Flat Creek Sayings Bank v. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

15 Tenn. App. 527, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 6, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Tenn. App. 527 (Flat Creek Sayings Bank v. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flat Creek Sayings Bank v. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, 15 Tenn. App. 527, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 121 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

DeWJTT, J.

This suit was brought by the Flat Creek Savings Bank, of Plat Creek, Tennessee, and D. A. Womack and E. W. Stone, of Bedford County, partners under the firm name of Womack and 8tone, against the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta (Nashville Branch) and the Tennessee-Hermitage National Bank of Nashville, to recover the sum of $13,689.14, with protest fees and interest, for loss alleged to have been occasioned by the failure of defendants to comply with instructions accompanying four drafts aggregating said sum, drawn by Womack and Stone to the order of Flat Creek Savings Bank, on AY. C. Halliburton of Roanoke, Virginia.

When each of these drafts was drawn, credit was given to Womack and Stone by the Flat Creek Savings Bank for the amount thereof, and they immediately checked against the same under a general agreement that if they were not paid by the drawee, they could be charged back against the drawers. These drafts were for the proceeds of four carloads of hogs shipped by Womack and Stone to Halliburton between August 31st and September 11, 1928. They were forwarded for collection by the Flat Creek Savings Bank to its correspondent bank, the Tennessee-Hermitage Bank, at Nashville, which credited the Flat Creek Savings Bank with the amounts there *529 of. Thereupon the Tennessee-Hermitage National Bank transmitted the drafts to the Federal Reserve Bank at Nashville, to be forwarded to the Colonial National Bank of Roanoke for collection from Halliburton. The hogs were received by Halliburton, but, having become insolvent, he did not pay the drafts and they were protested for non-payment and ultimately returned to the Flat Creek Savings Bank.

After the bill was filed Womack and Stone made payments to the Flat Creek Savings Bank, which reduced their indebtedness to it on these drafts to $2068.33. Of the money so paid the sum of $4468.44 was derived by them through assignment by Halliburton of a claim which he held against the Norfolk and Western Railroad Company, and which was paid.

In the original bill it is alleged that Halliburton was enabled to get possession of the hogs as the direct result of a violation of instruction given to the Tennessee-Hermitage National Bank by the Flat Creek Savings Bank — “always send there drafts in such a way that Roanoke Bank will wire non-payment.’’. It is alleged that the Tennessee-Hermitage National Bank was directed so to instruct its correspondent banks through which the drafts were to be forwarded. In July, 1928, a draft for a shipment of hogs by Womack and Stone to Halliburton had been dishonored, but it was afterward paid.

In their bill the complainants allege that had the said instructions been complied with they would not have shipped hogs to Halliburton after the shipment for which the first draft was drawn; but that thinking that the instructions had been complied with, and that the draft had been paid promptly on presentation, and relying thereon, they subsequently made the three other shipments of hogs, and which they lost.

In the bill the Flat Creek Savings Bank prays in the alternative that its credit for the four drafts be restored in full or partially on the books of the Tennessee-Hermitage National Bank. It appears that on September 17, 1928, Womack and Stone had checked out the funds arising from the four drafts either before the drafts were issued or before they were dishonored.

At the hearing in the Chancery Court, the complainants, being thoroughly satisfied that the Tennessee-Hermitage National Bank had not transmitted the alleged instructions as to these drafts to the Federal Reserve Bank, dismissed their bill as to the latter. The only defendant now concerned is the Tennessee-Hermitage National Bank.

The complainants frankly concede that they cannot maintain this suit for losses on the first and second shipments since the proof shows that both of said shipments were delivered to Halliburton before the first draft reached the Bank at Roanoke on September 8, 1928; there *530 fore the amount now involved is the aggregate of the third and fourth drafts, with protest fees and interest.

Upon the hearing upon a large record the Chancellor dismissed the bill upon two grounds: first, that the Flat Creek Savings Bank was the owner of the drafts in question and the only party complainant entitled to maintain this suit, and that Womack and Stone had no standing in the case; second, that the Flat Creek Savings Bank had suffered no damage by reason of the failure of the Tennessee-Hermitage National Bank to have the Roanoke Bank wire non-payment of the draft dated September 1, 1928, and therefore was not entitled to recover on any of the drafts involved. He accompanied his decree with an elaborate finding of fact and discussion of the questions of law, in writing. If the second reason given by the Chancellor is to be sustained, then of course the first would be immaterial, for if the failure of the Tennessee-Hermitage National Bank to have the Roanoke Bank to wire non-payment of the first draft was not the cause of the loss incurred, then neither complainant could recover.

The rule is that a bank, though negligent in the discharge of its duties as collecting agent, is not liable to its customer for a claim placed in its hands, unless it is shown that the claim was collectible by due diligence, and was lost in consequence of the bank’s negligence; and that the burden is on the claimant to show'these facts. Sahlien v. Bank, 90 Tenn., 220, 16 S. W., 373; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Federal Reserve Bank, 157 Tenn., 503, 10 S. W. (2d), 683; De Jarnett v. Bank, 1 Tenn. App., 191. In order to maintain such an action both wrong and damage must concur.

The Chancellor found that the third draft, drawn on September 8, 1928, was for a shipment made on September 7th, and was received by the Tennessee-Hermitage National Bank on September 10th, one day after the shipment reached Halliburton on September '9th; and that the draft did not reach. Roanoke until September 14th, five dajrs after the shipment reached Halliburton. He found that the fourth draft, drawn on September 13th, was for a shipment made on September 11th; that this shipment reached Halliburton on September 13th, the very day on which the draft was drawn by Womack and Stone; that this draft was not received by the Tennessee-Hermitage National Bank until September 15th, two days after it was drawn, four days after the shipment was made and two days after it w'as delivered; and that this draft was not received by the Roanoke bank until September 18th, seven days after the shipment was made and five days after it was delivered.

The Chancellor also found that the first and second shipment reached Halliburton before the respective drafts therefor reached the Roanoke bank; that the first draft reached that bank on September *531 8th, and the second draft reached it on September 11th. These facts appear in a stipulation of counsel, in the record.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Tenn. App. 527, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flat-creek-sayings-bank-v-federal-reserve-bank-of-atlanta-tennctapp-1932.