Jones v. Carolina National Bank

103 S.E. 27, 114 S.C. 11, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 85
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 22, 1920
Docket10395
StatusPublished

This text of 103 S.E. 27 (Jones v. Carolina National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Carolina National Bank, 103 S.E. 27, 114 S.C. 11, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 85 (S.C. 1920).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice

The action is for tort and the damages are laid at $25,000; verdict for the plaintiff for $750; appeal by both parties.

The controversy arises out of the following circumstances: Jones is a butcher at Columbia and the defendant is a bank at the same place; Jones, during the months of July, August and September, 1917, undertook to ship to the Ashley Hide and Pur Corporation at Charleston nine carloads of green tankage, to wit, the bones, entrails and blood of newly slain animals; Jones drew at sundry intervals his several bills on the Ashley corporation for the price of the goods with bill of lading attached “order notify;” these bills were lodged with the defendant bank at which Jones had done his business *15 for some years; the bank immediately credited Jones with the face of the bills the aggregate of which was $2,729.64, which amount was nearly equally divided betwixt Jones’ “open account” and Jones’ “savings account,” $1,385.99 to the first and $1,343.65 to the second; the bills and bills of lading were forwarded by the bank to its correspondent at Charleston; the drawee refused payment of them, of which circumstances the defendant, bank, was not advised by its Charleston correspondent until the latter part of. August or the first of September, and of which circumstances Jones was not advised by the defendant, bank, until early in September ; but the defendant, bank, alleges in the answer and contends in the testimony that Jones had actual notice of nonacceptance of the goods by the consignees from the mouth of the railway company, which carried them to Charleston; about the time of the discovery by the defendant, bank, that the seven bills of July and August, aggregating $1,697.14, had not been paid, Jones lodged with the defendant, bank, two additional and like bills, 4th September, 1917, $428.75, and 10th September, 1917, $603.75, and they were in like fashion put to Jones’ credit, but the defendant, bank, was soon advised by its Charleston correspondent that these two September bills were dishonored; the defendant, bank, then took steps to protect itself against the loss of the money ithad credited to Jones on the two September bills ; on the 14th September it charged Jones’ saving account with $603.75 and credited the sanie to his open account, and on 15th September it charged Jones’ saving account with $428.75, and credited the same to his open account; the aggregate of $1,032.50 thus subtracted from his savings and added to the open account, was almost immediately dissipated by Jones’ checks to sundry parties, and by the bank’s check against it for $428.75 to offset the deposit aforetime credited to Jones’ saving the sum of $3.27 still standing to Jones’ credit; but Jones drew three checks, for which there were not sufficient funds to meet, and the payment of which *16 the bank refused, to wit: One to Dent, 5th September, for $20; one to Lorick, 18th September, for $60, and one to Swift, 21st September, for $16.30.

Out of these transactions the plaintiff has designated in effect two wrongs to him by the bank, both alleged to have been wilfully done, to wit: (1) The duty of the bank to have notified him of the nonacceptance of his goods by the consignee and the nonpayment of his bills by the consignee; its neglect to perform that duty, the damage to him consequent thereupon; and (2) the obligation of the bank to let stay out the sums to his credit in the savings department, and the wrongful transfer of the same to the open account, and there charging that account with the September bills and the failure to pay the three checks before stated.

The defendant has made 28 exceptions and the plaintiff has made 7 exceptions; and all of them, save the defendant’s first exception (that for the direction of a verdict), go to the charge of the Court.

The charge takes up ten pages of the case, of which three are given to the requests to charge, and the exceptions to the charge takes up thirteen pages.

There were 17 requests to charge by the plaintiff and 5 requests to charge by the defendant.

So much was enough to confound the Court and jury. There ought to be more of simplicity and less of complication in procedure.

To follow these 35 exceptions in detail would be to commit the same heresy we have suggested the counsel to be guilty of.

The case turns on not near so many hinges.

The July and August bills, seven in number, and aggregating $1,697.14, may be laid out of view; and with them the claim for damage for the defendant bank’s neglect to advise the plaintiff of their nonpayment, for although the goods against which they were drawn were not received by the consignee, nor were the bills paid by the consignee, yet *17 the plaintiff got the benefit of the shipments, for the bank gave him credit for the seven bills, and the bank has lost so much by the transaction. The cashier of the bank admitted' the loss when he testified. And the last bill, that of 10th September, for $603.75, may be laid out of view; for the complaint alleges “that the plaintiff would not claim that the bank was liable for the last draft.”

So, the determinative issue of fact and law is about the bill of 4th September for $428.75. The contention of the plaintiff thereabout is: (1) That the bill .is a negotiable instrument; (2) that the bank failed to give notice to Jones of the nonpayment of that instrument; and (3) that the legal consequence of that omission is the loss of so much by the bank, and the gain of so much by Jones. Those are the ssues now up for decision.

The Court charged the jury thus: “I charge you that we are bound by the act of the legislature of this State of 1914, to regulate all negotiable instruments — “An act relating to negotiable instruments” — and I charge you that the instrument dated September 4th, known as the September 4 instrument, was a negotiable draft, and unless the defendant had some understanding with Jones, it took that as a negotiable draft, subject, of course, to the law, which I will call your attention to.”

“Now, the complaint of the plaintiff alleges that he was not notified of what was going on with the draft. I charge you that it was the duty of the bank to notify Mr. Jones, in order to hold him responsible, if notification was given by the bank in Charleston that the draft would receive attention as soon as the goods arrived, so that Mr. Jones could look after his property and use due diligence to save'it. And if the bank failed to do that, as required by the law, which I will read you, then Jones was relieved from responsibility on the draft, and the bank would have to lose it.”

The Court then read to the jury sections 89, 94, 96, 103, 104 and 105 of the negotiable instrument statute; and then *18 added these words : “You will see, therefore, gentlemen, that if you find that if the bank did not comply with the law, then it was liable to lose the payment on the draft of $428.75, and, as I understand, that is the only one in question, because it is admitted on -all sides that the bank is not liable for the $603.75 draft, and that they have pocketed the losses on all drafts prior to that.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Greenwood Grocery Co. v. Canadian County Mill & Elevator Co.
52 S.E. 191 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 S.E. 27, 114 S.C. 11, 1920 S.C. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-carolina-national-bank-sc-1920.