Mussey v. President of the Eagle Bank

50 Mass. 306
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1845
StatusPublished

This text of 50 Mass. 306 (Mussey v. President of the Eagle Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mussey v. President of the Eagle Bank, 50 Mass. 306 (Mass. 1845).

Opinion

Hubbard, J.

It is proved that Cook & Co. had no deposit to their credit, in the Eagle Bank, at the time the check was drawn, nor when it was presented for payment; and it is admitted that the action cannot be maintained against the defendants, unless the word “ good,” written by their teller, and certified by his signature, binds the bank. It is also agreed, or proved, that the teller had no direct authority conferred upon him to certify checks as good. Unless, therefore, a teller has power, by virtue of his office, thus to bind the bank ; or a custom thus to certify checks exists among banks, for the purpose of giving them currency with third persons, on the credit of the bank; or the defendants have sanctioned the practice of the making of such certificates, by their knowledge of its use, which they have not forbidden; this action, it is admitted, cannot be sustained.

These several propositions embrace, substantially, the subjects which have been discussed, and upon which- the plaintiff grounds his motion for a new trial. One of the propositions of the plaintiff’s counsel is stated thus: That the jury should have been instructed, that if the proof should warrant the inference that Odióme, while teller, certified the checks • of the customers of the bank, and this was, in any instance, known to the bank, and was not forbidden; and that, during the same period, it was the custom of all the tellers of other banks so to certify checks; the jury would be at liberty to infer an original, inherent, implied power in Odióme, as such teller, thus to certify checks. But certain facts are stated, in this proposition, as furnishing evidence of inherent power, which are rather applicable to the question and binding nature of a usage. They may prove the latter, while they by no means establish the former. The question of inherent power, and that of usage, should be separately considered, in order to arrive at a correct conclusion.

I. And first; has the teller of a bank an original, inherent, implied power to certify checks as good, bv virtue of his [311]*311office ? Or, in other words, has the teller of a hank an inherent power to bind the bank to the payment of any given sum of money, at-a future time, to any person who shall produce a check, which he has, by writing upon it the word “ good,” in fact accepted to pay ? Because, unless the word “ good ” carries with it binding evidence of the fact that the money is in the bank to meet that particular check, and that it will be paid to the bearer at any time when it is presented, it is of no practical utility. It will amount to no more than this, viz. that, at the moment of presentment, the check is good, and will be paid, if then handed in; but not that it will continue good two hours after, if, not being offered, other checks of the same drawer are presented, to the amount of his deposit in the bank.

The office of the teller is implied in the word used to designate it — to tell or count the moneys of the bank, which are received or paid out. The office is often divided into two branches, that of. receiving teller and of paying teller, where the business of the bank is large, and the duties cannot con veniently be united in one person. When united, the duty of the teller is, to receive all moneys offered at the bank in payment of notes and bills previously discounted or lodged for collection, as they severally fall due, and all moneys offered by customers of the bank, to be deposited to their credit in account, whether arising from moneys brought by them to the bank, or the proceeds of discounts made for them; to pay the checks of depositors, as the money is, from time to time, drawn out, or for notes discounted; and to redeem the bills of the bank with specie, when the same is demanded. This is his official employment; and, in the discharge of these duties, he is regularly to account for the moneys he has received and paid .out, not only to prevent mistakes, but to charge him when short or delinquent; and he is also made responsible for the payment of a check, when the drawer has not a like amount to his credit, unless he applies to the book-keeper for information as to the state of the drawer’s account; and then, if an over payment is mane, [312]*312through the mistake or fault of the hook-keeper, he, and not the teller, is responsible for the loss. And when checks on other banks are received in payment, or on deposit, (as is the usage among the banks in the city,) it is made his duty to attend to their collection by a given hour of the day. These are the powers and duties usually assigned to the office of the teller; and they are plain and explicit. They relate to the direct receipt or payment of moneys, and to a true and accurate accounting for such receipts and payments. His duties respect the daily cash transactions of the bank, and they do not relate directly to the credits given by the bank to its cusomers, or borrowers, on the loan of its funds. His office is not confounded with that of the discount clerk, or the bookkeeper ; but his daily minutes, and the checks paid or received by him, are handed to the book-keeper, for him to make the proper entries, by which the concerns of the bank may be known when tested by the teller’s cash on hand.

In these powers and duties, thus conferred upon the teller, and to be exercised by him in the discharge of the appropriate functions of his office, there is no inherent, original power, expressly conferred, to enable him to certify that the checks of the depositors at the bank will be good, when presented for payment, at some future time; nor is such power incident to, or necessary„to, the faithful discharge of any of his duties. Powers which are neither incidental nor necessary are not to be implied, when the rights of others are thereby involved. The power in question is, in fact, not only not implied as incidental to the proper performance of the duties of the office, but the teller is not a regular certifying officer, as to the state of any depositor’s account; for he has not the means of certifying it. Nor is he responsible for the book-keeper’s statement. Nor does such power exist in the book-keeper; for, during the business hours of the day, he is not the recen er of all the checks drawn by the depositors, as they are paid at the bank, nor is he answerable for the amount, until handed to him for entry in his books. Such certificate would, in fact, require the names of both the officers, that the drawer’s [313]*313account was good for the face of the check, before either of them could have evidence of the fact to be certified. Nor could they be secure from difficulty arising out of the constant pressure of business, without actually charging the check thus certified; and even if charged, they would be without a voucher, till the check should be handed in for payment.

Such a power of certifying is, in fact, a power to pledge the credit of the bank to its customers; a power which, by the constitution of a bank, can alone be exercised by its president and directors, unless specially delegated by them; and consequently, it cannot be implied as a resulting duty or authority in any individual officer. Evidence of usage, therefore, can imply no original, inherent and implied power in tellers thus to certify, however it may- bear on the question of binding a bank by the allowance of such a usage.

3.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Mass. 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mussey-v-president-of-the-eagle-bank-mass-1845.