Grissom v. Commerial National Bank

3 L.R.A. 273, 87 Tenn. 350
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 3 L.R.A. 273 (Grissom v. Commerial National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grissom v. Commerial National Bank, 3 L.R.A. 273, 87 Tenn. 350 (Tenn. 1889).

Opinion

Folkes, J.

This is a bill brought by complainant to recover of the defendant the sum of one thousand dollars, claimed as a balance due after crediting the bank with all. checks drawn against sundry deposits made therein by the complainant as a customer of the bank.

The defendant interposes two defenses. It admits that between May 1, 1886, and July. 27, 1887, the complainant made deposits with it in sundry sums, aggregating $5,184.05, but says that it has paid out the same, for and on account of complainant, upon sundry checks, except as to $1,000, which it says was paid upon and in discharge of a note of complainant for that amount, made and dated at Rash-ville, March 26, 1887, and payable sixty clays after date, to the order of J. D. Carter & Co., at the Commercial National Bank, Rashville, endorsed by J. D. Carter & Co., and by Jno. E. "Wireless, the latter of whom, as the owner and holder thereof, placed the same in the Fourth Rational Bank of Rashville for collection. That on May 28, the last day of grace, the note was, by the Fourth Rational Bank, presented for payment at the defendant’s banking house, where it was marked “good” by defendant, and was, on May 30th, paid by defendant to the Fourth Rational Bank, and the amount thereof charged up to complainant in the same [352]*352manner as though it had been a cheek drawn by complainant. «

It claims that it was, and is, the custom of the banks in Hashville, where notes are made payable at a particular hank, to pay such notes when the maker has sufficient funds to his credit for that purpose, without instructions, and to charge the same to the general account of the maker.

It also insists, that independent of custom, it has the right to treat a note so made as the equivalent of a check, and as a direction, therefore, on the part of .the maker, to pay same on his general account as a depositor.

The Chancellor found both defenses in favor of the bank, and dismissed the bill.

Complainant has appealed, assigning errors.

We will consider first the matter of custom.

The defendant introduces the testimony of the officers of four banks in the city of Nashville, who say that such a custom, with certain modifications and variations, prevails at their respective banks, and, so far as they know, at the banks in the city generally. But these witnesses are not agreed as to the manner of exercising th'e usage. Mr. Por-terfield, of the defendant hank, says it is the custom with his bank to pay such notes, unless on their face they appear to have been given for land, in which event they are not paid.

Mr. Williams, of the Hirst National Bank, says that while the habit of his bank was to pay such notes, they did not pay land notes, nor where [353]*353there was “ some complication ” about them. Mr. Keith, of the Eourth Rational Bank, proves that it was the custom of his bank to pay such notes, and that he knows of no exceptions to the rule, although his bank may have made some. Mr. Jones, of the American Rational Bank, says that it is the custom with his bank to pay such notes if given by mercantile men, but where given by men not so engaged they ask for instructions before paying; and that, immediately upon paying a note under the usage referred to, his bank always gave written notice to the depositor that such payment had been made. If the custom of this last bank, as to giving notice, had been followed by the defendant bank, it is probable that this suit would never have been brought, as the complainant would have had opportunity of protecting himself by recourse over on the parties for whom he was accommodation maker, as will appear later on.

It is clearly proven that such a custom was not known to this complainant, who was a lumber man, living in a small town in the State of Kentucky, two or three hundred miles- from Rashville.

From what has already been stated, as to the proof on this subject, it is clear that the defendant cannot justify its payment of the note in question upon the ground of custom.

It is well settled that, to be binding, a custom must be general, as to place, and not confined to any particular bank or banks; it must be certain and uniform, and there must be reasonable ground [354]*354to suppose that the custom was known to both parties to the contract, as it is upon this supposition that the parties are presumed to have contracted with reference to it. Dabney v. Campbell, 9 Hum., 686; Saint v. Smith, 1 Cold., 52; Adams v. Otterbach, 15 How., 545; Morse on Banking, Sec. 9 (Ed. 1888).

Having failed, then, to show a right to pay the note upon the ground of a usage or custom, binding upon this complainant, we are confronted with the proposition that, independent of usage, the bank, at whose place of business a note is, upon its face, made payable, has the right to treat the note as a check, and pay same, and charge it up to the account of the maker, where such maker is a depositor of the bank.

The question is presented for the first time in this State, although it has received the attention of text writers, and been passed upon by the Courts of other States, where we find a conflict of opinion.

Under such circumstances it is our duty to determine the question for ourselves upon reason and principle, and with a due regard for considerations of public policy and convenience, provided that in doing so we do not place our State in antagonism to the current of authority in this country.

We recognize the fact that it is of prime importance that the several States in this Union should, as far as may be, without doing violence to well settled principles of State jurisprudence, [355]*355endeavor to bring about and maintain as niucli certainty and uniformity of decision on questions of commercial law as can be accomplished. •

In response to this idea we would, upon the question now before us, yield much of the strong conviction we entertain thereon in the endeavor to place ourselves in line with the current of authority, if a strong and steady current could be found, which would not threaten to engulf and destroy distinctions which have been long well settled in this State.

While we must concede that the weight of text-book authority is in support of defendant’s contention, we are unable to discover that the weight of judicial decision is in the same direction. Moreover, we are constrained to believe that the contrary view is more in harmony with well settled adjudications in this State, upon principles presenting analogous questions, and that the current of adjudged cases is certainly as strong in the same direction.

Let us see, in the first place, what is the relation between depositor and banker. It is merely that of debtor and creditor, where the deposit is not a special one. The money deposited in the ordinary course of business is at once blended with the general funds of, and becomes the property of the bank; the depositor has only a debt against the bank, payable on demand, upon the presentation and surrender of the draft 'or order, addressed to and directing the bank, in - unequiv[356]*356ocal terms, to pay the amount of such draft to the person therein named, or to bearer. This order is commonly known in commercial and hank-ing parlance as a check.

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Bluebook (online)
3 L.R.A. 273, 87 Tenn. 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grissom-v-commerial-national-bank-tenn-1889.