Commercial National Bank v. Henninger

105 Pa. 496, 1884 Pa. LEXIS 134
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 3, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 105 Pa. 496 (Commercial National Bank v. Henninger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial National Bank v. Henninger, 105 Pa. 496, 1884 Pa. LEXIS 134 (Pa. 1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Paxsox

delivered the opinion of the court, April 14, 1884.

The fourth and eighth assignments raise the prominent questions of this case. The fourth alleges error in admitting in evidence the account of Mr. Young with the bank on February 28, 1882, for the purpose of showing that there were funds on deposit to his credit sufficient to have paid the notes in controversy; while the eighth alleges the court erred in instructing the jury in answer to the plaintiff’s first point: “ That if Mr. Young had a deposit in bank sufficient to pay these notes on the day they became due, and there were no circumstances shown in the case that would forbid the bank from so doing, the bank was obliged to charge up these notes against Mr. Young’s deposit. Especially was the bank required to do so if the jury find that there was some understanding between the cashier and the president, that the defendant would not be called upon to pay these notes, and such credit would be no injury to the bank.”

The defendant was the indorser of the notes in suit. The maker was B. F. Young, who was also the cashier of the bank. The notes had been discounted by the bank, and were payable there. On the day they' matured, at the close of banking hours, there was on deposit to the credit of Mr. Young, a balance sufficient to meet the notes. Instead of charging up [500]*500the notes against the deposit, the cashier handed them to a notary for protest! ■ The object of this was to hold the indorser, and compel him- to proceed against the maker in order to let in a defence which the maker could not set up against the bank. The defendant contends that the failure of the bank to charge up the notes against Mr. Young’s deposit relieved him as indorser.

That there were no circumstances in the case to prevent the bank from applying- the deposit to the notes has been found by the jury. There is no doubt as to the right of a depositor to control his deposit up to the point when the rights of others attach. He may -draw it out by his cheek; he may apply it to a- particular purpose by making it a special deposit, or by specific directions communicated to the bank. Hone of these things is found in the case. The mere mental intention of the depositor, not communicated to the bank, is of no importance. While the right, of the bank to charge the notes against the deposit is not disputed, it was at the same time contended that it was under no duty to do so, and that its failure to make such application did not discharge the indorser.

It is to be observed that the bank was the owner of the notes, and not a mere collecting agent. The difference is obvious. The position of the bank was this: It was a creditor of Mr. Young to the amount of the notes discounted; it was the debtor of Mr. Young to the amount of his deposit, and to that extent was in law bound to honor his checks or drafts ; it held the defendant as security on the notes by reason of his indorsement thereof; the deposit exceeded the 'notes, and it had the undoubted right at the close of banking hours on the 28th of August, to charge the notes -against the deposit. Was it bound to do so as between the bank and the indorser ?

: In order to discuss this question intelligently we must not lose sight of the peculiar character of a bank deposit. The money deposited does not, as is popularly assumed, continue to be the property of the depositor. ' It becomes the money of the bank the moment it is deposited. The depositor becomes the creditor of the bank, and as before observed, the bank is his debtor, and is in law bound to honor his drafts to the extent of his deposit: Foley v. Hill, 1 Phillips, 399; Bank of Republic v. Millard, 10 Wallace, 152; Carr v. National Security Bank, 107 Mass., 45. When the depositor becomes indebted to the bank on one or more accounts, and such debts are due. and payable, the bank has the right to apply any deposit he may have to their payment. This is by virtue of the right of set-off. Where a general deposit is made by one already indebted to the bank, the latter may appropriate such deposit to the,payment of such indebtedness. This results from the [501]*501general doctrine of the application or appropriation'of payments. And it may be safely asserted, that as a general rule, the former may waive the right to make such application, and allow the depositor to draw out his balance. Where, however, the rights of third parties intervene, the ease is sometimes different. The distinction between the liability of a bank to a customer and to a third party is thus defined in Morse on Banks and Banking at page 47 (2d ed.) : “ A bank holding a note of a depositor, is under no obligation to appropriate a sura sufficient to meet it from funds on deposit immediately upon its maturity, or indeed at any other particular time ; they may let the account run on and take the chance that they will not lose in the end......But as towards third parties, the obligation upon the bank is different, and it has been decisively and properly held that the neglect of the bank to make such an appropriation of the principal debtor’s funds would discharge the indorsers and sureties.”

The rule is well settled that “ when a creditor has in his hands the means of paying his debt out of the property of his principal debtor, and does not use it, but gives it up, the surety is discharged. It need not be actually in the hands of the creditor; if it be within his control, so that by the exercise of reasonable diligence he may have realized his pay out of it; yet voluntarily and by supine negligence relinquished it, the surety is discharged: ” Fegley v. McDonald, 8 Norris, 128, citing Commonwealth v. Vanderslice, 8 S. & R., 452; Everly v. Rice, 8 Harris, 297; Boschert v. Brown, 22 P. F. S., 372, and other cases.

This familiar rule applies to banks as Avell as other creditors. It was so held in Kuhns v. The Westmoreland Bank, 2 Watts, 136, where it was ruled :' “ The lien which a bank has, by virtue of the seventh section of the Act of 21st March, 1814, upon the stock of its debtor, results for the benefit of the surety of such debtor; and such is that resulting interest that the surety cannot be deprived of it. Hence, if the bank permit the stock of such debtor to be sold, and its proceeds applied to discharge a debt due to the bank by the same debtor which originated by a note of subsequent date, the surety in the first transaction Avill be thereby discharged.”

Ramsey v. Westmoreland Bank, 2 P. & W., 203, was a suit against a surety. The facts and the laAv of the case are sufficiently explained in the folioAving extract from the opinion of the court: “ The note on which the suit was instituted had been drawn by William Johnson and indorsed by John Ramsey ; he was then a mere surety, and as such entitled to be favored in the law. The evidence he offered v/as to prove, and would have proved, that a large balance arising on the sale of [502]*502the real estate of "William Johnson, was in the hands'of the sheriff, which was subject and. liable to" the judgment .of the bank, and would have been obtained if due diligence had been used. ■ The case then, if proved as offered by the plaintiff in error to the court below, would have come within the principle stated by the present Chief Justice in Bellas v. Miller’s Administrators, 8 S.

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105 Pa. 496, 1884 Pa. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-national-bank-v-henninger-pa-1884.