Henefin v. Live Stock National Bank

217 N.W. 91, 116 Neb. 331, 58 A.L.R. 758, 1927 Neb. LEXIS 183
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 24, 1927
DocketNo. 24795
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 217 N.W. 91 (Henefin v. Live Stock National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henefin v. Live Stock National Bank, 217 N.W. 91, 116 Neb. 331, 58 A.L.R. 758, 1927 Neb. LEXIS 183 (Neb. 1927).

Opinion

Redick, District Judge.

Case heard before the commission, and opinion of affirmance rendered and adopted by the court. A motion for rehearing was filed and allowed, and hearing had before the court, and is now before us for final disposition.

The facts are not in serious dispute. Plaintiff, appellee, on March 24, 1923, indorsed and deposited with the Nebraska State Bank of O’Neill a check payable to his order for $1,353.16, drawn by his son Edward Henefin upon the First National Bank of Gregory, South Dakota, where the drawer had sufficient funds on deposit to meet the check. The same was received and credited in the open account of plaintiff, and on the same day $500 or $600 was withdrawn by checks of plaintiff. On the same day the O’Neill bank indorsed the check for collection to its correspondent in Sioux City, Iowa (defendant and appellant), which received it March 26 and forwarded it by mail to Northwestern National Bank of Minneapolis, Minnesota, which received it March 27, and on same day delivered it to Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, which forwarded it direct to First National Bank of Gregory with other items for collection aggregating $1,780.95. It was presentéd for payment on the 29th to the Gregory bank and was paid with other items by the latter by its draft upon and in favor of the Federal Reserve Bank. The check in question was marked paid, charged to his account and later surrendered to the' drawer. This draft was not paid. The Gregory ..bank failed March 29. On March 26 and 27 the Gregory bank was overdrawn at the Federal Reserve Bank to-the amount of $2,962.43 and on the 29th $4,303.21. On March 27, 28, and 29, the Gregory bank had actual money in its .vaults about $1,400, enough to pay plaintiff’s check, but not sufficient to pay all checks outstanding and presented, in excess of $2,200: . The amount of the check, in question was charged back by defendant to the O'Neill [333]*333bank, which acquiesced in that charge and claimed reimbursement from plaintiff. Thereupon plaintiff reimbursed the O’Neill bank and took an assignment of all its rights and claim against defendant. Plaintiff brings this action for damages claimed to have resulted from negligence of defendant in forwarding and presenting the check. There was a trial to the court and finding and judgment for plaintiff for amount of check and interest. Defendant appeals.

The negligence complained of consists of the routing of the check by way of Minneapolis, instead of sending it direct to defendant’s correspondent at Gregory, the Commercial State Bank; and the forwarding by Federal Reserve Bank to drawee bank direct. And plaintiff claims that, had defendant used ordinary care, the check would have been presented and paid before the Gregory bank failed. On the other hand, defendant contends that it acted in the usual and customary manner an the handling of such matters and with ordinary care and is not liable.; furthermore, that if the check had been presented on the 27th or 28th, the earliest time it could have been presented, it would have been paid by draft with the same result, and the delay in presentment caused no loss.

Plaintiff grounds his right to recover on two propositions: ■ (1) That defendant was negligent in the circuitous routing of the check, and (2) that the Federal Reserve Bank, the agent selected by defendant, was negligent in sending the draft direct to the drawee bank..instead, of some other bank at Gregory. Plaintiff takes the position (1) that he was the owner of the check in question and. its proceeds, and that defendant was his agent for collection; plaintiff had no dealings direct with defendant, .but only through the O’Neill bank acting, as is claimed, ■ as his agent, who selected defendant as collection agent; and.^2) that defendant is liable to the O’Neill bank, his..,assignor, ....

. If plaintiff was owner of the check and the O’Neiil bank received it only for collection, then the ^ioux.fiity bank and ■ its successors in the collection chain were , agents, pf plaintiff and respectively, liable to him. for their negligence [334]*334causing loss. First Nat. Bank v. Sprague, 34 Neb. 318. That case discusses the Massachusetts rule and the New York rule in such cases, and adopts the former to the effect that the bank of deposit for collection is only liable for negligence if it fails to select a proper correspondent, but, having done that, is not responsible for the negligence of the correspondent bank, which is considered the agent of the owner. The New York rule held the bank of deposit liable for its own negligence and also that of all other banks in the chain of collection. It is suggested by plaintiff that the Massachusetts rule has been abrogated in this state by the later case of Bedell v. Harbine Bank, 62 Neb. 339. In that case the Harbine bank received the check for collection and, in consequence of a circuitous routing, presentment was not made for three days, when it could reasonably have been made in one, amount of check being thereby lost. The suit was by the bank against the payee as indorser, and it was held that the indorser was discharged by the delay, citing Western Wheeled Scraper Co. v. Sadilek, 50 Neb. 105, and First Nat. Bank v. Miller, 37 Neb. 500. The first of these cases was by the payee against the drawer of the check, who was held released by negligence of the bank selected by the payee as its agent for collection; and the second by the bank of deposit against the indorser, who was held released by negligence of indorsee bank in presenting the check for payment. Both support the conclusion in the Bedell case that the indorser was discharged by the delay in presenting the check, but do not discuss the Massachusetts rule. If the present case was by the O’Neill bank against plaintiff on his indorsement, the three cases would be applicable, and would require the discharge of the indorser; but they are not in point in this case, which is for damages for negligence. True, it was said in the Bedell case, page 343: “The defendant in error (the Harbine bank) would * * * have been inexcusably negligent in sending the check for collection through the agency of the St. Joseph bank, thus consuming three days’ time in doing what might have been [335]*335done in one day, and would be also responsible for the negligence of the latter bank in sending the check directly to the drawee either to make payment or give the requisite notice of dishonor.” And: “The Harbine. bank is responsible for the consequences, not only of the delay occasioned by sending the check to the St. Joseph bank, but for any default or negligence committed by the latter” —and this proposition was repeated in the. syllabus; but in none of the three cases was the rule under discussion involved. We are therefore constrained to hold as dictum the statements quoted as to the responsibility of .the bank of deposit for the negligence of its agents, and that First Nat. Bank v. Sprague, 34 Neb. 318, is still the law of this state. Moreover, that case was distinguished (not overruled) in the Harbine case, and was cited with approval in the later case of Crilly v. Ruyle, 87 Neb. 367.

The Massachusetts rule, however, is only applicable to cases where the bank receives the check for collection, not to those in which it becomes the owner of the check and makes the collection on its own account. It is therefq^e important to discover the precise relation of the bank,,to the check, whether owner or merely collecting agent.

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Bluebook (online)
217 N.W. 91, 116 Neb. 331, 58 A.L.R. 758, 1927 Neb. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henefin-v-live-stock-national-bank-neb-1927.