Moldawer v. Trust Co. of North America

57 Pa. Super. 66, 1914 Pa. Super. LEXIS 151
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 20, 1914
DocketAppeal, No. 138
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 Pa. Super. 66 (Moldawer v. Trust Co. of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moldawer v. Trust Co. of North America, 57 Pa. Super. 66, 1914 Pa. Super. LEXIS 151 (Pa. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rice, P. J.,

The banking business which the defendant conducted consisted, in part, of receiving money for deposit, and checks, notes, drafts and bills for collection. The plaintiff had been for fifteen or sixteen years, and was at the time of the transaction in question, a depositor in the defendant’s bank, and as such deposited notes and checks from time to time.

In October, 1907, he deposited a note for $350, dated September 20, 1907, made by Cooper Brothers to the order of M. Cooper & Company, payable three months after date, and indorsed by M. Cooper & Company, and by the plaintiff.

At the time he deposited it the bank teller who received it made an entry in the plaintiff’s pass book, consisting of the amount, the name of the maker and the date of maturity. The entry is not transcribed literally in the notes of the testimony. But its exact wording is not very important in the present inquiry, for it is not claimed that the note was deposited and accepted as the equivalent of cash, or that a present credit to the plaintiff for the amount was entered in his bank account or was intended, or that the plaintiff’s indorsement was for any other purpose than for collection for his use and benefit.

Before maturity, the defendant notified the makers that the note was at its banking house and was payable there. Not having been paid at maturity, the defendant at once placed it in the hands of an experienced and competent notary public with direction to collect, or protest it for nonpayment.

The notary went to the maker’s place of business and found it locked and deserted. He then started back to his office in order to notify the indorsers, when he discovered that he had lost the note. He advertised for it but it never was found. It was not protested, and the indorsers never were notified of its nonpayment.

[70]*70The defendant .was promptly notified of the loss of the note but did not promptly notify plaintiff, although that was feasible. He first learned of it in the early part of January in the following year in this way: He took his book to the bank to have his account settled, and when it was returned to him he discovered that it had not been credited with the amount of the note. Thereupon he made inquiry at the bank and was told it had been lost by the notary.

From the foregoing recital of undisputed and virtually admitted facts it is seen, that the transaction was the usual one of a deposit of commercial paper for collection, made by the holder thereof in a bank in which he is a regular and customary depositor, to be followed by a credit to him for the amount, if and when it shall be paid to the bank. Although the evidence does not show any words of express promise on the part of the bank, yet, viewing the transaction in the light of the previous and existing relation and course of dealing between the parties, and of the usages in such matters, which are of common knowledge (or, as is said in Hertzog v. Hertzog, 29 Pa. 465, “the common understanding of men”), an agreement in fact, creating an obligation on the part of the bank, is implied or presumed from their acts. The fact that no compensation for collection was promised or agreed upon does not militate against the foregoing conclusion. To say nothing of the advantage which accrues to the bank from having and retaining the holder of the paper as a general depositor, the valuable consideration which supports such agreement, as a contract, is the use of the money to be collected so long as it shall be allowed to remain in the bank’s hands after it has been collected: Merchants’ National Bank of Philadelphia v. Goodman, 109 Pa. 422. The defendant being an agent for collection, its duty was to exercise, “competent skill and proper care” in the service it undertook to perform: Wingate v. Mechanics’ Bank, 10 Pa. 104; Bank of [71]*71Delaware County v. Broomhall, 38 Pa. 135. In the present instance this service did not contemplate or require the transmission of the note to another, place for purpose of presentation to the maker and notice to the indorser in the event of dishonor. The note was made and was payable in Philadelphia, and so far as appears all the parties resided there. Therefore the defendant was not, in the strictest and most appropriate sense of the term, an agent for transmission only. But it has been held that, in such a case as we have, performance of the bank’s duty, so far as it involves presentation and notice of dishonor, may be committed by the bank to a competent and experienced notary public, in the usual course, and the bank is not liable to the depositor for the notary’s neglect to give notice to the indorser: Bellemire v. Bank of the United States, 4 Wharton, 105. It would seem to follow logically that the negligence of the notary, through which the note is lost, is not imputable to the bank. But, granting this, it does not follow logically or reasonably, that the bank is under no further obligation than to place the note in the hands of a competent and skillful notary with direction to collect or protest Tor nonpayment. For example, if it be returned by the notary unpaid, there still rests on the bank an obligation to exercise care in its custody until it is returned to the depositor on his demand; just as, and for the same reason, an obligation rested on the bank to exercise care in its custody before it delivered it to the notary. This obligation, though not expressed in words, is part of the general obligation which the bank impliedly takes on itself when it assumes the agency for collection. So also, the good faith and ordinary care and diligence, which the bank impliedly promises to observe and exercise when it receives from its customer commercial paper for collection, involve notification to the depositor of. the loss of the paper within a reasonable time after its loss is discovered by the bank. This implication im[72]*72poses no unreasonable burden on the bank. It does not involve the observance of the utmost good' faith or the exercise of extraordinary care, but only simple good faith and ordinary care.

The rule is invoked that the plaintiff does not recover on the proofs alone; he recovers secundum allegata et probata. It is argued that the rule is applicable here, and prevents recovery, because the only negligence proved against the defendant, was in failing to notify 'the plaintiff of the loss of the note, and this was not averred in the plaintiff’s statement of claim. It is to be observed with regard to this objection, that it was not raised by the defendant when the plaintiff testified to the facts involved in the proposition, nor was the court specifically requested to instruct the jury to disregard the testimony or to find for the defendant upon the ground of variance. Evidently the defendant was not surprised or taken at a disadvantage by the introduction of this testimony. To say the least, if these matters do not constitute a complete waiver of the objection, they do furnish a strong reason for harmonizing the issue raised by the pleadings and that actually tried, if that can be done, by taking a liberal view of the statement of claim. The action was assumpsit and the gravamen was breach of contract. The statement alleged, generally, an implied agreement on the part of the defendant to use due diligence, and alleged specifically an implied agreement on its part to return the note to the bank in the event of its not being paid, and failure to return it. The defendant answered, by its evidence, that it was exonerated by the loss of the note by the notary, in whose hands it had placed it.

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Related

Moldawer v. Trust Co. of North America
59 Pa. Super. 155 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 Pa. Super. 66, 1914 Pa. Super. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moldawer-v-trust-co-of-north-america-pasuperct-1914.