First National Bank v. Fourth National Bank

77 N.Y. 320, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 778
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 20, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 77 N.Y. 320 (First National Bank v. Fourth National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Fourth National Bank, 77 N.Y. 320, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 778 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

*323 Earl, J.

On the 22d day of March, 1866, the National Bank of Crawford county, Pennsylvania, at Meadvillo, made and delivered to the plaintiff, a national bank located at the same place, a sight 'draft for $6,000, drawn upon Culver, Penn & Co., bankers in the city of Now York. The plaintiff indorsed the draft and sent it by mail to the defendant, its corresponding bank in the city of New York, for collection and credit. The draft was received by the defendant on the morning of March 26th, and was on the same morning presented by it to the drawees for payment. Upon such presentation it received from the drawees their check for the amount upon the Third National Bank of New York, where they kept their account, and it delivered the draft to them. It did not present the check to the bank for payment on that day; but it was sent through the clearinghouse and presented for payment the next day, the 27th. Culver, Penn & Co. failed on that day, and the bank refused to pay the check. The defendant then took the check, and ■ on the same day returned it to Culver, Penn & Co. and received back the draft for which it had been given, and then formally demanded of them payment of the draft, and caused the same to be protested for non-payment and on the next day, March 28th, due notice of such non-payment was served by mail upon the plaintiff and also upon the drawer.

Upon these facts it cannot be disputed in this State that sufficient was done to charge the drawer. It was so decided, upon precisely similar facts, in Turner v. Bank of Fox Lake, (4 Abb. Ct. of Ap. Dec., 434), and Burkhalter v. The Second National Bank (42 N. Y., 538). If, therefore, the whole duty of the defendant to the plaintiff was discharged, as claimed by the learned counsel for the defendant, by preserving the liability of the drawer upon the draft, then the judgment appealed from is wrong.

It is the duty of an agent who receives negotiable paper for collection, in case such paper is not paid, so to act as to secure and preserve the liability thereon of all the parties prior to his principal: and if he fails in this duty, and *324 thereby causes loss to his principal, he becomes liable for such loss. But this is not the utmost limit of the agent’s duty and liability. He may so act as to charge all the parties to the paper, and yet become liable 'for a loss occasioned by his negligence. The rule which will measure the diligence which is exacted of a holder of such' paper, in order to charge the prior parties, will not always measure the diligence which is' required of a collecting agent, in the discharge of his duty to his principal. (1 Daniel on Neg. Instr., § 330.)

Suppose an agent receives for collection from the payee a sight draft. No circumstance can make it his duty, in order to charge the drawer, to present it for payment until the next day. He has entered into no contract with the drawer, is not employed or paid by him to render him any service, and owes him no duty to protect him from loss. What is required to be done to charge the drawer is simply a compliance with the condition attached to the draft, as if written therein ; and that condition is in all eases complied with by presentation, demand and notice, on the next day after receipt of the draft. But suppose the agent, on the day he receives the draft, obtains reliable information that the drawee must fail the next day, and that the draft will not be paid unless immediately presented ; what" then is the duty he owes his principal, whose interests for a compensation he has agreed with proper diligence and skill to serve in and about the collection of the draft ? Clearly, all would say, to present the draft at once ; and if he fails to do this; and loss ensues, he incurs responsibility to his principal; and yet the drawer would be charged if it was not presented until the next day. Where an agent receives a bill for collection, payable some days or months after date, in order to charge the drawer, he need not present it for acceptance until it falls due ; and if he then presents it and demands payment, and protests it, and gives the notice, the drawer is held ; and yet, in such a case, he owes his principal the duty to present the bill for acceptance at once, and if he fails in such duty, *325 and loss ensues to his principal, he becomes liable for such loss. It was so held in Allen v. Suydam (17 Wend., 368). That case was taken to the Court of Errors, and again appears in 20 Wench, 321, and although the judgment was reversed upon the question of damages, the same rule was laid down as to the duty and liability of the agent. The chancellor said: “If the receiving a bill by an agent, to collect, implies an obligation on his part to take the necessary steps to charge the drawer and indorsers, by protest and notices, in case it is not accepted and paid by the drawee, I do not see why due diligence on the part of the agent, in procuring the acceptance of the drawee without delay, when it may be necessary or beneficial to the interests of the principal, should not also be implied, as it is the duty of a faithful agent to do for his principal whatever the principal himself would probably have done, if he was a discreet and prudent man. Even where the principal is habitually negligent in attending to his own interests, it forms no excuse for similar negligence on the part of his agent.” In the same case, Senator Verplanck said : “It seems to be the general commercial law of the civilized world, that when a bill is payable at a day certain, the drawer and indorser are not discharged, if the bill is not presented until the day of payment. Yet it is still the duty of the agent for collection to present the bill for acceptance without delay, and to give immediate notice of refusal to accept.” He said further: “ The principle is familiar that an agent for pay is bound to use such means, care, skill and precaution, as are adequate to the due execution of his trust. He must use the ordinary diligence of a skillful and prudent man in such affairs.”

The rule of diligence applicable to an agent for the collection of negotiable paper, which has been stated, was fully and explicitly recognized hi the case of Smith v. Miller, reported in 43 N. Y., 172 and again in 52 N. Y., 545. In that case the defendants sent to the plaintiffs, for the purpose of paying them for a bill of goods, a draft drawn by them upon Place & Co. of New York. On the same day the *326 plaintiffs received the draft, they presented it to the drawees for payment, and received their check upon a New York bank for the amount, and delivered up the draft. The check would have been paid if presented on that day, but it was not presented until the next day, and, in the meantime, Place & Co. having failed, the bank refused to pay the check. Suit was then commenced by the plaintiffs against the defendants for tho price of the bill of goods, and it was held that the plaintiffs could not recover, upon two grounds: 1. Because they did not protest the draft and give notice of the non-payment thereof to the drawers. 2.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.Y. 320, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-fourth-national-bank-ny-1879.