Decatur National Bank v. Murphy

9 Ill. App. 112, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 100
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 19, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Ill. App. 112 (Decatur National Bank v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Decatur National Bank v. Murphy, 9 Ill. App. 112, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 100 (Ill. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinion

McCulloch, J.

Appellees sued appellant for a balance claimed to be due them on a bank deposit account, and recovered a judgment in the court below for $981.94, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted. The controversy relates to the sum of $600, included in said judgment.

On the 20th day of Movember, 1880, appellees were doing business under the firm name of Murphy & Waggoner, and kept their bank deposits with appellant. On that day they received a check drawn by the firm of Blackman & Holmes upon J. Miliken & Co., another banking firm with whom Blackman & Holmes kept their deposits. The dispute in this case grows out of the alleged dishonor of this check by J. Miliken & Co.

It appears from the evidence that for a number of years there have been three bankingdiouses in the city of Decatur, including those already named. Between these banks there has grown hp a usage, now claimed to have the force of a custom, for each one to receive on deposit from its own customers, cheeks drawn upon each of the others by their respective depositors, and to make exchanges of checks and pay balances every business day about the hour of two o’clock, or between that hour and the close of business for the day. If checks are received after the exchanges have been made they are held until the next day, unless for some special reason they are presented sooner. If a check is dishonored, it is returned to the bank irom which it came, and the money is paid in lieu of it. The usual hour for closing the banks is four o’clock in the afternoon.

After the exchanges had been made on Saturday, November 20th, appellees deposited the check in question with appellant and received credit therefor on their bank pass-book. On the Monday following a messenger from J. Millikin & Co. made ■the rounds of the banks for the purpose of making the exchanges. He delivered to appellant nineteen checks, and received the same number in return, there being a difference in favor of J. Millikin & Co.' of a small sum, which appellant paid in cash. The check in queátion was one of those taken away by the messenger, and in the course of an hour or an hour and a half it was returned to appellant as a rejected check; appellant took back the check, paid J. Millikin & Co-the face of it in currency, and charged it back to appellees. Their right to do so is the only question involved in this case.

Blackman & Holmes were known to be engaged in a highly speculative and very hazardous course of dealing in grain, in connection with an institution known as the Chicago Public Produce Exchange, for which reason they were not permitted to overdraw their bank account with J. Millikin & Co. At the close of business, on the 20tli of November, the balance to their credit was $190.65, but after banking hours they made a deposit of $2,990.62, and drew their check in favor of the Chicago Public Produce Exchange for the sum of $2.456, which sum was placed to its credit, leaving a balance in favor of Blackman & Holmes of $725.27. These matters were entered upon the books of J. Millikin & Co. as business transactions of the Monday following. On that day, and before the coming in of this check for $600, other checks of Blackman & Holmes were paid, by which their balance in bank was reduced to $575.27. Upon their being requested to do so, Blackman & Holmes failed to make up their deposits, so as to meet the check in question, and the same was returned by J. Millikin & Co. as a dishonored check. It is conceded that under the circumstances Millikin & Co. were not bound to pay the cheek, as it exceeded the fund in bank against which it was drawn. Without a special arrangement to that effect a bank is under no obligation to pay checks of its depositors in excess of their deposits.

It is further conceded that appellant took the check only as agent of appellees for its collection. If therefore the collection failed without any fault of appellant, it had the right to cancel the credit given appellees for the amount of the check. Morse on Banking, 2 Ed. 388.

It is further conceded that the law governing the presentation of the check, gave appellant the whole of the next business day after its receipt, to present it to J. Milliken & Co. for payment. This having been done, appellant was guilty of no laches in its presentation. Hor do we understand counsel for appellees to seriously controvert the proposition of law advanced by counsel for appellant, that where the custom of banks is to make exchanges throught a clearing house, or as in this case, by messengers going around and taking up the1' checks, such exchange of checks is not an absolute acceptance or payment thereof, but that each party is entitled to an opportunity of examining the accounts of its depositors, and of passing upon the validity of the check so received in exchange before the acceptance becomes absolute.

The question at issue, therefore, is whether or not J. Milliken & Go. either by actual acceptance of the check in question, as a good check, or by their failure to return it to appeh lant in due time according to an alleged custom of dealing between the banks at Decatur, are to be considered as having closed the transaction between themselves and appellant, so as to have enabled appellant to successfully prove payment of the check.

The question is not whether or not the check ought to have been paid on presentation, but whether or not it is to be treated as actually paid; for it is a part of the custom if one is proved, for the bank having sent in a check for exchange, to pay the cash upon its return dishonored, and it has a right to do this although the check may have been wrongfully dishonored if it is returned in due season. But it must make use of all proper means of knowing whether or not it is a case where the custom requires the refunding of the money. While it is no doubt true that the Iona fide holder of a check may retain it and insist upon its payment if the circumstances of the case entitle it to be paid, yet in this case no such duty devolved upon appellant. It had the check for collection only on account of appellees, and. if it used due diligence for its collection and failed, it had the right upon giving appellees due notice of its dishonor, to surrender the check to them and to cancel the credit given them for its face value. Ho duty devolved upon appellant after its dishonor to inquire into the state of accounts between Blackman & Holmes, and J. Milliken & Go., to see whether or not the check ought to have been paid. It was sufficient for appellant to make due presentation of the check, and when that was done its whole duty in that regard was performed. Then if the check was actually dishonored by non-payment or non-acceptance, and duly returned according to the custom, appellant had the right to charge it back to appellees.

It is contended on the part of appellees that the custom of the banks requires, that upon return of the messenger making the exchanges, the checks brought in by him are to be immediately examined by the proper officer to ascertain if they are good. They further contend - that this check with all the others brought in by the messenger was either examined and passed upon, or that it was accepted without question, placed with the other checks upon a spindle used for the reception of paid checks, and finally passed to the credit of appellant, on the exchange account.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Ill. App. 112, 1881 Ill. App. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decatur-national-bank-v-murphy-illappct-1881.