City National Bank v. Cooper & Griffin

74 S.E. 366, 91 S.C. 91, 1912 S.C. LEXIS 207
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 25, 1912
Docket8147
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 74 S.E. 366 (City National Bank v. Cooper & Griffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City National Bank v. Cooper & Griffin, 74 S.E. 366, 91 S.C. 91, 1912 S.C. LEXIS 207 (S.C. 1912).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Woods.

The defendants appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff founded on a verdict for $2,866.10. On July 3, 1907, the defendants, Cooper & Griffin, deposited with the plaintiff, City National Bank' of Greenville, their draft on Steele, Miller & Company, óf Corinth, Mississippi, for $2,476.23. The plaintiff bank immediately forwarded the draft with the usual collection endorsement to the Tishomingo Savings Institution for collection, and on July 11, 1907, Steele, Miller & Company paid the *93 draft to that bank. On July 20, 1907, the Tishomingo Bank sent the City National Bank its check for $2,476.23 on the National Bank of Commerce of St. Louis'. Upon receiving the check, the City National Bank, on July 22, 1907, entered the amount of the check to the credit of Cooper & Griffin, and forwarded it for collection to its correspondent, the National State Bank of Richmond, Virginia; and that bank, in turn, sent it to the Mechanics National Bank of St. Louis for collection. Upon presentation of the check to the National Bank of Commerce, the drawee bank, on July 25,' 1907, payment was refused for lack of funds. Notice of protest having been sent to1 the1 City National Bank, it extended the notice 'to Cooper & Griffin. When this notice was received, Mr. Steele, of Steele, Miller & Company, happened to be in Greenville, and at the request of Cooper & Griffin, and with the assent of the City National Bank, he made inquiry over the telephone of the Tishomingo Bank as to the dishonor of the check, and was assured that there was some mistake, and upon a second presentation it would 'be paid by the National Bank of Commerce. Cooper & Griffin made known this statement toi the City National Bank, and it telegraphed to> its Richmond correspondent to return the check to St. Louis for a second presentation. 'It appears, however, that the check was last, and so was never again presented. The president of the Tishomingo Bank having failed in his promise to> send a duplicate check, the City National Bank on October 11, 1907, made a draft on that bank for the amount. Payment of this draft was refused. About November 1, 1907, by agreement between the City National Bank and Cooper & Griffin, Mr. S. A. Cothran, am employee of Cooper & Griffin, was sent to Corinth with instructions , to try to get the Tishomingo Bank to pay its draft. He received from the Tishomingo Bank about thirty-eight dollars in cash and a duplicate of the check which had been sent by it to the City National Bank on July 20, 1907. Payment of this check was refused, and *94 the paper was- returned to the City National Bank. In December, 1907, tine Tishomingo Bank suspended payment and1 went into bankruptcy. The Oity National Bank -having made an unsuccessful effort to collect from the -asset's of the bankrupt $2,476.23 -and interest, less the payment of thirty-eight dollars, brought this action to' recover the amount from Cooper & Griffin.

The foregoing is a statement of the material undisputed facts. At other points- in the -evidence there were distinct issues of fact. Johnson, the cashi-er of the plaintiff -bank, testified that the draft of Cooper & Griffin on Steele, Miller & Company was sent to the Tishomingo Bank for collection at the express request of Lively, the agent of the defendants1, by whom it was- deposited. Lively testified -on this point as -to the interview with Johnson: “When I took it in, be asked m-e how he should send it, and I told him that it didn’t make any difference, it was drawn with exchange, and he asked me if I knew th-e name of a 'bank that he could direct it to, and I gave him- the name -of this; bank at Corinth, and mentioned to him that Steele, Miller & Company did' business with them, and- told 'him that I remembered 'the name of this bank.”

Th-e evidence on the part of the- defendants was -that they participated in sending Mr. Cothran- to Corinth, and in other efforts- looking to collection from1 the Tishomingo' Bank, merely aiding gratuitously the City National Bank, that Mr. Cothran was not their agent, but the agent of the City National Bank, and -that they -assumed no authority in the matter, considering their liability -on the paper at an end when- the draft was paid by Steele, Miller & Company. The undisputed testimony tended to show that there had 'been delay in pressing the -claim! against tine- Tishomingo' Bank, and for this alleged negligence the defendants1 contended the plaintiff was solely responsible, and that by it'they had been relieved even if before they bad been liable. On this point the plaintiff’s testimony tended to show that its officers acted *95 in concent with the defendants in sending Mr. Cothran, and in taking other means to collect the draft from the Tishomingo Bank. The plaintiff contended that there had- been no negligence, but reasonable and concerted' effort to collect on the part of the plaintiff and' the defendants.

1 The first position -taken in argument by defendants’ counsel is that, -although the Circuit Judge charged all but -one of his requests and refused all but two of the requests of the plaintiff’s counsel, yet the instruction was given to the jury that they might find for the plaintiff without respect to whether the plaintiff had failed to use due diligence ini trying to collect from the Tishomingo Bank. The argument of defendant’s counsel on- the point is impressive, but a statement of the law and an analysis of the charge, we think, will show if to be unsound. At defendant’s request the Circuit Judge -charged the jury: “Where a bank, as a collection agent, receives a draft from one of its customers for collection, its position is that of an-independent contractor, and the instruments employed by such bank in the business contemplated are its agents, and not the sub-agents of the owner of the draft. A bank which receives a draft for collection and sends it to a correspondent in another city to present for payment, collect, and' remit the proceeds, is not justifiable in receiving from -such other bank the proceeds of collection in -the form of a check drawn- by such other bank on another bank. If the collecting bank has received money for the draft, it should remit money, and the original bank -in accepting anything else assumes- responsibility for such 'Other medium; unless the owner of the draft has authorized or ratified such departure- from the requirements -of the case.” As there wa-s- no exception to the charge -on this point it must be regarded the law of the case whether correct or not. But inasmuch a© this point, vital in the trial of the case, i-s very important and has never been decided in this State, we Shall not pass- over it.

*96 The rule which is supported by much judicial authority and strong- reasoning in this country, as will be seen- by reference to the oases cited below, is that when a bank receives paper for collection at a distant point, it engages to use reasonable efforts' to collect and to pay its- customer. The necessity of using- other agencies' being manifest, the bank is responsible only for reasonable care in the selection of such agencies, and if such care is exercised it will not be 'held' liable for default on the part of the collecting bank. Faden v. Merchants Bank, 23 Pickering 330, 34 Am. Dec. 59;

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.E. 366, 91 S.C. 91, 1912 S.C. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-national-bank-v-cooper-griffin-sc-1912.