Glennan v. Rochester Trust & Safe Deposit Co.

102 N.E. 537, 209 N.Y. 12, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 794
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 102 N.E. 537 (Glennan v. Rochester Trust & Safe Deposit Co.) 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
Glennan v. Rochester Trust & Safe Deposit Co., 102 N.E. 537, 209 N.Y. 12, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 794 (N.Y. 1913).

Opinion

Cullen, Ch. J.

The action is brought by the plaintiff as administrator of a depositor in the defendant trust company to recover the amount of a deposit made by the intestate. The defense was payment and an assignment of the deposit by the intestate to a third party. The payment proved was that of a check drawn by the intestate but not presented to or paid by the defendant until after the death of the former, of which the defendant claimed 'to be ignorant. While the case was submitted to the jury on both issues, the jury was directed to answer specific questions of fact, one of which was: “Did the bank pay the money without knowledge of the death of John Callahan (plaintiff’s intestate) and in the due course of business % ” This question the jury answered in the affirmative. If the finding required a verdict in the defendant’s favor, as the trial court charged, it is not necessary to consider the other rulings on the trial of which the appellant complains, as they do .not affect this issue.

It is singular that there should be such a paucity of judicial decisions on this question, as seems to be the case. In my search through the reports I have been able to find only one on the precise point, Rogerson v. Ladbroke, decided by the English Common Pleas in 1822 (1 Bing. 93), in which' it was held that the payment or rather the charge of a check to a depositor’s account made by the banker after the death of the depositor, but before the bank had received knowledge of that fact, was a valid payment and that the banker was not liable for the amount. There is another case often cited to the same *15 effect (Tate v. Hilbert, 2 Vesey, Jun. 112) where the lord chancellor expressed the opinion that if the holder of a check had collected the money from the hanker after the death of the drawer, but before the banker had knowledge of death, no court would take the money away from her. This was purely obiter, simply the chancellor’s opinion, for, as a matter of fact, the suit in which the opinion was expressed was dismissed and the complainant remitted to her action at law. On the other hand, none of the cases cited by the learned counsel for the appellant is authority for the contrary proposition. The greatest reliance is upon Davis, Admr., v. Windsor Savings Bank (46 Vt. 728). There a woman from túne to time deposited certain sums of money in a savings bank to the credit of her brother, in whose name the pass book was issued. The jury found that these moneys were the property of the brother and had been collected by the woman on his account. After the death of the brother, but before notice of that death had reached it, the defendant paid the amount of the account to the woman who presented the pass book. It was held that death revoked the agency of the plaintiff and that the payment was bad. No question of the payment of a check was involved in this case, for there was none. As to the other cases cited, Fordred v. Seamen’s Savings Bank (10 Abb. Pr. Rep. [N. S.] 425) was an action by the bolder of a check against the bank, which refused to pay it. Of course, in this state no such action could be maintained whether the drawer was dead or alive. In Podmore v. South Brooklyn Savings Institution (48 App. Div. 218) payment was made by the bank after knowledge of the death of the depositor to one who presented the pass book, claiming the deposit .as a gift causa mortis from the deceased. As the jury found there was no gift, the defense failed. Here, again, no question of a check was involved. This is the same case which is reported in this court on a subsequent appeal *16 under the title of Mahon v. South Brooklyn Savings Institution (175 N. Y. 69). In Pullen v. Placer County Bank (138 Cal. 169) the check was paid not only after the death of the drawer hut after the defendant had been informed of the death, as is stated in the opinion of the court. But while there is this paucity of judicial decisions on the subject, there seems to be absolute unanimity in the rule as declared by the leading text writers. Chitty on Bills (*429), Byles on Bills (Sharswood ed. p. 22), Parsons on Notes and Bills (Vol. 2, p. 81), Story on Promissory Notes (§ 498a), Edwards on Bills and Notes (§ 739), Morse on Banks and Banking (§ 400) and Daniels on Negotiable Instruments (§ 1618b) all assert that while a bank should not pay a check after the death of the drawer, still a payment made in good faith, without knowledge of the death, or of facts sufficient to cause inquiry, is a valid payment, though the only authority usually cited is that of Tate v. Hilbert (supra).

For the appellant it is argued, first, that a check, of itself, is a mere order for the payment of money, not operating as an assignment of any part of the fund, the authority of the drawee or the banker to pay which may be revoked or countermanded by the drawer. This is the rule of law prevailing in England and in this country, with the exception of a very few states in which a check is considered as an assignment of the fund. The rule stated is unquestionably the law of this state as well as the law of the Federal courts. (Atty.-Genl. v. Continental Life Ins. Co., 71 N. Y. 325; O’ Connor v. Mechanics’ Bank, 124 N. Y. 324; Bank of the Republic v. Millard, 10 Wall. 152; Florence Mining Co. v. Brown, 124 U. S. 385; Fourth St. Bank v. Yardley, 165 U. S. 634.) That the death of the principal revokes the authority of the agent to collect the check, in those jurisdictions where the check is considered a mere order, must also be conceded. (Fo rdred v. Seamen’s Bank, supra; Atty.-Genl. v. Continental Life Ins. Co., supra; Long v. Thayer, *17 150 U. S. 520.) It is further true that the common-law doctrine that death revokes an agent’s power, even as to third parties dealing with the agent in good faith without notice, is the general rule in this state. (Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. v. Wilson, 139 N. Y. 284.)

At this point we reach the very crux of this case, and the question is whether payment of checks by banks or bankers is an exception to the rule stated. I think it is. It must be first borne in mind that the rule itself is an exception to the still broader rule that revocation of the power of an agent does not affect third parties dealing with him in good faith without notice. This is the rule of the civil law even where the agency is revoked by death. The common-law rule in some states has been changed by statute, in others repudiated (Cassiday v. M'Kenzie, 4 Watts & Sergeant [Penna.], 282; Carriger v. Whittington, 26 Mo.

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Bluebook (online)
102 N.E. 537, 209 N.Y. 12, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glennan-v-rochester-trust-safe-deposit-co-ny-1913.