Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania v. Union Bank

19 Barb. 391, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 230
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 Barb. 391 (Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania v. Union Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania v. Union Bank, 19 Barb. 391, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 230 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1853).

Opinions

Harris, J.

The Bank of Wilmington and Brandywine received the draft in question from Betts, Harlan & Hollingsworth, the payees and holders thereof, and gave them credit for the amount; that bank thereby became its owner. The Troy City Bank received the draft for collection, and failed either to collect the draft, or to protest it, so as to charge the parties who would have been liable to the owner for its payment. The Bank of Wilmington and Brandywine is therefore entitled to indemnity for its loss, and the Troy City Bank is liable for its failure to discharge the duty it took upon itself when it received the draft for collection. The question then is how the plaintiff and the defendants, the immediate parties to the transaction, are affected by the right of the Bank of Wilmington and Brandy-wine to indemnity, and this liability of the Troy City Bank. That the plaintiff is liable to the Bank of Wilmington and Brandywine, is settled by the authority of Allen v. The Merchants’ Bank of New York, (22 Wend. 215.) The resolution of the court for the correction of errors in that case is, that when a bank, upon a good consideration, receives a note, or a bill, for. collection at a distant place, the party receiving the same for collection, is liable for the neglect, omission, or other misconduct óf the bank or agent to whom the note or bill is sent, either in the negotiation, collection or paying over money, by which .the money is lost or other injury sustained by the owner of the note or bill, unless there be some agreement to the contrary, expressed or - implied. Upon this principle, the Merchants’ Bank of Hew York, which had received from the Messrs. Allen a draft upon a mercantile firm in Philadelphia for collection, and had transmitted it for the same purpose to the Philadelphia Bank, was held liable to the owners of the draft for the neglect of the notary of the latter bank in giving notice of the non-acceptance of the draft, so as to charge the indorsers. (See also Downer v. The Madison County Bank, 6 Hill, 648.)

[396]*396In the Bank of Orleans v. Smith, (3 Hill, 560,) Nelson, Ch. J., while he still seems to prefer the rule as it had been declared by the supreme court in Allen v. The Merchants’ Bank, and as it undoubtedly exists in some-other states, considers the doctrine as settled by the decision of the court of errors. In the case last cited, it was held that the party who deposits commercial paper, payable at a distant place, with a bank for collection, may hold any of the parties through whose hands it has passed in its transmission to the place of payment, answerable for any default in the collection of the paper. In that case Smith was the holder of a note payable at Buffalo. He left it for collection with the Merchants’ and Mechanics’ Bank of Troy. That bank transmitted it to the Bank of Orleans, and the latter to the Commercial Bank of Buffalo. The Bank of Orleans supposing the note had been collected by its correspondent at Buffalo, paid the amount to the bank at Troy, and that bank had also paid it to Smith. It turned out that the note had not in fact been paid, and that no loches were imputable to any of the parties. The Bank of Orleans sued Smith for the money thus paid through mistake. It was insisted that the Merchants’ and Mechanics’ Bank of Troy alone was liable to the plaintiff. But it was held that the Bank of Orleans might be considered, as the agent of Smith as well as the bank from which it received the note; and having, as such agent, paid the money, and the same having been received by Smith as the owner of the note, the action,'though it might have been maintained against the bank at Troy, was properly brought against the principal. According to the principle of this case then, the Bank of Wilmington and Brandywine might at its election have maintained its action against either of the three banks to which the draft had been transmitted for collection. The Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania was liable not only for the default of the Union Bank, to which it transmitted the draft for collection, but also for the default of the agent at Troy, employed by the latter bank, and so passing by the Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania, the owners of the draft might have looked directly to the Union Bank or the Troy City Bank, and regarding it as. its [397]*397own agent, have held either liable for the loches through which the draft was lost. The same evidence which would establish the liability of one, would equally establish the liability of either of the others. If the plaintiff in this action had been compelled to pay the amount of the draft to the Bank of Wilmington and Brandywine, by reason of the loches of the Troy City Bank, it will not he denied that upon the same evidence it might have sustained an action against either the Union Bank or the Troy City Bank.

The question still remains, whether being itself liable to the Bank of Wilmington and Brandywine, the plaintiff may maintain its action against the Union Bank or the Troy City Bank, without waiting for a recovery against it upon its own liability. To hold that the action cannot be maintained, would be contrary to the policy of the law, which always seeks to avoid a multiplication of suits by sustaining the action directly against the party ultimately liable. Why,” said Nelson, Oh. J., when the same argument was urged by the defendant, in the Bank of Orleans v. Smith—“why bring'the action against the Bank of Troy? They were but the agents of the defendants, and a recovery against them would only have the effect of multiplying actions, as they would have an immediate remedy over against the defendant.” If, according to the principle laid down by the supreme court, in Allen v. The Merchants' Bank, (15 Wend. 482,) the only duty assumed by the plaintiff upon receiving the draft, was, that the draft should be forwarded in due season to some competent agent at the place of payment; then, indeed, having discharged that duty, there would be no ground for maintaining the action—no injury could have been sustained by the plaintiff. But since by the doctrine established by the court of errors, in Allen v. The Merchants' Bank, the plaintiff became answerable for the diligence of the agents who might be employed in the collection of the draft, it had such a special interest in the draft as would enable it to maintain an action for the injury it ha,d sustained. Though the Bank of Wilmington and Brandywine was the general owner, the plaintiff, to which the draft had been indorsed and delivered for a special purpose, became a special owner. It [398]*398was bound to return to the general owner of the draft either the money or the draft duly protested. And if, through the negligence of the defendants, or any agent employed by the defendants, it was unable to discharge this duty to the owner, I see no reason why it should not be permitted to maintain an action for the injury. The case, I think, falls within the principle of that larger class of cases, in which the ■ action ■ may be maintained, either by the principal or the agent. Thus, a factor may sue in his own name for the price of goods sold for his principal; so an auctioneer may maintain an action in his own name for goods sold by him. In these and similar cases, while the agent has such a special property in the subject matter of the action that he is authorized to sue in his own name, the principal also may maintain an action upon the contract of his agent, and, in general, a suit by one will supersede the right of the other to sue. (Story on

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

Related

Long Bros. v. J. K. Armsby Co.
43 Mo. App. 253 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1891)
Guelich v. National State Bank
56 Iowa 434 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1881)
Terry v. McNiel
58 Barb. 241 (New York Supreme Court, 1870)
Howard v. Orient Mutual Insurance
9 Bosw. 645 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1862)
Henry v. Dubuque & Pacific Railroad
2 Iowa 288 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1855)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Barb. 391, 1853 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-bank-of-pennsylvania-v-union-bank-nysupct-1853.