Freeport Bank of Freeport v. Viemeister

227 A.D. 457, 238 N.Y.S. 169, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6460
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 31, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 227 A.D. 457 (Freeport Bank of Freeport v. Viemeister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeport Bank of Freeport v. Viemeister, 227 A.D. 457, 238 N.Y.S. 169, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6460 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Carswell, J.

This action is based upon a check for $1,000 made by the defendant Viemeister to one Gilbert, who was a depositor of the plaintiff, Freeport Bank. The payment upon the check was stopped by the maker, Viemeister, and the bank sued for $1,000. Upon the trial it claimed it was entitled to a judgment of $679.49, the extent to which it claimed to be the holder for value of the check involved. A jury was waived and the trial court dismissed the complaint. From the judgment thereon, plaintiff appeals and seeks not only a reversal but a judgment in its favor for $679.49, with interest. The material facts are not in dispute.

On January 7, 1927, Gilbert, a depositor in the plaintiff Freeport Bank, had some dealings with the defendant Viemeister which concerned the purchase of certain lots. Viemeister gave a check to Gilbert for $1,000 upon the condition that he was not to use the check until" Monday, January ninth, and then only in the event that as a result of an inspection of lots on January eighth, the intervening Sunday, Viemeister concluded that he wished to purchase the lots. On January ninth, Viemeister tried unsuccessfully to reach Gilbert on the telephone to advise him that he had inspected the lots and that he did not intend to consummate the deal. Viemeister, being unable to reach Gilbert, stopped payment on the check.

On January 7, 1927, Gilbert, disregarding Viemeister’s conditional delivery of the check to him, deposited the check to his own credit in the plaintiff Freeport Bank, together with other checks. The deposit slip had this notation thereon: “ Depositors [459]*459are hereby notified that credits entered in their accounts are conditional and not final until items deposited are paid by banks on which they are drawn.”

The Viemeister check for $1,000 was credited to Gilbert’s account on January 7, 1927, by the plaintiff bank, together with other items deposited. This was on a Saturday. The plaintiff bank then indorsed the check and in the regular course it reached the Municipal Bank, Greenpoint Branch (against which the defendant Viemeister had drawn his check), for payment on January eleventh, at which time payment was refused because the defendant had stopped payment on January ninth. The check thereupon was protested for non-payment on January 11, 1927.

On January 10, 1927, the day before payment of the check was refused by the Municipal Bank and before the plaintiff knew or could know that the defendant’s check would be protested because payment thereof had been stopped, a check was presented to the plaintiff bank for certification, which check was drawn by Gilbert, its depositor, upon the plaintiff bank to the order of one Rosenfeld for $1,525. This check was dated September 30, 1926, more than three months before the day it was presented for certification. It had been presented for certification or payment before, and certification was refused because of insufficient funds. On January 10, 1927, when it was again presented, the plaintiff bank certified the check and charged the amount against Gilbert’s account. Subsequently this check of Gilbert’s to Rosenfeld, thus certified for $1,525, was indorsed by Rosenfeld and deposited in the Nassau National Bank and in due course presented to the plaintiff and paid by it. On January 10, 1927, when the Gilbert check to Rosenfeld for $1,525 was presented for certification, the total amount to the credit of Gilbert in the plaintiff Freeport Bank was $846.71, exclusive of the $1,000 credit arising from the defendant Viemeister’s check to Gilbert. Without this credit for $1,000, the certification of Gilbert’s check for $1,525 to Rosenfeld left Gilbert’s account overdrawn to the extent of $678.29. Accordingly, despite the notice on the deposit slip that the credits were conditional and not final until the items were paid by the banks on which they were drawn, the plaintiff Freeport Bank, by certifying this $1,525 Rosenfeld check, gave credit unconditionally to its depositor Gilbert to the extent of $678.29 as against this $1,000 check of the defendant which was in process of presentation to the Municipal Bank, which, on the following day, refused payment thereof because of defendant Viemeister’s having stopped payment.

The trial court found that the plaintiff was not the holder of the defendant Viemeister’s check for value, having received it from [460]*460Gilbert, its depositor, for collection only, and that the defense of lack of consideration as between the defendant, Viemeister, and Gilbert, the plaintiff’s depositor, was available to the defendant, Viemeister, against the plaintiff, Freeport Bank.

The question presented is, did the plaintiff bank, to the extent it accorded absolute credit to its depositor Gilbert upon the defendant Viemeister’s check, become the holder thereof for value in that amount, or did it continue from the date of the original deposit to hold it for collection despite its certifying of Gilbert’s check to Rosenfeld against the deposited Viemeister check.

Section 91 of the Negotiable Instruments Law defines a holder in due course as one who has taken the instrument under the following conditions: 1. That it is complete and regular upon its face; 2. That he became the holder of it before it was overdue, and without notice that it had been previously dishonored, if such was the fact; 3. That he took it in good faith and for value; 4. That at the time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it.”

The plaintiff herein claims it conforms to the requirements of condition 1 in that the instrument is complete and regular; of condition 2 in that plaintiff became the holder before the check was overdue, not having notice that it had previously been dishonored before plaintiff became the holder; of condition 3 in that plaintiff took the check in good faith and for value to the extent of $678.29; of the 4th condition it says it advanced upon the instrument at a time when it had no notice of any infirmity in the title of the person negotiating it. The one element which is controverted in this record as a matter of argument, the facts not being in dispute, is the condition which concerns whether the plaintiff took the check or advanced upon the check in good faith for value.”

Section 51 of the Negotiable Instruments Law defines value in connection with what constitutes consideration. It reads: What constitutes consideration. Value is any consideration sufficient to support a simple contract. An antecedent or pre-existing debt constitutes value; and is deemed such whether the instrument is payable on demand or at a future time.”

Section 323 of the Negotiable Instruments Law provides: Certification of check; effect of. Where a check is certified by the bank on which it is drawn the certification is equivalent to an acceptance.”

Section 112 of the Negotiable Instruments Law provides: “ Liability of acceptor. The acceptor by accepting the instru[461]*461ment engages that he will pay it according to the tenor of his acceptance * * *.”

Under the foregoing provisions, when the plaintiff Freeport Bank certified Gilbert’s check to Rosenfeld it guaranteed the genuineness of the signature of Gilbert and guaranteed that it, the plaintiff bank, had sufficient funds to pay the check and agreed that those funds would not be withdrawn to the prejudice of the holder of the check. (Cullinan v. Union Surety & Guaranty Co., 79 App. Div.

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Bluebook (online)
227 A.D. 457, 238 N.Y.S. 169, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeport-bank-of-freeport-v-viemeister-nyappdiv-1929.