German-American Bank v. Milliman

31 Misc. 87, 65 N.Y.S. 242
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedMarch 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 31 Misc. 87 (German-American Bank v. Milliman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
German-American Bank v. Milliman, 31 Misc. 87, 65 N.Y.S. 242 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Sutherland, J.

This action was brought upon a promissory note dated January 6, 1899, made by the defendant, payable three months after the date thereof, to the order of W. E. Williams, at the Central Bank, Rochester, N. Y., for thirty-nine dollars and interest. Before maturity the note was indorsed by Williams, the payee, and transferred to the plaintiff. t_ The day the note became due (April 6, 1899), shortly after ten o’clock, á messenger from the plaintiff presented the note at the Central Bank and requested payment, which was refused because the defendant’s account was not good. The banking hours at the Central Bank are from ten a. m. until four p. m. ; the banking hours of the plaintiff are from ten a. m. until three p. m. At about half-past three of the afternoon of the same day the assistant cashier of the plaintiff, who is a notary public, presented the note at the Central Bank and demanded payment, which was refused because the defendant’s account was not good. The notary immediately protested the note, and about four o’clock mailed notices of protest to the indorser and maker. After the notary had presented the note and payment had been refused, Milliman deposited in the Central Bank cash, and a check which was treated as cash sufficient in amount to make his account good for the note in suit. About five minutes before four o’clock Milliman deposited enough at the Central Bank to pay the note, and then went to the German-American Bank and told its cashier that he had made his account good; the cashier told him that as the note had already gone to protest, he would have to pay the face of the note and interest, and one dollar and fifty cents protest fees, which protest fees the defendant declined to pay. • The correct amount of the protest fees was one dollar and fourteen cents.

This action was commenced April 15, 1899. The defendant’s, account remained good for the amount of the note from five minutes of four p. m. of April sixth until the morning of the day when the summons was returnable in this action, when defendant with[89]*89drew from the hank the amount of the note, with interest up to the date of its maturity, which amount he at once paid into court when he filed his answer pleading a tender. The Municipal Court gave judgment for the face of the note and interest to the date of the judgment, besides one dollar and fourteen cents protest fees and the costs of the action.

The defendant insists that by making his account good for the note and accrued interest, before the close of banking hours at the Central Bank, he fulfilled his contract, and that the two demands and refusals which had been made earlier in the day did not put upon him the duty either of making a tender of the amount at the German-American Bank, or of paying the protest fees, and that the judgment appealed from is excessive in awarding plaintiff interest from the maturity of the note to the date of judgment, with protest fees, and that defendant, not plaintiff, should have been awarded costs.

The respondent contends that it was not necessary for the notary to wait until the close of banking hours at the Central Bank, but that the note having been once presented there for payment within banking hours, and payment being refused because of the want of funds, the note was thereby immediately dishonored, and was properly protested before four o’clock, and that if the maker desired to fulfill his obligation after one presentment and refusal, he was bound to bring the money to the plaintiff’s bank and there tender the amount due, with the protest fees.

The question thus presented is not free from doubt, and there is no reported case in this State which is precisely analogous to the one at bar. Numerous expressions may be found, however, in the opinions of the courts pronounced during a long series of years, which, although obiter dicta, deserve respect and serve to indicate with some degree of certainty the views of the judges on the point involved here. In Etheridge v. Ladd, 44 Barb. 69, decided in 1865, the Supreme Court held that where a note was made payable at the store of one Child, and a demand was made between eight and nine a. m., during the ordinary business hours at the store, the holder was at liberty at once to treat the note as dishonored and immediately give notice of nonpayment to the indorser, without waiting until the close of business hours of that day. Judge Bockes, in the opinion, refers to the general rule “ that if payment be refused during the last day, the holder may [90]*90give notice of its dishonor; yet if payment be subsequently made on that day, such notice becomes of no avail. True the-maker has the whole of the last day of grace within which to pay. But after due demand and refusal, followed by notice to the indorser, the maker, if he wishes to make payment, must seek the holder for that purpose.” He recognizes, however, that more latitude is allowed the maker of a note payable at bank than is permitted the maker of a note payable at some other place, for at page 72 he says: “ He (the holder) was not required to remain all day at the place to receive payment; nor was he bound by any custom — as perhaps he might have been had the note been payable at a bank — to leave the note until the close of the day. But his duty was at an end when he made presentation of the note for payment, at the proper place, at a reasonable hour, followed by immediate notice to the indorser.” Again, at page 73, he says: “ There is a custom at banks which gives to the maker all of bank hours within which to pay, and in order to meet this custom, the note, when payable at a bank, is usually left there, and demand is made at the close of the day.”

In Merchants’ Bank v. Elderkin, 25 N. Y. 178, decided in 1862, the defendant was an indorser of a promissory note payable at the Troy City Bank. The plaintiff sent the note, which it had discounted, to its correspondent, the Commercial Bank, of Troy, for collection. On the last day of grace the Commercial Bank sent the note to the Troy City Bank, whose banking hours closed at two p. m. At fifteen minutes before two, there being no funds to meet it, the Troy City Bank sent the note back to the Commercial Bank, whose cashier, being a notary, protested the same-and gave notice to the indorsers. Eo funds had been deposited in the Troy City Bank to pay the note when the bank closed at two. Eo formal demand of payment was made. The indorser was held liable. The opinion does not state whether the note was actually protested before two o’clock, but the language used makes that the natural inference. It would seem from the opinion that the lack of formal demand was the main point under consideration; but the case must be considered as authority for the proposition that where no funds are placed in the bank at which the note is payable, before the close of banking hours, a presentment on the day of maturity, during, but before the close of, banking hours, is sufficient to charge the indorser. The learned judge writing the opin[91]*91ion was careful to state, however, as follows: “ And whatever questions might arise, had the drawer, just before two o’clock, placed at the Troy City Bank funds to meet the note, we have no such case before us. * * * When a case comes before us, where there has been a note protested, during business hours, in such a way that the indorsers might be prejudiced, or that the settled rules of law were clearly infringed, it will be time enough to deny a plain right on a technicality. This is not that case. At two o’clock there were no funds to meet the note; and nobody has been injured by the protest.” Reference is made in the opinion to the case of Gillett v.

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

Related

Bredow v. Woll
143 A. 849 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1928)
Klein v. East River Electric Light Co.
32 Misc. 774 (City of New York Municipal Court, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Misc. 87, 65 N.Y.S. 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/german-american-bank-v-milliman-nycountyct-1900.