Federal Land Bank of St. Louis v. Goodman

292 S.W. 659, 173 Ark. 489, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 182
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 4, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 659 (Federal Land Bank of St. Louis v. Goodman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Land Bank of St. Louis v. Goodman, 292 S.W. 659, 173 Ark. 489, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 182 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Meecaeey, J.

Appellee began suit in the Crittenden Chancery Court, and, on October 19, 1925, the court rendered its judgment in favor of appellee and against the appellants. Tommie Hollowell was the owner of a tract of land, and he executed note and mortgage to Abe Goodman, trustee, of Memphis, Tennessee, for $827. Hollowed applied for a loan from the Federal Land Bank of St. Louis, pledging the same land as security for payment of the loan. The application was made through the Tri-County National Farm Loan Association, and James C. Moore was secretary and treasurer of this association, and he was also the 'active vice-president of the Bank of Commerce of Earle, Arkansas. George F. Scott was an abstracter, and was assistant to Moore as secretary and treasurer of the National Farm Loan Association. Hollo-well’s application for loan was approved, and, on Novem-' her 1,1924, a note and mortgage were executed by Hollowed and his wife in favor of the Federal Land Bank of St. Louis. The mortgage was duly recorded in Critten-den County, Arkansas.

The Federal Land Bank of St. Louis issued its check for the sum of $938.75, mailed said check to J. C. Moore, as secretary and treasurer, and to the borrower. It was given to pay the debt due to Abe Goodman.

Moore received the check November 19, and credited the amount on the books of the Bank of Commerce to Tommie Hollowed and issued exchange of the Bank of Commerce, drawn upon the First National Bank of Memphis, Tennessee, in favor of Abe Goodman, for $827.

Moore delivered the exchange to Scott for the purpose of delivery to Goodman, in satisfaction of the lien held by Goodman. On the 22d day of November Scott wrote to Goodman, asking him to execute and send to the Bank of Marion, Arkansas, the release which he inclosed in that letter, and, upon-presentation, he would pay the bank the amount due.

Goodman wrote Scott, declining to send the release, as the notes were made payable in Memphis, and stated that, if they would have their bank instruct their correspondent here to pay him the amount stated, he would deliver them the notes, marked paid, and also execute the quitclaim deed Scott inclosed.

Scott went to Goodman’s office in Memphis, Tennessee, Friday afternoon, November -28, 1924, after the Memphis banks were closed for the day, arriving between three and four o’clock. There was some testimony that he arrived there and delivered the exchange to Goodman between 1:30 and 2 p. m. on the 28th.

Scott, who delivered the deed, was dead at the time of trial. Goodman executed the release deed upon delivery to him of the exchange. The Bank of Commerce of Earle was open for business during the banking hours of Saturday, November 29, but did not open for business Monday morning.

Goodman, after receiving the exchange on the 28th, having received it too late to deposit it, put it in his safe, and, on Saturday morning, the 29th of November, deposited it in the Bank of Commerce & Trust Company, at Memphis, Tennessee.

Memphis, Tennessee, has a clearing-house association, and the exchange was presented to the First National Bank, through the clearing-house, on Monday morning, December 1,1924, and payment refused because the Bank of Earle was reported closed.

• Goodman’s office in Memphis is within forty feet of the First National Bank. The release deed .executed by Goodman was placed "on record in Crittenden. County immediately, having been filed for record the same day it was executed, November 28, 1924, at 4 o’clock p. m.

The Bank of Commerce of Earle had on deposit to its credit in the First' National Bank of Memphis, on December 1, subject to check, over $6,000, but the Bank of Earle was indebted, to the First National Bank in the form of notes not matured. When the exchange was returned unpaid, Goodman placed on the margin of the record of the release deed a statement that it was erroneously given and without consideration, and canceled the release deed, certifying that it was void. This was done on December 19.

Appellee’s complaint set up the facts’which are in substance outlined above, and the Federal Land Bank answered, and stated that the advance was made, secured by a mortgage upon the faith of a release deed, and that plaintiff, by his own negligence, failed to collect the exchange, as the same would have been paid to Goodman on either the day of its receipt or the following day. It filed a cross-complaint against the First National Bank of Memphis and the original plaintiffs, Bank of Commerce of Earle, and Loid Rainwater, Bank Commissioner.

The Bank Commissioner entered his appearance, but no service appears upon any of the other cross-defendants. The answer of the appellants also denied the allegations in plaintiff ’s-complaint.

The chancellor found in favor of appellees against the appellants and others in the sum of $811.59 and interest, and decreed that the release deed executed by Goodman should be canceled and set aside; dismissed the cross-complaint of the Holloweils, held that the deed from the Hollowells to the Federal Land Bank was valid, but was subject to the first deed in favor of Goodman, and ordered the sale of the land to pay Goodman’s judgment.

The appellant contends, first, that, if the holder of a check and the bank on which it is drawn reside in the same place, the check must be presented for payment not later than the day after its receipt. This presents the only real controversy in the case. The authorities cited by appellant, while announcing this rule, state that it is not absolute, and that the holder of a check must use due diligence hi tlie presenting of a check for payment. The authorities cited also hold that, if a hank fails after the holder, using due diligence, could have gotten the money on the check, the loss is his. Both parties agree that this question should be determined or decided under the laws of the >State of Tennessee. The law with reference to this matter in the State of Tennessee is the same, however, as the Arkansas statute, and both statutes provide, in substance, that a check must be presented within a reasonable time after its issue.

One of the cases relied on by appellant in discussing tills question is an Arkansas case, and the court said in that case: “In the absence of special circumstances excusing delay, the reasonable time for presenting a check, Avliere the person receiving the same and the bank on which it is drawn are in the same place, is not later than the next business day after it is received; and, where they are in different places, reasonable diligence requires the check to be forwarded to the place of payment not later than the next'business day after it is received by. the payee, and presented not later than the day after it is there received. Inexcusable delay will discharge the drawer from liability if he is injured by the delay.”

But the'court also said in the same case: “A check, like a bill of exchange, must be presented for payment within a reasonable time, and what is a reasonable time will depend upon the circumstances of each particular case.” Burns v. Yocum, 81 Ark. 127, 98 S. W. 956.

The above case was decided in 1906, before we had any unif orm negotiable instrument law in Arkansas.

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 659, 173 Ark. 489, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-land-bank-of-st-louis-v-goodman-ark-1927.