Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co. v. First Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City

1937 OK 146, 66 P.2d 29, 179 Okla. 475, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 310
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 2, 1937
DocketNo. 26085.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1937 OK 146 (Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co. v. First Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co. v. First Nat. Bank of Oklahoma City, 1937 OK 146, 66 P.2d 29, 179 Okla. 475, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 310 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

GIBSON, J.

This action was commenced in the district court of Oklahoma county by the Oklahoma Gas & Electric Company against the First National Bank of Oklahoma City and the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Missouri, to recover on a check drawn by said electric company on its own account in the First National Bank of Sapul-pa. The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court.

Under date of June 20, 1928, the plaintiff, Oklahoma Gas & Electric Company, drew a check for the sum of $2,500 upon the First National Bank of Sapulpa, payable to the order of Oklahoma Gas & Electric Company, General Office, Oklahoma City, Okl'a. The plaintiff endorsed the check as follows: “Pay to the order of First- National Bank, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for deposit only, Oklahoma Gas & Electric Company General Office Account, W. R. Emerson, Treasurer.” On June 22, 1923, plaintiff deposited the check in the defendant Oklahoma City bank, and that bank in due course delivered the same to the Oklahoma Cit.y branch of the defendant Reserve Bank for collection. Thereupon the cheek was sent direct by mail to the Sapulpa bank for collection.

Accompanying said check to the Sapulpa bank were other checks aggregating approximately $19,000 drawn by depositors of that bank upon their respective accounts. On June 23rd the Sapulpa bank drew a check or draft on its reserve account in the Reserve Bank and payable to the order of the latter *476 for the sum of approximately $22,000, and mailed same to the branch bank at Oklahoma City. On that day plaintiff's check was marked paid and charged to its account in the Sapulpa bank. That hank closed at the regular hour on June 23rd, which was Saturday, and failed to reopen thereafter and was placed in charge of a receiver. The Reserve Bank notified the Oklahoma City bank of such failure and that .final collection of the check had not been made. Thereupon the check wag charged to plaintiff’s account, and this action resulted.

Plaintiff charges the defendant banks with negligence in sending the check direct to the drawee bank for collection and in accepting in payment anything other than cash. It is further charged that, since the foregoing method of collection was adopted, it became the duty of the Reserve Bank to charge the drawee bank’s reserve account then held by the Reserve Bank with the amount of plaintiff's check.

Judgment was for defendants, and plaintiff has appealed.

The relationship of the plaintiff and the defendant Oklahoma City bank was that of principal and agent arising by virtue of express contractual obligation. The conditions upon which the Oklahoma City bank accepted plaintiff’s check were printed upon plaintiff’s duplicate deposit, slip, and plaintiff was fully aware of those conditions when the deposit was made. They read as follows:

“Items deposited are received for collection only credited subject to final payment in cash, with rights reserved to charge hack or enter for collection. Acting only as agent for depositor, items may be forwarded through ordinary channels but this bank assumes no responsibility for neglect, default, or failure of such agents, including failure to follow instructions to protest; nor losses in the mails. Should any collecting agent convert the proceeds, or remit in returns afterward dishonored credits given wiT be charged back, although item, itself, may have been paid and not returnable. When deemed best, items may be sent for collection to banks on which drawn: if so sent, above conditions are neither waived nor suspended. Items on this bank not found good at close of business on day of deposit, will be charged back to depositor.”

Even in the absence of that agreement the defendant bank was the agent of plaintiff for the purpose of collecting the check, and was charged with ordinary dare and diligence in performing that duty. Bank of Big Cabin v. English, 27 Okla. 334, 111 P. 386; Crawford v. First State Bank, 120 Okla. 243, 251 P. 481.

It has been stipulated that the Oklahoma City bank by placing the check in the hands of the Reserve Bank employed the ordinary channels for collection. Such action was clearly pursuant to its agreement with plaintiff. It is not contended that in so doing it failed to exercise ordinary care and diligence. The Oklahoma City bank, as agent for plaintiff, was authorized by the agreement to employ the Reserve Bank as subagent to collect the check. Under the plain terms of the agreement it assumed no responsibility for neglect, default, or failure on the part of the subagent, the Reserve Bank, in making the collection. After the employment' of the Reserve Bank the responsibility of the Oklahoma City bank as collecting agent ceased (2 C. J. 687, sec. 3461, and attached again only after the collection found its way back to said bank. After its employment the Reserve Bank acted as agent for plaintiff as the owner of the check. 2 C. J. 291, sec. 352. See, also, 2 O. J. S., Agency, p. 1362, sec. 137.

Our attention has been directed to the so-called New York and Massachusetts rules applied in situations of this character, and also to the case of Federal Reserve Bank v. Malloy, 264 U. S. 160, wherein said rules are expounded or applied. Both of said rules, so far as they apply here, recognize the right of the owner of the check under contractual relationship as here existing to maintain an action against the subagent bank for negligence or wrongful handling of the collection.

In the instant case the rights and duties of the Oklahoma City bank were clearly defined by its agency agreement with plaintiff. It has in no manner violated that agreement.

The question involving the Reserve Bank’s alleged negligence and default in attempting to collect the check is to be determined by an ai>plication of the laws governing the duties of subagents. In the instant case the agent, by express authority from the princ.L pal, employed the subagent. In such case, where the subagent knows of the prior agency, the subagent represents the principal in the same manner ,as the original agent. 2 C. J. 690, sec. 350: see, also, 2 C. J. S., Agency, p. 1361, sec. 137. In the absence of some custom or usage of business to -the contrary, the subagent’s duties to the principal are defined and controlled by the original 'agency agreement, unless the principal has consented to or ratified other means and methods employed or to be employed by the subagent in furtherance of the agency.

Here, under the general ru’e applying in such oases, the Federal Reserve Bank’s duties to the plaintiff were defined by the agreement *477 between plaintiff and tlio Oklahoma City bank. It may not escape those duties unless there existed a custom, chargeable to plaintiff’s knowledge, whereby the dirties of the subagent to the principal were restricted or enlarged in some manner outside the express and implied terms of the original agreement, or unless by express law the subagent was prohibited from acting under all the terms of such agreement; or unless the plaintiff has ratified or acknowledged a wholly different agency relationship between it and the Reserve Bank. It is not contended that the sub-agent in the instant case was unaware of the original agency.

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239 F. Supp. 987 (W.D. Oklahoma, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 146, 66 P.2d 29, 179 Okla. 475, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oklahoma-gas-electric-co-v-first-nat-bank-of-oklahoma-city-okla-1937.