Morris-Miller Co. v. Von Pressentin

114 P. 912, 63 Wash. 74, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 1159
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1911
DocketNo. 8956
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 114 P. 912 (Morris-Miller Co. v. Von Pressentin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris-Miller Co. v. Von Pressentin, 114 P. 912, 63 Wash. 74, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 1159 (Wash. 1911).

Opinions

Crow, J.

On November 4, 1907, the defendant, A. Von Pressentin, of Skagit county, being indebted to plaintiff, Mon-is-Miller Company, a corporation, of Tacoma, delivered to plaintiff his check for $343.18, drawn on the private bank of A. W. Schafer & Company, at Hamilton, Washington. Respondent indorsed the check, “Pay to order of Pacific National Bank, Morris-Miller Company, C. L. Morris,” deposited it with the Pacific National Bank of Tacoma, and received credit therefor, subj ect to check, with the understanding that the bank was to receive it for collection and charge it back to respondent if dishonored. The Pacific National Bank promptly forwarded the check for collection to A. W. Schafer & Company, drawee, the only bank at Hamilton. The check could not reach Hamilton and be presented for payment until November 6, 1907. The defendant had sufficient funds on deposit with A. W. Schafer & Company to meet the check, but that bank, instead of honoring the check, laid it aside until November 15, 1907, when a receiver took charge of A. W. Schafer & Company, found the dishonored check, returned it through the Pacific National Bank to plaintiff, who transmitted it to defendant. Upon defendant’s refusal to make other payment, plaintiff commenced this action, not upon the check, but to recover defendant’s original indebtedness. The defendant pleaded payment, and negligence of the Pacific National Bank in failing to exercise diligence in collecting the check. From a judgment in plaintiff’s favor, the defendant has appealed.

At the close of respondent’s evidence, appellant moved for a nonsuit, contending that the Pacific National Bank of Tacoma was owner of the check, that the dispute was between it and appellant, and that respondent was not the proper party plaintiff. This motion was denied, and at the close of all the evidence, respondent’s motion for judgment was granted. Appellant contends the trial court erred in refusing the nonsuit, and in entering judgment for respondent. There is no serious dispute as to the facts. ■ After the Pacific National Bank [76]*76transmitted the check to A. W. Schafer & Company, and had received no report, it promptly followed the check with a tracer or letter of inquiry, but heard nothing further until the receiver was appointed. From November 4, 1907, the day the check, was issued, until the appointment of the receiver, A. W. Schafer & Company had, at the close of each day’s business, available cash as follows: November 4, $559.47; November 5, $518.87; November 6, $448.83; November 7, $392.63; November 8, $321.58; November 9, $151.87; November 11, $208.02; November 12, $466; November 13, $571.95; and November 15, $634.58. Other obligations of the bank were past due and unpaid.

On November 15, 1907, A. Yon Pressentin, the appellant herein, as plaintiff, commenced an action in the superior court of Skagit county, wherein A. W. Schafer, doing business as A. W. Schafer & Company, was defendant, and in that action the receiver was forthwith appointed upon his application. A. W. Schafer & Company was a private bank, owned and conducted by A. W. Schafer. Appellant in his complaint, seeking the appointment of a receiver, alleged that as a depositor he was a creditor of the bank to the extent of $1,000. Other allegations of his complaint show the bank was insolvent, and that appellant, before demanding a receiver, knew the bank was dishonoring, and unable to pay, checks drawn by its depositors. Appellant testified that, before he applied for the receiver, he was informed that his check issued to respondent was at the bank unpaid and dishonored. On learning this fact, he made no effort to save himself, although the bank then had more available cash than it had at any other date after the check was issued. No evidence was offered to show, that at any time after appellant’s check was given to respondent the bank was .solvent; that it was paying checks of depositors; that it was doing a general banking business, although it remained open; or that it was able to pay checks actually drawn by its depositors when the same .were presented. The respondent [77]*77offered evidence that other checks of its depositors had been presented to the bank and dishonored, but upon appellant’s objection, the most of this evidence was excluded.

Appellant insists that the Pacific National Bank owned the check at all times after it was indorsed and deposited by respondent. There is much conflict of authority on this question, but in consideration of the usual business methods prevailing between respondent and the Pacific National Bank, their understanding that the check was deposited for collection only, although indorsed without restriction, and their agreement that, if dishonored, it was to be charged back and returned to respondent, all shown by the evidence, we conclude that the Pacific National Bank never became its owner. In pursuance of this custom, understanding, and agreement, the dishonored check was actually charged back, returned to, and accepted by, respondent without objection. Although there was no restriction in the form of the indorsement, the undisputed evidence shows that, as between the Pacific National Bank and respondent, the indorsement was in fact a restrictive and conditional one. Such evidence was competent. Section 3407, Rem. & Bal. Code, the same being § 16 of the negotiable instruments act of 1899, provides that delivery of an indorsed instrument, which has not come into the hands of a holder in due course, may be shown to have been conditional, for a special purpose only, and not made to transfer property in the instrument.

“Checks deposited and credited as cash do not become the property of the bank, so that it takes the risk upon itself even though the depositor has been allowed to check against the deposit before the paper is collected, and the depositor can recover the check or other paper, if it is still in the possession of the depositor. When a depositor deposits a check on another bank, without any special contract, the property remains in him, and the bank is his agent until it has notice that the correspondent bank has received the money and credited it. If the deposit is made and credited to cover an overdraft, or is drawn upon, the bank can hold the paper [78]*78until the account is squared, but the property is in the customer. It is said that indorsement of the check to the bank, and credit on the books of the bank and'on the pass-book, are evidence of a contract by which the bank shall become owner of the paper; but (1) banks always claim and exercise the right of charging to the depositor all such checks returned unpaid, which is not consistent with the theory of an understanding that title passes absolutely. (2) The practice of allowing depositors to check against such .paper is reckoned by the ablest text-writers as ■ a mere gratuitous privilege.” 2 Morse, Banks & Banking (4th ed.), § 586. See, also, 5 Cyc. 493, and cases cited.
“Neither the deposit of a check with a bank for collection, nor the entry on its books of the amount of the check as a deposit of money in favor of the owner of the check, nor yet the negligence of such bank in and about the collection of the check from the drawee bank whereby there is a failure to collect it, nor all these facts combined, makes such check the property of the collecting bank, nor the owner of the check a depositor of the money entered to his credit, in such sense as gives him a right of action for money had and received, or otherwise, for the amount of the face of the check as money due him from the bank.

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Bluebook (online)
114 P. 912, 63 Wash. 74, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 1159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-miller-co-v-von-pressentin-wash-1911.