Davidow v. Bank of Detroit

236 N.W. 828, 254 Mich. 447, 1931 Mich. LEXIS 955
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1931
DocketDocket No. 113, Calendar No. 35,425.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 236 N.W. 828 (Davidow v. Bank of Detroit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davidow v. Bank of Detroit, 236 N.W. 828, 254 Mich. 447, 1931 Mich. LEXIS 955 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

North, J.

The defendant reviews by writ of error a judgment entered against it for $959.44. The pertinent facts appear from the following portion of the circuit judge’s findings:

“On January 30, 1926, J. and A. Schweizer executed to Davidow & Davidow their promissory note in the amount of $900 in payment of legal services. This note was indorsed by Davidow & Davidow and came into the possession of the Bank of Detroit. April 1, 1926, it was paid by the receipt of $50 in cash on principal and the accrued interest and by the giving of a new note for $858. June 2d, this renewal note was paid by the payment in cash of $50 on principal and of the accrued interest and the giving of a further renewal note in the sum of $800, signed by J. T. Schweizer and Anna Schweizer and indorsed by plaintiffs. This note was not paid at its maturity on August 2d.
“Davidow & Davidow is a partnership engaged in the practice of law in the city of Detroit. The partnership maintained a commercial account on the Bank of Detroit covered by pass book, Exhibit 7, from August 16, 1922, to August 28, 1926. * * *
“On the 2d of August notice of dishonor was executed and mailed to J. T. Schweizer and Anna Schweizer. * * * Notice that the note had been dishonored was not received by the plaintiffs in this case until the 9th day of August, 1926, at which time *449 they received notice that the amount of the note together with interest and charges, in all $809.69, had been charged back by the bank to their commercial or checking account.
“The Bank of Detroit carried upon its books two accounts with Davidow & Davidow. One account is the ledger account carried in connection with their commercial or checking account. * * * The bank also opened an account with Davidow & Davidow in connection with the note transactions above described. This account is in evidence as Exhibit 9. It is on a sheet under the heading of liability ledger, ‘Indirect as indorser and guarantor.’ It contains a statement of each transaction and named J. and A. Schweizer as makers of the note in question and Steve Davidow as accommodation indorser or guarantor.
“On the first page of the deposit book, Exhibit 7, there is a printed notice containing the following language in so far as it is material in this case:
‘ ‘ ‘ This bank in receiving checks, drafts and notes or other items on deposit or for collection acts as your agent only, and assumes no responsibility beyond the exercise of due care in selecting agents at other points and forwarding such items to them.
“ ‘Should any such check, draft or other item be dishonored or should there be any delinquency on the part of the collecting agent, the amount will be charged back to the depositor’s account and the check, draft, note or other item delivered to the depositor. ’ <
“There is no evidence in the cáse other than the fact that this deposit book had been in use for a period of upwards of four years that the plaintiffs or any of them knew of the existence of this rule. ’ ’

"We also quote the following portion of the trial judge’s findings of law:

“The notice printed in the pass book, Exhibit 7, under the testimony in the case, constitutes a con *450 tract between the depositors and the bank which contract is binding in connection with the commercial account in accordance with its terms.
“This contract does not cover the transaction in question for the following reasons:
“(1) The transaction between the plaintiffs and the defendant bank in connection with the note, Exhibit 1, was neither a receipt thereof for deposit or for collection.
“(2) Such transaction was a discount by plaintiffs with the bank of said note. The deposit as shown in the pass book, Exhibit 7, was a deposit of the proceeds of such discount and not a deposit of the face of said note. * * *
‘ ‘ The note was discounted and a separate account was started as the result of that discount. What was deposited in the checking account was the proceeds of that discount. If the plaintiffs in this case had chosen to take the cash instead of a credit resulting from the discount certainly the bank could not maintain that any relationship existed except the relationship of indorsers and indorsee. The bank could not then recover unless the provisions of the negotiable instruments law were carried out (2 Comp. Laws 1929, § 9338). It is not quite clear how the accidental fact that the proceeds instead of being received in cash were transferred in the shape of credit to their checking account can make any difference in the relationship created by the signing of their names on the back of the paper, Exhibit 1, and their transfer of that paper to the bank.”

The issues hereinafter considered are raised by exceptions to the trial judge’s findings of fact and law and assignments of error thereon. From the above-quoted portion of the record it is obvious that the trial judge in part based his determination of defendant’s liability upon the fact that defendant carried a record of the Schweizer notes in its dis *451 count ledger. In this connection the undisputed testimony shows that this was merely a matter of bookkeeping for the convenience of the bank.

“Q. Then a distinction is made by the bank between the checking accounts and the indirect indorser and guarantor?

“A. As far as bookkeeping is concerned, yes.”

As between the parties concerned in the original transaction, we think a mere form of bookkeeping is not of sufficient consequence to alter a definité contractual relation between the parties, if such is found to exist. The trial judge correctly determined that the printed notice in the pass book constituted a contract between the plaintiffs and the bank which was binding in connection with the plaintiffs’ commercial account. We are mindful that one of the three members of plaintiffs ’ firm testified:

“That this language (of the notice printed in the pass book) was not called to our attention at any time, and the first intimation we had of it was when it was raised by the pleadings in the case.”

At least one of the other two members of this firm was in court at the trial of this case; but neither of them testified as to their knowledge or lack of knowledge of the pass book notice. But obviously determination of defendant’s liability is not controlled by this phase of the case if, as plaintiffs claim, the note in question was discounted by the bank rather than being received as a conditional item of credit in plaintiffs’ account. As noted above, the trial judge held as a matter of law that this note was discounted; but in this conclusion we are constrained to hold there was error. When the two preceding Schweizer notes fell due plaintiffs went *452

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Bluebook (online)
236 N.W. 828, 254 Mich. 447, 1931 Mich. LEXIS 955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidow-v-bank-of-detroit-mich-1931.