Metropolitan National Bank v. Jones

12 L.R.A. 492, 137 Ill. 634
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 12 L.R.A. 492 (Metropolitan National Bank v. Jones) 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
Metropolitan National Bank v. Jones, 12 L.R.A. 492, 137 Ill. 634 (Ill. 1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court':

This was a suit in assumpsit, brought by the Metropolitan National Bank of Chicago against Noble Jones, Edward S. Jones and Walter Metcalf, copartners doing business under the firm name of Noble Jones, to "recover the amount of a bank check for $1540, drawn by the defendants on the Traders’ Bank of Chicago, payable to the order of the plaintiff. The defendants pleaded non assumpsit, and on trial before the court, ■a jury being waived, the issues were found for the defendants, and the court, after denying the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, gave judgment in favor of the defendants for costs.

The facts appear by stipulation, and are, in substance, as follows: On the 1st day of October, 1888, after the commencement of banking hours in the morning of that day, the defendants being indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $1540, gave to the plaintiff their check on the Traders’ Bank of Chicago as follows:

“Echo. S. Jones. Noble Jones. Walter Metcalfe.

“$1640. Chicago, Cook Co., III., Oct. 1, 1888.

“Pay to the order of Metrop. Nat’l Bank fifteen hundred and forty dollars.

Noble Jones.

“To Traders’ Bank, Chicago, HI.—No. 18,828.”

On the same day and during banking hours, the plaintiff sent said cheek by one of its collectors to the Traders’ Bank and asked said bank to certify it, which was done by writing across the face of it as follows: “Certified. 10 [ 1, 1888. Traders Bank of Chicago. Charles G. Fox.” The next morning, during banking horns but before clearing-house hours, the plaintiff sent said check by its collector to the Traders’ Bank and presented it for and demanded payment, which was refused. Thereupon, on the same day, and during banking hours, the plaintiff protested said check for non-payment, and sent notice of dishonor to the defendants. On the morning said check was presented for payment, and before it was presented, and before clearing-house hours, the Traders’ Bank became insolvent and suspended payment, and its assets were subsequently placed in the hands of a receiver who has since had possession thereof. Said receiver has paid the creditors of said bank dividends at different times, those paid to the plaintiff amounting to $693, leaving a balance, principal and interest, due on said check at the time of the trial of $961.70. At the time said check was drawn at the time it was certified, ° and at the time payment was demanded, the defendants had sufficient funds in the Traders’ Bank tó their credit to pay the check, and if payment had been demanded instead of certification, said bank would have paid it.

Upon these facts, the counsel for the plaintiff submitted to the court the following proposition to be held as the law in the decision of the case, which was refused:

“The court holds as a proposition of law, that when the holder of a check drawn upon a bank situated in the same city as the holder, on the day of its issue takes said check to said, bank and asks said bank to certify said check, which said bank certifies by marking ‘certified’ on the face thereof, and the day following, during bank hours, presents said check to said bank for payment, and the bank refuses payment thereof, having become insolvent and passed into the hands of a receiver before banking hours of said day, and the holder of said check at once, and during' banking hours of said day, gives notice of such dishonor to the drawer of said check, said certification does not release the drawer of said check, although at the time of the making and certification of said check the drawer had sufficient funds to his credit in said bank to pay the same, and if payment had been demanded by the holder instead of certification, such bank could not have refused to pay the same.”

The only question presented by this appeal is the one raised by the foregoing proposition, viz, whether the plaintiff, by obtaining certification of said check, released the drawers. A check being payable immediately and on demand, the holder can only present it for payment, and the bank can fulfil its duty to its depositor only by paying the amount demanded. In other words, the holder has no right to demand from the bank anything but payment of the check, and the bank has no right, as against the drawer, to do anything else but pay it. It follows that there is no such thing as acceptance of checks in the ordinary sense of the term, for acceptance ordinarily-, implies that the drawer requests the drawee to pay the amount' at a future day, and the drawe -: “accepts” to do so, thereby becoming the principal debtor, and the drawer becoming his. surety. Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sec. 1601. then the holder, on making presentment of the check, instead' of demanding and receiving payment, has the check certified; and retains it in his possession, he enters into a new and express contract with the bank not within the scope of the legal relations of the parties nor within the presumed intention of the drawer. By certification the bank enters into an absolute undertaking to pay the check when presented at any time within the period prescribed by the Statute of Limitations. The transaction as between the holder and the bank, is substantially the same, in legal effect, as though the holder had received payment and had deposited the money with the bank and received a certificate of deposit therefor. The liability of the bank, after certification, is independent of the question of its possession of the requisite amount of funds of the drawer, it being, by the act of certification, estopped to' deny the possession of sufficient funds.

Another result of the transaction is, that the bank thereby becomes entitled to, and if its business is properly conducted" actually does, charge the amount of the check to the account of the drawer at the time of the certification, thus in reality appropriating to the payment of the check the necessary amount of the money on deposit to the credit of the drawer, precisely the same as though the check were paid. As between the bank and drawer, certification has the same effect as payment, the funds representing the amount of the check being just as effectually withdrawn from the control of the drawer, ■and the indebtedness from the bank to the depositor created ■by the deposit being just as effectually satisfied to that amount in one case as in the other.

The question whether this change in the rights and relations ■ of the parties should be held to discharge the drawer from further liability on the check has not, so far as we are aware, ever been before this court for decision, but the great weight of authority, as found in the decisions of courts of other jurisdictions and in the treatises of law writers of the greatest learning and ability, is in favor of the conclusion that the drawer is .discharged. Mr. Daniel, in the section of his treatise above cited lays it down as the rule that, the bank by certifying the . check, becomes the principal and only debtor; that the holder, iby taking a certificate of the check from the bank, instead of requiring payment, discharges the drawer, and that the check then circulates as the representative of so much cash in bank payable on demand to the holder.

The question is very elaborately and learnedly discussed in 1 Morse on Banking, (3d Ed.) sec.

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Bluebook (online)
12 L.R.A. 492, 137 Ill. 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-national-bank-v-jones-ill-1891.