Blaine v. Bourne & Co.

11 R.I. 119, 1875 R.I. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 6, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 R.I. 119 (Blaine v. Bourne & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blaine v. Bourne & Co., 11 R.I. 119, 1875 R.I. LEXIS 6 (R.I. 1875).

Opinion

Potter, J.

The draft in question was as follows:—

“Banking House oe Blaine, Gould & SnoitT,
“ North East, Pa., August 16, 1873.
“ Thirty days after date pay to the order of Frank Thayer Seven Hundred dollars, Frank Thayer.
“ To Messrs. B. G. Chace & Co., Providence, B. I.
“ Due September 18.”

Thayer was the agent in Pennsylvania to make purchases for Chace & Co. of Providence, and he drew on them for payment.

This draft was indorsed by Thayer in blank, and was discounted by the plaintiffs before acceptance. The plaintiffs indorsed it as follows : —

“ Pay Jay Cooke & Co. or order on account of Blaine, Gould & Short, North East, Pa. “ Alered A. Short, Oash’r.”

By Jay Cooke & Co. it was sent to the defendants in Providence for collection, indorsed as follows : —

■ “ Pay to the order of Messrs. Bourne & Co.
“ Jay Cooke & Co.”

The draft was paid by Chace & Co. to the defendants about noon of September 18. Jay Cooke & Co. stopped payment about *120 eleven A. M. of that day, and about one p. m. of the same day their failure was generally known in Providence.

The draft was never the property of Jay Cooke & Co., and was never credited by them to the plaintiff, but was merely received by them for collection.

Jay Cooke & Co. were owing the defendants, and the defendants credited it in their account with them, and claim that they had a right so to do.

The rights of parties to bills forwarded for collection have been a fruitful source of litigation. Questions of this sort have generally arisen where some party becomes insolvent, and the contention is who shall bear the loss.

When is the last holder of paper sent for collection bound to look beyond the last remitter ?

We are referred by defendants’ counsel to one case only, Bank of Metropolis v. New England Bank, 17 Pet. 174 ; also in 1 How. U. S. 234. In that case a bank had forwarded for collection paper with a general or unrestricted indorsement to another bank, which, with its own similar indorsement, had sent it to a third bank for collection. The second or intermediate bank failed, and on the day of its failure notified the third bank that the paper was the property of the first bank. In a suit by the first against the third bank to recover the proceeds, the court, while admitting that if it was a case of two banks acting as collecting agents for each other, and where no consideration was paid or money advanced, the paper would remain the property of the sender, holds that in this case the third bank, which held the paper, not having notice by the indorsement or otherwise that the paper was not the projoerty of the second bank, had a right to treat- it as theirs, and was not bound to inquire; and that where two banks dealt together in this way for several years, kept an account current, and mutually credited the collections, there was a lien upon the paper so transmitted for the balance without regard to who might be the real owner. The first bank, by indorsing the paper in such a manner as to make it appear primé facie the property of the failing bank, had no particular equitj1' in its favor.

But this came again before the United States Supreme Court in Bank of Metropolis v. New England Bank, 6 How. U. S. 212, where the court lays down its propositions more definitely; that *121 if the collecting bank, at the time of the dealings, had notice that the bill was not the property of the intermediate remitting bank, but had been merely sent by them for collection as agent for some other bank, then the collecting bank had no right to retain for any balance due from the intermediate bank which had failed; even if the collecting bank had no notice, they could not retain as against the real owner, unless credit had been given to the intermediate remitting bank, or what was equivalent, balances suffered to remain to be met by such paper; but if the latter was the case, and they had treated the intermediate bank as the owner, and had no notice, then they might retain.

And there are further explanations of the decision in Wilson v. Smith, 3 How. U. S. 763, 769. And see it criticised and restricted in McBride v. Farmers' Bank of Salem, 25 Barb. S. C. 657, 661, which case was affirmed on appeal in McBride v. Farmers' Bank, 26 N. Y. 450. See also Reeves et al. v. State Bank, 8 Ohio St. 465 ; Jones v. Milliken & Son, 41 Pa. St. 252; Dickerson v. Wasson, 54 Barb. S. C. 230 ; also in 47 N. Y. 439. There are some cases going still further in favor of the original remitting bank, and allowing parol evidence to show the fact. Lawrence v. Stonington Bank, 6 Conn. 521, and cases there cited; Bank of Washington v. Triplett & Neale, 1 Pet. 25 ; Commercial Bank of Clyde v. Marine Bank, 3 Keyes, 337; also in 1 Ab. Ct. App. Dec. 405.

A general indorsement of bills is primá facie evidence of property in the indorsee, and even where it is subject to any equity or trust between former parties, may change the legal property as to bond fide holders for value. Collins v. Martin, 1 B. & P. 648. But even where there is a general indorsement of paper sent only for collection, it will still remain the property of the sender as to all persons having notice.

The counsel for the plaintiffs say that the present case would come under the head of what is in some places denominated a “ short entry.” It would seem that in London it was a custom (Giles et al. v. Perkins et als. 9 East, 12, and counsel arguendo in Ex parte Thompson, 1 Mont. & Mac. 102, 110) for bankers to receive bills for collection and to enter them immediately in their customers’ accounts, but never to carry out the proceeds in the column to their credit until actually collected; and this was *122 called a “ short entry,” or “ entering short.” And such bills always continued the property of the customer, unless the contrary was to be inferred from some course of dealing. Whereas country bankers in England generally credited to their customers at once all bills considered good, and generally allowed drafts upon the proceeds. And even in the latter cases Lord Ellenborough held such bills did not pass to the assignees in bankruptcy, if there was a balance in favor of the customer over and above the bills.

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Bluebook (online)
11 R.I. 119, 1875 R.I. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaine-v-bourne-co-ri-1875.