Gordon, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
On December 30, 1966, defendant Margaret Kirby handed the following check to a teller at a branch of plaintiff First & Merchants National Bank:
NEUSE ENG. AND DREDGING CO.
Check Number
68-728 514
12-29-1966
Pay to the order of William J. Kirby & Margaret Kirby $2,500.00
Twenty-Five Hundred ------- Dollars
FIRST & MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK Virginia Beach, Virginia . .. 0514 ... 0728 NEUSE ENG. & DREDGING CO. /s/ W. R. Wood
The back of the check bore the signatures of the payees, Mr. and Mrs. Kirbv.
[90]*90Mrs. Kirby, who also had an account with the Bank, gave the teller the following deposit ticket:1
The teller handed $200 in cash to Mrs. Kirby, and the Bank credited her account with $2,300 on the next business day, January 3, 1967. The teller or another Bank employee made the notation “Cash for Dep.” under Mr. and Mrs. Kirby’s signatures on the back of the Neuse check.
On January 4 the Bank discovered that the Neuse check was drawn against insufficient funds. Instead of giving written notice, a Bank officer called Mr. and Mrs. Kirby on January 5 to advise that the Bank had dishonored the check and to request reimbursement. Mr. and Mrs. Kirby said they would come to the Bank to cover the check, but they did not. On January 10 the Bank charged Mrs. Kirby’s account with $2,500, creating an overdraft of $543.47.
On January 18 the Bank instituted this action to recover $543.47 from Mr. and Mrs. Kirby. At the trial a Bank officer, the only witness in the case, testified:
“Q. Did you cash the check [the Neuse check for $2,500] before you credited this deposit [the deposit of $2,300 to Mrs. Kirby’s account] ?
[91]*91“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. So the bank, in effect, cashed the check for $2,500.00 and then gave the defendant a credit of $2,300.00 to their [«e] account and gave them [sic] $200.00 in cash?
“A. Correct.
“Q. So you cashed the check for $2,500.00?
“A. Yes, sir.”
The trial court, sitting without a jury,, entered judgment for the plaintiff First & Merchants, and the defendants Mr. and Mrs. Kirby appeal. The question is whether the Bank had the right to charge Mrs. Kirby’s account with $2,500 on January 10 and to recover from Mr. and Mrs. Kirby the overdraft created by that charge ($543.47).
U.C.C. § 4-2132 provides:
“(1) An item3 is finally paid by a payor bank when the bank has done any of the following, whichever happens first:
“(a) paid the item in cash;”.
So if First & Merchants paid the Neuse check in cash on December 30, it then made final payment and could not sue Mr. or Mrs. Kirby on the check except for breach of warranty.4
[92]*92When Mrs. Kirby presented the $2,500 Neuse check to the Bank on December 30, the Bank paid her $200 in cash and accepted a deposit of $2,300. The Bank officer said that the Bank cashed the check for $2,500, which could mean only that Mrs. Kirby deposited $2,300 in cash.
And the documentary evidence shows that cash was deposited. The deposit of cash is evidenced by the word “currency” before “2,300.00” on the deposit ticket and by the words “Cash for Dep.” on the back of the check.5 The Bank’s ledger, which shows a credit of $2,300 to Mrs. Kirby’s account rather than a credit of $2,500 and a debit of $200, is consistent with a cashing of the Neuse check and a depositing of part of the proceeds. We must conclude that First & Merchants paid the Neuse check in cash on December 30, and, therefore, had no right thereafter to charge Mrs. Kirby’s account with the amount of the check.
The trial court apparently decided that Mr. and Mrs. Kirby were liable to the Bank because they had indorsed the Neuse check. But under U.C.C. § 3-414(1) an indorser contracts to pay an instrument only if the instrument is dishonored. And, as we have pointed out, the Bank did not dishonor the Neuse check, but paid the check in cash when Mrs. Kirby presented it.
As a practical matter, the contract of an indorser under U.C.C. § 3-414(1) does not run to a drawee bank. That contract can be enforced by a drawee bank only if it dishonors a check; and if the bank dishonors the check, it has suffered no loss.
The warranties that are applicable in this case are set forth in U.C.C. §§ 3-417(1) and 4-207(1): warranties made to a drawee bank by a presenter and prior transferors of a check. Those warranties are applicable because Mrs. Kirby presented the Neuse check to the Bank for payment. U.C.C. § 3-504(1); Bunn, Snead ér Speidel, An Introduction to the Uniform Commercial Code § 3.4(B) (1964). And those warranties do not include a warranty that the drawer of a check has sufficient funds on deposit to cover the check.
