Famous Shoe & Clothing Co. v. Crosswhite

51 Mo. App. 55, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 393
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 9, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 Mo. App. 55 (Famous Shoe & Clothing Co. v. Crosswhite) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Famous Shoe & Clothing Co. v. Crosswhite, 51 Mo. App. 55, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 393 (Mo. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinions

Biggs, J.

This is an action to recover the amount of a bank check drawn in the usual way by the defendants, and payable to one Herman Heckle, or order. The person to whom the check was delivered transferred it for value to the plaintiff. The cause was submitted to the court on an agreed statement of facts, and judgment was entered thereon for the defendants. The agreed statement is in itself a concise statement of the case, and presents the points for decision. It is as follows:

“First. The plaintiff is now, and at the dates hereinafter stated was, a corporation engaged in carrying on a merchandising business in the city of St. Louis; and the defendants are now, and were at the said times, copartners under the firm-name of Cross-white, Patton & Rubey, and engaged in buying and selling horses and mules in the said city.
“Second. The Mullanphy Savings Bank is, and was at the said times, a corporation doing a general banking business in the said city, with which defendants, under their firm-name, kept their banking account, against which they, from time to time, drew checks.
“Third. On or about the twenty-seventh of October, 1890, one Herman Wilke represented to defendants that his name was Herman Heckle, and that he was the owner of two mules then and there in his possession, and which he then and there, under said assumed name, sold to defendants at their said place of business, and in payment therefor defendants drew and delivered to the said Wilke, under the said assumed name, their check as copartners on the said Mullanphy [57]*57Savings Bank, which said check is hereto attached and made a part of this agreed statement.
“Fourth. The said mnles were not the property of the said Herman Wilke, but had been, previous to said date, stolen by him from one John Heckle in the state of Illinois, and brought to the said city of St. Louis, although that fact was not known to defendants at the time of the purchase of the mules by them from the said Wilke, and of the drawing and delivering of said check to him.
“Fifth. It was then and there the custom of the said Mullanphy Savings Bank, as well as of all other banks of the city of St. Louis, to require persons presenting checks drawn upon it, if unknown to its officers or agents, to identify themselves to the said bank before paying the amount called for by the check. This custom was then and there well known both to the plaintiff and the defendants, and the said Mullanphy Savings Bank would not have paid the said check to the said Wilke without his being known or identified to the said bank or its officers as Herman Heckle, the payee therein named, if he had presented the same to the said bank for payment.
“Sixth. The defendants gave the said check to the said Wilke in payment of said mules, because they did not know him personally, and because they knew of the custom of said bank, and that he would have to be known or identify himself to the said bank or its officers before the amount of said check would be paid to him by the said bank.
“Seventh. After delivering said check to the said Wilke the latter left the defendants’ premises, and his whereabouts became unknown to the defendants; and shortly thereafter and upon the same day defendants ascertained that the said mules, sold by the said Wilke, as aforesaid, had been stolen by him, and thereupon [58]*58directed the said Mullanphy Savings Bank not to pay said check when presented for payment.
“Eighth. Afterwards, to-wit, on or about the twenty-eighth day of October, 1890, the possession of said mules was claimed by and delivered to the said John Heckle, the owner thereof.
“Ninth. After receiving said check, and on the same day, the said Wilke went to the plaintiff’s place of business and purchased merchandise to the amount of $74.15, and tendered to the defendants in payment thereof the said check indorsed by him under the name of ‘Herman ' Huickle; ’ and without making inquiry of the said Wilke as to how he obtained the said check, and without the said Wilke being known to the plaintiff or its agent, who made the sale of the said merchandise, and without his being identified to plaintiff or its said agent, plaintiff, through its said agent, accepted the said check, and delivered to the said Herman Wilke the said merchandise, and gave him -the difference of the amount of said check, namely, seventy-four dollars and eighty-five cents ($74.85) in cash.
“Tenth. At the time defendants stopped the payment of said cheek as aforesaid, they did not know that it had been transferred to plaintiff as aforesaid, nor did plaintiff know the circumstances under which the said Wilke had obtained the same from defendants, nor that payment thereof had been stopped by them, nor that he was not Herman Heckle or Herman Huickle.
“Eleventh. After receiving said check,' and upon the same day, plaintiff presented the same to the said Mullanphy Savings Bank and demanded payment thereof, which was refused in pursuance of said directions given by defendants to the said bank not to pay the same.
“Twelfth. Thereupon, the plaintiff procured the arrest of the said Wilke and recovered back from him [59]*59a part of the merchandise sold by it to him as aforesaid, aggregating in value the sum of thirteen dollars ($13), and, in addition, seventy-fonr dollars and eighty-five cents ($71.85) in cash, but retained possession of the check, but not because the plaintiff was unknown to the bank.
“Thirteenth. If the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendants on the foregoing statement of facts, it is entitled to recover the sum of sixty-one dollars and fifteen cents ($61.15).”

There is but one question presented, and that is, were the defendants justified in countermanding the payment of the check? If the check was a non-negotiable instrument, or if the plaintiff was not a bona fide holder for value, the judgment must be affirmed.

In this state bills of exchange, if made payable to the order of the payee or tofbearer, are negotiable by the law merchant. Promissory notes drawn in the same way, and expressed to be for value received,, are made negotiable by statute. Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 733. It is also the law of this state that no instrument except a bill of exchange is negotiable, unless it appears on its face to have been issued for value received. Lowenstein v. Knopf, 2 Mo. App. 159. This is not controverted by counsel, but it is argued that the check, although not . containing the words, value received, is negotiable, because it possesses all of the characteristics of an inland bill of exchange, and is, in legal effect, such a bill. We cannot agree to this. Although checks and bills of exchange possess several incidents common to both, yet .there are many radical differences, which, in the eye of the law, render them different instruments. A check may be defined to be an order to pay the holder a sum of money at the bank on presentment of the check and demand of the money. A bill of exchange has been defined to be a written [60]*60order or request by one person to another for the payment of a particular sum of money at a specified time

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

Related

Hays v. Lathrop Bank
75 Mo. App. 211 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Mo. App. 55, 1892 Mo. App. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/famous-shoe-clothing-co-v-crosswhite-moctapp-1892.