Industrial Bank v. Bowes

46 N.E. 10, 165 Ill. 70
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 46 N.E. 10 (Industrial Bank v. Bowes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial Bank v. Bowes, 46 N.E. 10, 165 Ill. 70 (Ill. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Craig

delivered the opinion of the court:

It was conceded on the trial that John R. Bowes was authorized to sign for E. J. Bowes, Jr. & Bros., and that his signature represented the firm.

The certificate of the architect set out in the statement shows that on June 17, 1892, there was due to the Empire Building Company, the contractor, from Bowes Bros., the defendants, $500. Peabody, Houghteling & Co. had made Bowes Bros, a building loan, and the money was drawn, from time to time, on architect’s certificates, as needed, to pay for the construction of a building. On the back of the certificate of the architect issued June 17,1892, for $500, Bowes Bros, wrote the following:

“Peabody, Houghteling & Go.:
“Pay to the order of the Empire Building Company.
John R Bowes.”

This certificate was subsequently endorsed to the Industrial Bank by the Empire Building Company, and the bank failing to collect the money named in the certificate, brought this action against Bowes Bros, on the writing they had executed on the back of the certificate of the architect. The bank recovered a judgment in the Superior Court for the amount claimed to be due, but in the Appellate Court the judgment was reversed on the ground that the instrument sued upon was a bill of exchange, and plaintiff could not recover for the reason it had failed to notify Bowes Bros, at once of the refusal of Peabody, Houghteling & Co. to pay upon the presentation of the order.

The law is well settled that a bill of exchange must be presented to the drawee within a reasonable time, and where payment is refused notice must be given promptly to the drawer, otherwise he cannot be held liable. (Montelius v. Charles, 76 Ill. 303; Bickford v. First Nat. Bank of Chicago, 42 id. 238; Story on Promissory Notes, sec. 492.) But was the instrument sued on strictly a bill of exchange, so that it should be governed by the rules of law applicable to such instruments? To a bill of exchange there are three parties—drawer, drawee and payee. The drawee is not bound until acceptance, and then, having become the acceptor, he is regarded as primarily the promisor and as the drawer only collaterally, and the drawer is therefore liable in very much the same way as the endorser of a note. (1 Parsons on Contracts, 250.) In Story on Promissory Notes, (sec. 4,) in pointing out the distinction between bills of exchange and promissory notes, the author says: “In a bill of exchange there are ordinarily three original'parties,—the drawer, the payee and the drawee, who, after acceptance, becomes the acceptor. In a bill of exchange the acceptor is the primary debtor, in the contemplation of law, to the payee, and the drawer is but collaterally liable.” The author also says: “The indorser of a note stands in the same relation to the subsequent parties as the drawer of a bill, and the maker of the note is under the same liabilities as the acceptor of a bill.” In the forms of bills of exchange given by Chitty in his work on Bills it will be found the time of payment is always specified, and on page 170, while the author admits that the omission to state the time of payment would not render the bill invalid, he says: “It is advisable in all cases to express the time of payment as clearly and intelligently as possible,. and it is therefore usual to write it in in words.”

As a general rule it is understood that a bill of exchange will be accepted by the drawee, hence it is drawn payable on sight, or in thirty, sixty or ninety days, and when presented to the drawee it is accepted, and from that time he becomes bound to pay. The instrument in question contains no time of payment, nor is there anything to indicate, from the reading thereof, that it was ever intended to be accepted by the drawee, as is usually the case with a bill of exchange. While it has some of the characteristics of a bill of exchange, we do not regard it as such. On the other hand, it has all the elements of a check, and we think it clearly falls within the definition given in the text books of a check. In 2 Daniel on Negotiable Instruments (528) the author says: “A check is a draft or order upon a bank or banking house, purporting to be drawn upon a deposit of funds, for the payment, at all events, of a certain sum of money to a person or his order, or to bearer, and payable instantly on demand.” In 2 Parsons on Notes and Bills the author says (p. 57): “A check is a brief draft or order upon a bank or banking house, directing it to pay a certain sum of money.” These definitions of a check were quoted and approved by this court in Ridgely Bank v. Patton, 109 Ill. 479. Here, Peabody, Houghteling & Co. was not a regular bank, but the firm was the banker of Bowes Bros, and was so treated and recognized, and, so far as the check in question is concerned, the firm will be regarded as a bank. The instrument in question was, then, a draft or order upon a banking house directing it to pay a certain sum of money, and, as declared by Parsons, a check; or it was a draft or order upon a banking house, purporting to be drawn upon a deposit of funds, for the payment, at all events, of a certain sum of money to a person or order, and payable instantly on demand,—which Daniel declares to be a check. Under either definition the instrument in question was a check.

The instrument being a check, did the Industrial Bank lose its right to recover from the drawers of the check, for the reason the bank failed to present it for payment within proper time, and failed to give notice to the drawer of the refusal of Peabody, Houghteling & Co. to make payment? The general rule is, that the holder, in order to charge the drawer in case of dishonor, is bound to present the check for payment within a reasonable time and give notice to the drawer within a like reasonable time, otherwise the delay will be at his own peril. Story on Promissory Notes (sec. 493) lays down the rule, that if the payee or holder of the check receives it from the drawer in the same town or city where it is payable, he is bound to present it for payment on the next succeeding day after it is received; but where he receives the check from the drawer in a place distant from the place of payment, it will be sufficient for him to forward it by the post to some person at the latter place on the next day after it is received, and the person to whom it is sent will not be required to present it for payment until the next day after it has reached him in the regular course of mail. But the rule just spoken of only applies where, in the intermediate time between the drawing of the check and presentment, there has been a change of circumstances affecting the interests of the drawer in respect to the banker upon whom the check was- drawn. Where there has been a change the rule is applied strictly. But Story (sec. 497) says: “The drawer is in no case discharged from his responsibility to pay the same unless he has suffered some loss or injury by the omission or neglect to make such presentment, and then onlj pro tanto. If the bank has failed or become bankrupt, he will be discharged to the extent of the loss he has sustained thereby.” This court has laid down the same rule. Thus, in Heartt v. Rhodes, 66 Ill. 351, it is said (p. 354): “The want of due presentment or notice of the dishonor of a check does not discharge the drawer unless he has suffered some loss or injury thereby. This is one point of difference between a check and a bill of exchange.” And in Stevens v.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.E. 10, 165 Ill. 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-bank-v-bowes-ill-1897.