thus drawn; no stamp is required upon those payable on presentment, while those that are post-dated, are absolutely void unless Written upon stamped paper. We can find, therefore, no parallel case to the present in the English books, though the principle upon which we may decide the present controversy, is often suggested and never controverted.

A check, unquestionably, has some of the peculiarities of [81]*81an inland bill of exchange, though in many respects it is essentially different; while it is an order or draft for the payment of money, and the rule that binds the holder of a bill to diligence, is substantially applicable, still the drawer is not discharged from his liability by the holder’s failure to present in due time, unless he have sustained actual prejudice, as by the failure of the banker. This, we believe, is now the settled law. 7 M. & Granger, 1061, Alexander v. Burchfield; 9 A. & Ellis, N. S. 58, Robinson v. Hawksford.

In the last case, Williams, J., said: “ If the question arises, who is to be the loser, when a banker becomes unable to pay, the point is properly raised whether the check was presented in due time; but if things remain the same, the check is still a check, and the money is money applicable to the payment, and the rule as to time does not apply.” See also 2 Hill, 425, Little v. Phoenix Bank; 2 Story, 503, Ex parte Brown; 8 Pick. 423, Oxford Bank v. Haynes.

There has been, in some of the State courts, a conflict of opinion as to the rule by which checks, not payable on demand, should be governed.

The Supreme Court of New York held, in 21 Wendell, 373, Harker v. Anderson, that irrespective of the question of loss, or injury to the drawer, a check should be presented within a reasonable time, and the rule, as to inland bills, was regarded as applicable; this opinion was overruled,however, in 2 Hill, 425, Liltle v. Phoenix Bank. In 4 Yerger, 214, Brown v. Lusk, the Supreme Court of Tennessee decided the point in the same manner; so in 1 Blackford, 104, Glenn, et al. v. Noble, and others. But in 2 Story, 517, Ex parte Brown; 11 Metcalf, 52, Taylor v. Wilson; 5 Sandford, S. C. 327, Bowen v. Newell, it is held that a check, though post-dated or payable on a day certain, is a check still, and can not be regarded as a bill of exchange.

The counsel for both parties do not differ upon this pointy and we refer only to the cases we have cited to show that there is truly no such analogy as that which it has been said existed.

[82]*82A cheek can not be demanded before the day named for payment, nor yet presented for acceptance, as a bill might well be; and if refused, the drawer, being notified, would’be liable. It is only when payment is due that it can be -sought, and the result necessarily is, that there is no liability on the part of the drawer until the presentation for payment is made.

. The time when payment should be demanded upon a cheek payable generally, has been so well determined, by judicial decision, that the point can not now be safely controverted. In all cases the day subsequent to the date of the check, is now regarded ;as within the rule of due -diligence on the part of the holder. Byles on Bills, 74; 4 Bingham, N. C. 266, Moule v. Brown; 13 Wendell, 133, Mohawk Bank v. Broderick, et al.; 20 Wendell, 192, Smith v. Janes; 4 B. & Adolph., 752, Boddington v. Schlencker.

Formerly it was held that the check must be presented on the morning of the next day after its date; it is now, however, settled that the holder has the whole of the banking hours of the next day, within which to present it. 2 Taunton, 388, Robson v. Bennett; 2 Campbell, 537, Rickford v. Ridge; 4 Barn. & Adolph. 752; Chitty on Bills, 419, 420; Story on Promissory Notes, §493.

Having ascertained the rule applicable to checks payable on demand, let us inquire in what particular those payable at a future day, or post-dated, differ from those payable generally. We have already seen that both are regarded as checks, in the popular as well as legal sense. N either are bills of exchange, and can not therefore be subjected to the peculiar formalities required to be pursued before a drawer or indorser -can be made liable upon mercantile contracts.

There is, to our apprehension, taking the rule thus stated to be the true one, no real distinction between the cases. We can perceive no more real propriety in giving to the holder of the ordinary check the right to present it on the day after it is dated, than there would be in granting the-[83]*83same privilege when the check is payable on a particular day. For all practical purposes, on. the day it is thus payable, it is equivalent to a check due on demand, as then the prohibition to pay it before is removed from the banker. Checks are not entitled to the days of grace, and are therefore without the rule that applies to bills of exchange; it follows then, that strictly speaking, the holder of the check should present it on the day it is payable by its terms. But in practice, long existing and universally understood, the subsequent day has been allowed to the payee, or those to whom the check has been transferred. Such a demand will subject the drawer if payment is refused, and notice of the fact given to him; though the banker meanwhile should have failed in business, the loss, if any, will fall upon the customer or depositor, not upon the holder of the check. If the drawer suffers no loss by any such occurrence, the demand for payment is not thus limited, nor is notice of a refusal required to be given to him.

If then we regard the instrument in question as a cheek, in the ordinary sense of the term, we know of no rule that compels us to place it in any class of instruments, where other liabilities are contracted, and duties imposed. "Whether payable at a future day, or on demand, we must apply the same principle of construction to the contract.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Smith v. Janes
20 Wend. 192 (New York Supreme Court, 1838)
Mohawk Bank v. Broderick
13 Wend. 133 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1834)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Disney (Ohio) 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blachly-v-andrew-ohsuperctcinci-1855.