Jensen v. Laurel Meat Co.

230 P. 1081, 71 Mont. 582, 1924 Mont. LEXIS 159
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1924
DocketNo. 5,578
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 230 P. 1081 (Jensen v. Laurel Meat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jensen v. Laurel Meat Co., 230 P. 1081, 71 Mont. 582, 1924 Mont. LEXIS 159 (Mo. 1924).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the .court.

• On December 12, 1922, Otto Jensen, of Edgar, Montana, sold and delivered to the Laurel Meat Company of Laurel merchandise of the value of $226.59, and on the same day, after banking hours, received the meat company’s check for the amount, drawn on the Citizens’ National Bank of Laurel. On the morning of the 13th Jensen indorsed the check in blank and deposited it with the Edgar State Bank, which forwarded It in the usual course of business through the Yellowstone-Merchants’ National Bank of Billings and the Federal Reserve Branch Bank of Helena to the Citizens’ National Bank of Laurel for payment, where it was received on December 17 or 18. Upon receipt of the cheek the Laurel bank marked it paid, charged the amount to the meat company’s account, and on December 18 issued its sight draft on the Montana National Bank of Billings in favor of the Federal Reserve Bank for the amount of this check and other checks, and the draft was transmitted by mail to the Federal Reserve Bank, which in turn sent it to the Montana National Bank of Billings, where on December 22 it was protested for'nonpayment, returned to the Federal Reserve Bank, and by it sent back to the Laurel bank on January 6, 1923. In the meantime, and on December 21, the Laurel bank failed and was closed by the proper authorities.

- From December 12 to 21 the meat company maintained on deposit with the Laurel bank funds sufficient to pay the check, [587]*587and during the same period the Laurel bank was a going concern, with funds in its vault ample to pay the check, and, if a demand to that effect had been made, the cheek would have been paid in cash.

After the Laurel bank closed, someone assumed to credit back to the meat company’s account the amount of the check, and took the check from the pouch containing canceled checks of the meat company and returned it to Jensen through the same agencies by which it was transmitted in the first instance, and all without the knowledge or consent of the meat company.

Jensen then instituted this action to recover the purchase price of the merchandise, and prevailed in the lower court. The meat company appealed and now insists that upon the undisputed facts the judgment should have been in its favor.

Certain incidental questions suggested by the respective counsel may be disposed of somewhat summarily, and the case simplified materially.

(1) When the check was deposited by Jensen with the Edgar State Bank without any special agreement, the presumption is to be indulged that it was deposited for collection (2 Daniels on Negotiable Instruments, 6th ed., see. 1623), and the title to it remained in Jensen, even though he was given credit for the amount of it in his pass-book and permitted to draw against the deposit provisionally (2 Michie on Banks & Banking, sec. 159.)

(2) In accepting the check for collection, the Federal Re- serve Bank became Jensen’s agent, and, since the Edgar State Bank and the Yellowstone-Merchants’ National Bank served only as instruments for effecting the transmission, they may be eliminated from further consideration. (Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond v. Malloy, 264 U. S. 160, 68 L. Ed. 617, 31 A. L. R. 1261, 44 Sup. Ct. Rep. 296.)

(3) The meat company did not discharge its obligation to Jensen by delivering to him its check, for “a check is [588]*588merely an order for money, and in the absence of any agreement to the contrary, its acceptance in discharge of an indebtedness is conditional upon its payment.” (United States Nat. Bank v. Shupak, 54 Mont. 542, 172 Pac. 324.)

(4) The Federal Reserve Bank was not negligent in sending the check for payment directly to the bank upon which-it was drawn. The imputation of negligence might have been-made prior to 1917, but by the enactment of section 6108, Revised Codes of 1921, any bank doing business in this state- and receiving a check for collection may send it for ■ payment-directly to the bank upon which it is drawn, and the failure of. the bank to which it is sent to account for the proceeds shall not render the forwarding bank liable if it “used due diligence, in making such collection.”

(5) There is not any charge of negligence or laches in presenting the cheek for payment. On the contrary defendant alleges in its answer that the cheek was duly forwarded to the Laurel bank in the usual course of business, and this constituted due diligence under the express provisions of section 6109, Revised Codes.

It is the contention of defendant that its check was paid- and its obligation to Jensen discharged when the check was received by the Laurel bank, marked “Paid,” the account of the meat company charged with the amount of it, and the Laurel bank’s draft issued to the Federal Reserve Bank; that-so far as defendant is concerned the transaction was then-closed, and neither the crediting back of the amount of the check to its account nor the return of the check to- plaintiff, nor the dishonor of the draft, nor the failure of the Laurel bank, nor all of these circumstances combined, could operate-to reopen it; that the money was on hand in the Laurel bank to pay the check, -and, if the cash was not received by Jensen-in point of fact, the failure can be attributed only to the negligence of his agent, the Federal Reserve Bank.

[589]*589The drawer of a check undertakes that it will be paid upon due presentment (sec. 61, N. I. L.; see. 8468, Rev. Codes), and a first due presentment for payment fixes the rights and liabilities of the parties (Simpson v. Pacific Mutual L. I. Co., 44 Cal. 139). If, when due presentment for payment is made, the drawee is ready, able and willing to pay, and the holder permits the fund to remain longer in the hands of the drawee, or accepts in lieu of the money the drawee’s draft on another bank, he does so at his own peril. (Anderson v. Gill, 79 Md. 317, 47 Am. St. Rep. 402, 29 Atl. 527, 25 L. R. A. 200.)

And the reason for the rule is manifest. The check calls for the payment of money upon due presentation, and the drawer cannot be held to anticipate that settlement will be made in anything but money, or that payment will be postponed after due presentation is once made. If, then, when the check is first presented for payment, the drawer has on deposit with the drawee bank funds sufficient to meet it and the drawee is ready, able and willing to pay it in cash, the drawer has fulfilled his undertaking. If the holder sees fit'to disregard the mandate of the check and to settle the drawee’s liability upon terms other than those proposed by the drawer, he does so at his own risk, but he cannot extend the drawer’s liability.

When the Federal Reserve Bank sent the check to the Laurel bank, due presentment for payment was made as effectively as if the check had been sent by messenger and the messenger had presented it at the bank window during banking hours. And, since at that time the meat company had on deposit ample funds to meet it, and the Laurel bank was ready, able and willing to pay it in cash, the meat company had fulfilled its undertaking, and its rights were not prejudiced by the fact that the Laurel bank did not ship the currency to the Federal Reserve Bank, but, acting in virtue of a business custom or usage prevailing between the two institutions, for the sake of convenience transmitted its draft.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 P. 1081, 71 Mont. 582, 1924 Mont. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-v-laurel-meat-co-mont-1924.