Dorchester v. Merchants Nat. Bank of Houston

163 S.W. 5, 106 Tex. 201, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 98
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1914
DocketNo. 2312.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 163 S.W. 5 (Dorchester v. Merchants Nat. Bank of Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorchester v. Merchants Nat. Bank of Houston, 163 S.W. 5, 106 Tex. 201, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 98 (Tex. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice BBOWN

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was instituted by Dorchester, receiver, against the Texas Lamp & Oil Company to recover $1563.33, on a verified account. The defendant admitted the correctness of the claim but alleged that it paid the claim by a draft for the sum due, drawn by it in favor of plaintiff on the hank of T. W. House, which was located in the City of Houston, which check was delivered to plaintiff, and that said Oil & Lamp Company had at that time in the T. W. House bank more than sufficient funds to pay the check which remained in said bank until its failure, and that plaintiff failed to present the check for payment in due time. The receiver then amended the petition and made the Merchants National Bank of Houston a party defendant, alleging, in substance, that the plaintiff delivered the check to that bank for collection which negligently failed to present the check in due time. The latter bank answered as follows:

“This defendant avers that if it ever had or handled the check described in plaintiff’s petition, it took the same in due course of business, and that in handling the same it handled it in the ordinary, customary and usual manner in which such matters are handled by banks, doing business in the City of Houston, State of Texas, and elsewhere; that if it ever handled said check it used due diligence, and all care necessary and proper, and such as is customary in an effort to collect the same; that it was not negligent in any particular or in any manner or in any way in its efforts to collect said draft; that if it ever handled said draft it presented the same promptly for payment in the usual and customary manner in which such items are handled by the banks of Houston, and in such prompt, usual and customary manner as plaintiff knew the said check would be handled by said bank when the same was deposited with it for collection; that if it ever handled said check, the same, when presented promptly and properly and through the proper channels, was 'dishonored, not paid, and returned to this defendant, and immediately by it reported dishonored and returned to the plaintiff; and this defendant denies that it has been guilty of any negligence, neglect or carelessness whatever in connection with the handling of said check or its presentation for payment, and denies that it is liable to *205 the plaintiff in any sum whatever in this case, and of this it puts itself upon the country.”

The trial court gave judgment in favor of the Lamp & Oil Company, and in favor of plaintiff against the bank. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed that judgment against the receiver, from which judgment this writ of error was granted. The judge of the District Court made this finding of facts: ■

“1. That the defendant, Texas Lamp & Oil Company, was indebted as alleged by petitioner, upon open account, in the sum of $1563.33, which indebtedness is not denied.
“2. That on the 15th day of October, 1907, the Texas Lamp & Oil Company drew its check upon the bank of T. W. House and sent the said check by mail to its creditor, Dorchester, as receiver of the Waters-Pierce Oil Company, which check was received by said Dorchester, or his agent, in due course of mail, on the morning of October 16, 1907, at about the hour of 8 o’clock. I find that the Texas Lamp '& Oil Company, or its manager or owner, who drew the check, did business with T. W. House, and that he had received canceled checks that had gone through the clearing house which had marked on them ‘paid by clearing house’ or ‘paid through the clearing house,’ and that the present Texas Lamp & Oil Company had been doing business here about six or seven years. I do not find that" said manager or owner had any other knowledge of the methods of doing business than were revealed by those checks.
“3. The said agent of the receiver in charge of the business in Houston took the said check, in connection with something like 119 other checks, aggregating $10,045.36, and sent them by messenger, in the ordinary course of business, to the Merchants Fational Bank, which is interplead in this action.
“4. I find that the weight of the testimony is to the effect that the messenger of the Waters-Pieree Oil Company (which term will be used instead of using the name of Dorchester) did not reach the bank until some time after 2:30 o’clock on the 16th, or about 2:45 or 2:55 on that day, and did not reach it in time for the checks deposited on that day to get into the clearing house, it being necessary under the rules of the clearing house for all checks to be there at the clearing point by 2:45 p. m. of each business day, that being the hour at which the clearing house met each day, except on Saturdays.
“5. The Merchants Fational Bank, therefore, held the checks, but duly sent them in to the clearing house at the proper hour on the 17th, at 2:45 p. m., and when the checks were received, they were all sorted out, as is customary there, and all the checks that were drawn on T. W. House were delivered to some messenger or clerk of his and sent over to the bank of T. W. House for the purpose of having the signature verified and the endorsements examined by those of his employees charged with that duty. I find the weight of the evidence to show that this check did not get to the bank of T. W. House till after 3 p. m., when it was closed for business.
“6. The Merchants Fational Bank was a debtor of the clearing *206 house on that day to the extent of something like $114,000, and T. W. House was debtor bank to the extent of something in excess of $21,000. The method of operation of the clearing house seems'to be that all the checks drawn in favor of any bank were balanced against those drawn against it, and if those drawn against it are in excess of those drawn in its favor, it becomes a debtor to the clearing house to that extent and the manager of the clearing house draws checks upon the debtor banks in favor of the banks who.are credit banks on that day, and thus the accounts are settled between them.
“7. Upon that da)r, October 17, 1907, the balances were so struck and checks were drawn on the Merchants National Bank in favor of other banks to the extent of its indebtedness, and a check to the extent of twenty-one thousand and odd dollars was drawn against the bank of T. W. House, which when presented, was refused payment, T. W. House having at the close of business on that day acknowledged himself insolvent and made an assignment, and he was afterwards adjudged a bankrupt.
“8. It seems, so far as I can deduce from the testimony, that the clearing house had no rules or regulations in its by-laws or book of rules providing for any such contingency as the failure of one of its members, so after the failure of Mr. House was announced, there was an assemblage called together of the officers of all other banks belonging to the clearing house, ten in number, excluding Mr. House, and it was decided to have another clearance and rebalance the books and exclude' and eliminate all checks, drawn in favor of or against T. W. House, which was done.
“9. I find that in anticipation of the payment of the check by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 5, 106 Tex. 201, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorchester-v-merchants-nat-bank-of-houston-tex-1914.