The rule that a drawee who mistakenly pays a check has recourse only against the drawer was firmly established before adoption of the Uniform Commercial Code:
[93]*93“The drawer of a check, and not the holder who receives payment, is primarily responsible for the drawing out of funds from a bank. An overdraft is an act by reason of which the drawer and not the holder obtains money from the bank on his check. The holder therefore in the absence of fraud or express understanding for repayment, has no concern with the question whether the drawer has funds in the bank to meet the check. The bank is estopped, as against him,, from claiming that by its acceptance an overdraft occurred. A mere mistake is not sufficient to enable it to recover from him. Banks cannot always guard against fraud, but can guard against mistakes.
“It is therefore the general rule, sustained by almost universal authority, that a payment in the ordinary course of business of a check by a bank on which it is drawn under the mistaken belief that the drawer has funds in the bank subject to check is not such a payment under a mistake of fact as will permit the bank to recover the money so paid from the recipient of such payment. To permit the bank to repudiate the payment would destroy the certainty which must pertain to commercial transactions ;if they are to remain useful to the business public. Otherwise no one would ever know when he can safely receive payment of a check.”
7 Zollman, The Law of Banks and Banking § 5062 (1936). See generally 3 Baton's Digest of Legal Opinions, Overdrafts § 4 (1944).
Virginia followed the same rule. Citizens Bank of Norfolk v. Schwarzschild & Sultzberger Co., 109 Va. 539, 64 S.E. 954 (1901); Bank of Virginia v. Craig, 33 Va. (6 Leigh) 399, 431 (1835); see Va. Code Ann. § 8.3-417, Virginia Comment at 220 (1965 added vol.); Va. Code Ann. § 8.4-207, Virginia Comment at 271 (1965 added vol.)
Nevertheless, First & Merchants contends that under the terms of its deposit contract with Mrs.
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Gordon, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
On December 30, 1966, defendant Margaret Kirby handed the following check to a teller at a branch of plaintiff First & Merchants National Bank:
NEUSE ENG. AND DREDGING CO.
Check Number
68-728 514
12-29-1966
Pay to the order of William J. Kirby & Margaret Kirby $2,500.00
Twenty-Five Hundred ------- Dollars
FIRST & MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK Virginia Beach, Virginia . .. 0514 ... 0728 NEUSE ENG. & DREDGING CO. /s/ W. R. Wood
The back of the check bore the signatures of the payees, Mr. and Mrs. Kirbv.
[90]*90Mrs. Kirby, who also had an account with the Bank, gave the teller the following deposit ticket:1
The teller handed $200 in cash to Mrs. Kirby, and the Bank credited her account with $2,300 on the next business day, January 3, 1967. The teller or another Bank employee made the notation “Cash for Dep.” under Mr. and Mrs. Kirby’s signatures on the back of the Neuse check.
On January 4 the Bank discovered that the Neuse check was drawn against insufficient funds. Instead of giving written notice, a Bank officer called Mr. and Mrs. Kirby on January 5 to advise that the Bank had dishonored the check and to request reimbursement. Mr. and Mrs. Kirby said they would come to the Bank to cover the check, but they did not. On January 10 the Bank charged Mrs. Kirby’s account with $2,500, creating an overdraft of $543.47.
On January 18 the Bank instituted this action to recover $543.47 from Mr. and Mrs. Kirby. At the trial a Bank officer, the only witness in the case, testified:
“Q. Did you cash the check [the Neuse check for $2,500] before you credited this deposit [the deposit of $2,300 to Mrs. Kirby’s account] ?
[91]*91“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. So the bank, in effect, cashed the check for $2,500.00 and then gave the defendant a credit of $2,300.00 to their [«e] account and gave them [sic] $200.00 in cash?
“A. Correct.
“Q. So you cashed the check for $2,500.00?
“A. Yes, sir.”
The trial court, sitting without a jury,, entered judgment for the plaintiff First & Merchants, and the defendants Mr. and Mrs. Kirby appeal. The question is whether the Bank had the right to charge Mrs. Kirby’s account with $2,500 on January 10 and to recover from Mr. and Mrs. Kirby the overdraft created by that charge ($543.47).
U.C.C. § 4-2132 provides:
“(1) An item3 is finally paid by a payor bank when the bank has done any of the following, whichever happens first:
“(a) paid the item in cash;”.
So if First & Merchants paid the Neuse check in cash on December 30, it then made final payment and could not sue Mr. or Mrs. Kirby on the check except for breach of warranty.4
[92]*92When Mrs. Kirby presented the $2,500 Neuse check to the Bank on December 30, the Bank paid her $200 in cash and accepted a deposit of $2,300. The Bank officer said that the Bank cashed the check for $2,500, which could mean only that Mrs. Kirby deposited $2,300 in cash.
