Merchants' Nat. Bank of Houston v. Dorchester

136 S.W. 551, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 225
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 17, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 551 (Merchants' Nat. Bank of Houston v. Dorchester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants' Nat. Bank of Houston v. Dorchester, 136 S.W. 551, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 225 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

McMEANS, J.

The following statement of the case made by appellant in its brief, and which is approved by the other parties to this appeal, is adopted:

On September 14, 1908, Chester B. Dor-chester, as receiver for the Waters-Pierce Oil Company, instituted suit in the district court of Harris county against the Texas Lamp & Oil Company to recover the sum of $1,563.33 on a verified account. On the 17th day of April, 1909, the defendant filed its first amended original answer, admitting the purchase of the goods, as alleged in the plaintiff’s petition, and further alleging that the amount claimed remained unpaid until on October 15, 1907, when it drew its check payable to the order of the plaintiff in the sum of $1,563.33 on the bank of T. W. House, in the city of Houston, and delivered it to the plaintiff on said date; that the defendant on said date, and on each and every day thereafter, and continuously up to the closing of said bank at 3 o’clock p. m. October 17, 1907, had on deposit in said bank funds to the amount of or more than $1,563.33, which were subject to withdrawal on the order of the defendant, and that if said check so drawn and delivered to the plaintiff had been presented at any time, or within a reasonable time after its delivery to the plaintiff, it would have been paid; that the plaintiff received said check on the 15th day of October, 1907, or at an early hour on October 16, 1907, and long before the failure of the T. W. House bank, and retained said check, and did not return or offer to return the same, and did not refuse to accept the same prior to 'the failure of said T. W. House bank; that after the close of said bank at 3 o’clock p. m. October 17, 1907, the bank of T. W. House failed and became insolvent, and on application of creditors was adjudged a bankrupt by the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Texas. Defendant also alleged that plaintiff received said check on the morning of October 16, 1907, and did not present the same for payment during that day, although it had ample opportunity to have done so during business hours; that thereafter, on or about October 17, 1907, the plaintiff deposited said check in the Merchants’ National Bank of Houston, a bank situated next door to the bank of T. W. House, and separated therefrom by a partition or wall, and that said Merchants’ National Bank failed to present said check or to return it to the defendant within a reaonable time, and did not present it for payment at the bank of T. W. House before the closing of business hours at 3 o’clock p. m. October 17, 1907, and thereafter, on that day, the bank of T. W. House failed and became insolvent, and that the failure of the plaintiff and the said Merchants’ National Bank to present said check for payment within a reasonable time, or to return the same to the defendant until the said bank of T. W. House had failed, had damaged the defendant in the sum of $1,563.33.

Upon the coming in of the first amended original answer of the defendant Texas Lamp & Oil Company, the plaintiff Chester B. Dorchester, receiver, by supplemental petition, impleaded the Merchants’ National Bank, a national banking corporation having its place of business in the city of Houston, Tex., alleging substantially that on the morning of October 16, 1907, he received by mail from the Texas Lamp & Oil Company the latter’s check for the sum of $1,563.33, drawn on T. W. House, banker, payable to the order of Waters-Pierce Oil Company; that on that morning he also received a large number of checks from other parties, and as soon as the mail received was opened and the checks, including the cheek in question, were separated from the remaining portion of the mail, in the ordinary course of plaintiff’s business, said cheeks were listed upon the books of plaintiff, and the proper and usual entries made on said books, and all of said checks, including the one in question, were, as soon as practicable, placed in the hands of plaintiff’s messenger, who went with said checks to the place of business of the Merchants’ National Bank for the purpose of depositing them with said bank; that the check in question was deposited with the Merchants’ National Bank at about 1:30 p. m. October 17, 1907, and that the same was deposited by plaintiff in the regular course of his business, as soon as it was practicable *553 to do so; that the said Merchants’ National Bank gave credit to the plaintiff in his pass book for the sum of $10,045.36, which includ- • ed the check in question; that the plaintiff’s place of business was located many blocks distant from the place of business of both the Merchants’ National Bank and the T. W. House bank; that neither of said banks were easily accessible to said place of business, and plaintiff had in his employ a messenger whose duties were to each day carry to and deposit in the said Merchants’ National Bank all checks received on that day by plaintiff, and that said messenger used a bicycle for that purpose; that, by reason of the great number of checks received by the plaintiff, it was impracticable for him- to visit each bank in person, and that it was his custom to regularly and promptly deposit all checks received by him with the Merchants’ National Bank, with which he was at that time doing business, and thereupon it became the duty of the Merchants’ National Bank to promptly and diligently present the cheek in question for payment, arid to collect the amount thereof; that the Merchants’ National Bank at that time adjoined the bank of T. W. House, and that same could have been presented by said Merchants’ National Bank for payment, and could have been collected by the latter, either before the close of business hours on October 15, 1967, or before the close of business hours on the day following; that said check was in fact presented by the said Merchants’ Bank to said T. W. House, banker, before the close of business hours on October 17, 1907, and was in fact paid by said T. W. House, banker, to said Merchants’ National Bank, either in cash or by the said T. W. House, banker, offsetting against the same cheeks which he held drawn on the said Merchants’ National Bank or otherwise. It was further alleged that on the morning of October 18, 1907, the plaintiff was advised by the Merchants’ National Bank that the check in question was uncollectible, and that, in accordance with the custom existing between the plaintiff and said bank for the plaintiff to forward to said bank a remittance to cover such checks as had been by said bank credited to plaintiff’s account and were uncollectible, plaintiff, upon being so advised that the check in question was un-collectible, and relying upon such advice, and in ignorance of the true facts, forwarded to said bank his draft for the sum of $1,563.33 for the purpose of off'etting the credit given by said bank to the plaintiff at the time of the deposit of the cheek in question, which check was applied by said bank for that purpose, and that, therefore, the said Merchants’ National Bank became liable to the plaintiff in the sum of $1,563.33, together with interest thereon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 551, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-nat-bank-of-houston-v-dorchester-texapp-1911.