Capital City First Nat. Bank v. Lewis State Bank

341 So. 2d 1025, 21 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 183
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 19, 1977
DocketBB-87
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 341 So. 2d 1025 (Capital City First Nat. Bank v. Lewis State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital City First Nat. Bank v. Lewis State Bank, 341 So. 2d 1025, 21 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 183 (Fla. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

341 So.2d 1025 (1977)

CAPITAL CITY FIRST NATIONAL BANK, a National Banking Corporation, Appellant,
v.
LEWIS STATE BANK, a Florida Banking Corporation, Appellee.

No. BB-87.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

January 19, 1977.
Rehearing Denied February 22, 1977.

*1026 C. Gary Williams, of Ausley, McMullen, McGehee, Carothers & Proctor, Tallahassee, for appellant.

John D. Buchanan, Jr., of Henry & Buchanan, P.A., Tallahassee, and Charles W. Pittman, of MacFarlane, Ferguson, Allison & Kelly, Tampa, for appellee.

SMITH, Judge.

Between June 19 and 25, 1974, two checks drawn by the distressed Commonwealth Corporation on uncollected funds were, as one witness put it, "floating around Tallahassee looking for a home." Both checks, totaling $150,000, were drawn by Commonwealth to the order of Commonwealth on its account at Florida State Bank of Tallahassee. Commonwealth deposited the first check, for $10,000, in its account at appellant Capital City First National Bank on June 19, and received credit which Commonwealth immediately used. The second check, for $140,000, was similarly deposited at Capital City the next day, June 20. Florida State, the payor bank, dishonored the two checks and gave notice of dishonor following an intervening weekend, on June 24 and 25. Between their deposit and subsequent dishonor, the checks were handled by appellee Lewis State Bank, which accepted Florida State's dishonor of the checks, rescinded its prior charges to Florida State's account at Lewis, and sued Capital City, the depositary bank which refused to recognize Florida State's dishonor of the checks.

The issue is whether the loss properly falls on Capital City, as held by the circuit court, or on Lewis. Resolution of that issue is controlled by whether Florida State timely dishonored the checks before midnight of the banking day following "presentment" to Florida State. That determination in turn depends on whether delivery of the checks to Lewis and Lewis' handling of them in its proof and transit department on June 20 and 21 was in effect presentment to Florida State, commencing the period for payment or dishonor and rendering tardy Florida State's notices of dishonor on June 24 and 25. The trial court held that presentment to Florida State did not occur when Lewis received the checks and that Lewis' handling of the checks in its proof and transit department on June 20 and 21 was only as an "intermediary collecting bank," not as Florida State's agent to receive presentment. Capital City appeals from the adverse judgment on the principal matter in issue and Lewis cross-assigns error in the trial court's refusal to award interest.

Some of the pertinent statutes are § 673.504, F.S. 1973, "How presentment made":

*1027 "(1) Presentment is a demand for acceptance or payment made upon the ... payor by or on behalf of the holder.
"(2) Presentment may be made:
(a) By mail, in which event the time of presentment is determined by the time of receipt of the mail; or
(b) Through a clearing house; or
(c) At the place of acceptance or payment specified in the instrument... .
"(3) [Presentment] may be made:
.....
(b) To any person who has authority to make or refuse the acceptance or payment."

Sec. 673.506, F.S. 1973, "Time allowed for acceptance or payment":

"(1) Acceptance may be deferred without dishonor until the close of the next business day following presentment... ."

Sec. 673.508(2), F.S. 1973, "Notice of dishonor":

"Any necessary notice [of dishonor] must be given by a bank before its midnight deadline [the next banking day, § 674.104(h)]... ."

Sec. 674.107, F.S. 1973, "Time of receipt of items":

"(1) For the purpose of allowing time to process items, prove balances and make the necessary entries on its books to determine its position for the day, a bank may fix an afternoon hour of two p.m. or later as a cut-off hour for the handling of money and items and the making of entries on its books.
"(2) Any item ... received on any day after a cut-off hour so fixed or after the close of the banking day may be treated as being received at the opening of the next banking day."

Sec. 674.202(2), F.S. 1973, "Responsibility for collection; when action seasonable":

"A collecting bank taking proper action before its midnight deadline [the next banking day, § 674.104(h)] following receipt of an item ... acts seasonably... ."

Sec. 674.204, F.S. 1973 "Methods of sending and presenting; sending direct to payor bank":

"(2) A collecting bank may send:
(a) Any item direct to the payor bank;
.....
"(3) Presentment may be made by a presenting bank at a place where the payor bank has requested that presentment be made."

The odyssey of the second or $140,000 check deposited to Commonwealth's account at Capital on June 20 was at every stage a banking day later, but otherwise identical to, that of the first or $10,000 check deposited Wednesday, June 19. The issues in the case may conveniently be discussed in terms of the first check. As the depositary bank, Capital had initial control of the manner of presentment of that check to the payor bank, Florida State. Capital might have physically delivered the check for presentment over the counter at Florida State; it might have mailed the check to Florida State for presentment; or it might have included the check in the sack of other checks delivered the night of June 19 to the Federal Reserve Bank of Jacksonville, which would have granted Capital City provisional credit on the morning of June 20 and made presentment to Florida State that morning. If by either of those methods Capital City had forwarded the check for ultimate presentment, and presentment had occurred on Thursday, June 20, Florida State's deadline to dishonor the check would have been midnight of the following day, Friday, June 21, and the check would by law then be deemed finally paid and not subject to dishonor by Florida State on the following banking day, Monday, June 24. Capital City did not so route the check, but sent it the morning of Thursday, June 20, together with other checks held on Tallahassee banks, for handling in the local clearinghouse which Tallahassee banks employ to exchange and provisionally credit items requiring presentment in Tallahassee.

*1028 The heart of Capital City's position in this case is the assertion, well documented in this record, that a depositary bank which holds and has granted a depositor credit for a check drawn on another bank has as its primary purpose speedy presentment for payment by the payor. But, the record likewise demonstrates, that purpose may be overridden in favor of a slower method when distance or collection expense are substantial factors. It would not do to mail a check directly for presentment to a New York bank payor, for example, because the mails would delay use of the funds by the depositary bank, which may obtain them provisionally by negotiating the check to a nearby intermediary collecting bank. While a check thus negotiated goes its slower way to New York, the bank of deposit may enjoy use of the provisional credit granted by the collecting bank.

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Bluebook (online)
341 So. 2d 1025, 21 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-city-first-nat-bank-v-lewis-state-bank-fladistctapp-1977.