And the documentary evidence shows that cash was deposited. The deposit of cash is evidenced by the word “currency” before “2,300.00” on the deposit ticket and by the words “Cash for Dep.” on the back of the check.5 The Bank’s ledger, which shows a credit of $2,300 to Mrs. Kirby’s account rather than a credit of $2,500 and a debit of $200, is consistent with a cashing of the Neuse check and a depositing of part of the proceeds. We must conclude that First & Merchants paid the Neuse check in cash on December 30, and, therefore, had no right thereafter to charge Mrs. Kirby’s account with the amount of the check.
The trial court apparently decided that Mr. and Mrs. Kirby were liable to the Bank because they had indorsed the Neuse check. But under U.C.C. § 3-414(1) an indorser contracts to pay an instrument only if the instrument is dishonored. And, as we have pointed out, the Bank did not dishonor the Neuse check, but paid the check in cash when Mrs. Kirby presented it.
As a practical matter, the contract of an indorser under U.C.C. § 3-414(1) does not run to a drawee bank. That contract can be enforced by a drawee bank only if it dishonors a check; and if the bank dishonors the check, it has suffered no loss.
The warranties that are applicable in this case are set forth in U.C.C. §§ 3-417(1) and 4-207(1): warranties made to a drawee bank by a presenter and prior transferors of a check. Those warranties are applicable because Mrs. Kirby presented the Neuse check to the Bank for payment. U.C.C. § 3-504(1); Bunn, Snead ér Speidel, An Introduction to the Uniform Commercial Code § 3.4(B) (1964). And those warranties do not include a warranty that the drawer of a check has sufficient funds on deposit to cover the check.
The rule that a drawee who mistakenly pays a check has recourse only against the drawer was firmly established before adoption of the Uniform Commercial Code:
[93]*93“The drawer of a check, and not the holder who receives payment, is primarily responsible for the drawing out of funds from a bank. An overdraft is an act by reason of which the drawer and not the holder obtains money from the bank on his check. The holder therefore in the absence of fraud or express understanding for repayment, has no concern with the question whether the drawer has funds in the bank to meet the check. The bank is estopped, as against him,, from claiming that by its acceptance an overdraft occurred. A mere mistake is not sufficient to enable it to recover from him. Banks cannot always guard against fraud, but can guard against mistakes.
“It is therefore the general rule, sustained by almost universal authority, that a payment in the ordinary course of business of a check by a bank on which it is drawn under the mistaken belief that the drawer has funds in the bank subject to check is not such a payment under a mistake of fact as will permit the bank to recover the money so paid from the recipient of such payment. To permit the bank to repudiate the payment would destroy the certainty which must pertain to commercial transactions ;if they are to remain useful to the business public. Otherwise no one would ever know when he can safely receive payment of a check.”
7 Zollman, The Law of Banks and Banking § 5062 (1936). See generally 3 Baton's Digest of Legal Opinions, Overdrafts § 4 (1944).
Virginia followed the same rule. Citizens Bank of Norfolk v. Schwarzschild & Sultzberger Co., 109 Va. 539, 64 S.E. 954 (1901); Bank of Virginia v. Craig, 33 Va. (6 Leigh) 399, 431 (1835); see Va. Code Ann. § 8.3-417, Virginia Comment at 220 (1965 added vol.); Va. Code Ann. § 8.4-207, Virginia Comment at 271 (1965 added vol.)
Nevertheless, First & Merchants contends that under the terms of its deposit contract with Mrs. Kirby, the settlement was provisional and therefore subject to revocation whether or not the Neuse check was paid in cash on December 30.6 It contends that in this regard the [94]*94deposit contract changes the rule set forth in the Uniform Commercial Code. But in providing that “all items are credited subject to final payment”, the contract recognizes that settlement for an item is provisional only until the item is finally paid. Since the deposit contract does not change the applicable rule as set forth in the Uniform Commercial Code, we do not decide whether a bank can provide by deposit contract that payment of a check in cash is provisional.
Even if the Bank’s settlement for the Neuse check had been provisional, the Bank had the right to charge that item back to Mrs. Kirby’s account only if it complied with U.C.C. §§ 4-212(3) and 4-301. Those sections authorize the revocation of a settlement if, before the “midnight deadline”,7 the bank
“(a) returns the item; or
“(b) sends written notice of dishonor or nonpayment if the item is held for protest or is otherwise unavailable for return”. U.C.C. § 4-301.
The Bank concedes that it neither sent written notice of dishonor nor returned the Neuse check before the “midnight deadline”. So the Bank had no right to charge the item back to Mrs. Kirby’s account.
For the reasons set forth, the trial court erred in entering judgment for First & Merchants against Mr. and Mrs. Kirby.
Reversed and final judgment.