Oyster & Fish Co. v. Bank

51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 106
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 106 (Oyster & Fish Co. v. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oyster & Fish Co. v. Bank, 51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 106 (Ohio 1894).

Opinion

Dickman, C. J.

The plaintiff in error, The Cincinnati Oyster & Fish Company, is a corporation organized under the laws of Ohio; and the defendant in error, The National Lafayette Bank, is a corporation organized under the laws of the United States. In June, 1887, the Lafayette Bank received from a banking correspondent in Michigan, for collection, a sight draft for. fifty-four dollars, drawn upon the plaintiff in error. On the 20th day of June, 1887, the plaintiff in error, on receiving the draft from the Lafayette Bank, gave to that bank, in exchange, its check for fifty-four dollars, already, by the procurement of the plaintiff in error, certified by The Fidelity National Bank of Cincinnati, Ohio. • The following is a copy of the check and its certification:

“No. 344. Cincinnati, June 20, 1887.
“The Fidelity National Bank pay to the order of National Lafayette Bank, fifty-four dollars.
“The Cincinnati Oyster & Fish Company.
“$54.00. Stephen Chase, Superintendent.
(“ Certification.)
“Good for $54.00, when property indorsed.
“Fidelity National Bank,
Ammi Baldwin, Ccoshier.”

On the same day — the 20th of June — the amount of the check was at once credited by the Lafayette Bank to the account of its banking correspondent. The check was duty indorsed, and duty presented to the Fidelity National Bank on the 21st day of June, 1887, and payment was refused —the Fidelity Bank having failed and closed its doors. The check was duty protested on the same day for non-payment, and notice of such non-payment was served upon the plaintiff in error, at its place of business in Cincinnati.

[109]*109Demand of payment of the check was made upon the plaintiff in error, and payment was by it refused.

At the time of the transaction between the parties to this cause, it was usual and customary for banks and bankers in Cincinnati to send notices to persons owing accounts at banks, that “checks on other banks are not received in payment for drafts after half-past one o’clock unless certified;” and for those receiving such notices, to take up and pay off drafts or other mercantile paper with certified cheeks. But while it was thus the general rule of banks and bankers to require checks offered in payment of drafts, notes, or other mercantile paper after half-past one o’clock, to be certified, that rule was not such that it might not be permitted to go unobserved, if the party receiving the check was satisfied that it was good, or that the party drawing it was responsible.

The record presents only one question that claims our consideration, and that is, can the drawer of a certified check be held liable for its payment, where it is certified by the bank at his own instance, request, or procurement, before he delivers it to the payee.

Among the numerous definitions of checks which the text writers give, that of Mr. Daniels, in his treatise on negotiable instruments, (§1566) has been very generally approved. A check is there defined as, “a draft or order upon a bank or banking house, purporting to be drawn upon a deposit of funds for the payment at all events of a certain sum of money, to a certain person therein named, or to him or his order, or to bearer, and payable instantly on demand.” It is an absolute transfer or appropriation of so much money in the [110]*110hands of the drawee. If the payee or holder presents the check for payment before the close of banking hours on the next day after its date, and payment is refused, the drawer, if duly notified, will be liable. And the drawer will not be discharged from liability by the delay of the holder to make presentment and give notice of dishonor, unless he has suffered loss thereby; and if the bank remains solvent, and the fund upon which the check is drawn is unaffected by the delay, the liability of the drawer continues, ordinarily, in full force.

The certification of the check by the bank as “good,” procured by the drawer, on his own motion, before its delivery to the payee, will not relieve the latter from the necessity of making due presentment and giving due notice of its dishonor, if he would hold on to the liability of the drawer; nor, will such a certification discharge the drawer where the bank becomes insolvent, if the payee uses the proper diligence in presenting the check for payment, and giving notice of its dishonor. In other words, where the drawer of the check delivers it already certified, the relations of the payee or holder and the drawer are not affected by the circumstance that the check is certified; their duties and obligations toward each other remain the same as they would have been had the check not been certified.

Upon presentation of the check by the drawer to the bank for certification, it becomes manifest that it is designed to be negotiated, and that the drawer, to facilitate its negotiation, seeks to strengthen his own obligation by adding to it that of the bank. The certification becomes an acknowb edgment by the bank, that the drawer has funds [111]*111on deposit, which the bank will pay over to the holder of the check upon its being presented. Assurance is thereby given to the payee that the cheek has not been drawn without provision to meet its payment. A check so certified, when offered in taking up drafts, notes, or other mercantile paper, if it is received too late to pass through the clearing house on the day when offered, may inspire confidence that when presented the next day for payment it will not be dishonored. But such an enlargement of the security is not to be construed into an absolute discharge of the drawer of the check. By simply receiving the cheek in the form in which it is presented, the holder does not make the drawee his sole debtor, as when, after becoming the owner, the holder procures the certification of the check — thus voluntarily making the bank upon which it is drawn his sole debtor, and releasing the drawer. Born v. Bank, 123 Ind. 78, 24 N. E. Rep. 173.

It is said, however, in behalf of the plaintiff in error, that the drawer of the check in dispute caused it to be certified by the requirement of the Lafayette Bank. The record does not lead us to that conclusion. It is not anywhere stated that the notice was sent to the plaintiff in error, that checks on other banks would not be received in payment for drafts after one and a half o’clock, unless certified. The bank notified the plaintiff in error that it held for collection the sight draft received from its banking correspondent in Michigan, but what else that notice contained does not appear, as the notice itself was not offered in evidence. As agreed to by counsel for the parties to the cause, the plaintiff in error received from the Lafayette* Bank the sight draft, “and, in exchange [112]*112therefor, gave its check, already, by its procurement, certified by The Fidelity National Bank.” The fact that when the check was thus given it had already been certified by the procurement of the plaintiff in error, would in itself, preclude the idea that the bank had procured it to be certified.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Ohio St. (N.S.) 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oyster-fish-co-v-bank-ohio-1894.