Sublette Exchange Bank v. Fitzgerald

168 Ill. App. 240, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1115
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 25, 1912
DocketGen. No. 5561
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 168 Ill. App. 240 (Sublette Exchange Bank v. Fitzgerald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sublette Exchange Bank v. Fitzgerald, 168 Ill. App. 240, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1115 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Martin J. Fitzgerald appeals from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Lee county against himself and Granville Miller as endorsers of a check dated at Plainview, Texas, November 3, 1909, and drawn on the First National Bank of Plainview, Texas, by Harrison Miller, to the order of Granville Miller. The pleadings are not abstracted and we therefore assume that they are sufficient to support the judgment. The record shows that Miller was defaulted and that appellant pleaded non assumpsit and a verified plea denying that he made and delivered the writing declared upon. Appellant testified that he did not endorse the note and was not in the bank when it was endorsed and cashed. There is a clear preponderance of the proof that on November 6, 1909, appellant and Granville Miller came into the Sublette Exchange Bank together; that Miller endorsed the check and presented it to the clerk in charge, who said he did not know him; that Miller said appellant would identify him; that the clerk asked appellant if he would endorse the check; that he said he would and took it and wrote upon the back thereof and handed the check back .to the clerk and the clerk handed to appellant the amount of the check and the parties went away, and, so far as the clerk knew, appellant took the money away with him. On this subject the verdict against appellant was justified by the proof.

It is contended that appellant is released because the check was not forwarded to Plainview, Texas, by the most direct route nor with sufficient promptness. The check was cashed in the afternoon of Saturday, November 6th, at Sublette, in Lee county, nearly due west of Chicago. Appellee sent it to the Corn Exchange Bank of Chicago that afternoon or evening, where it was received on Monday, November 8th, and on the same day it was sent by that bank to the Fort Worth National Bank of Fort Worth, Texas. It was received there on November 10th, and sent to the First-National Bank of Plainview, Texas, where it was protested on November 13.

In Travers v. T. M. Sinclair & Co., 122 Ill. App. 203, we said: “As to what is a reasonable time for presentment of an indorsed check and notice of dishonor in order to hold the endorser, depends to some extent upon circumstances and the conditions existing. If a check is received in the same town as the hank on which it is drawn is located, the law is that it must be presented either on the same day, or not later’ than the next. If the check is received in one place, drawn on a bank at some other place, then it must he forwarded, not later than the day after it is received, for presentment to the bank on which it is drawn, and this appears to mean that it must he forwarded directly. Forwarded by a circuitous route may, as a general rule, he said to constitute negligence.”

We followed this rule in First National Bank of Chadwick v. Mackey, 157 Ill. App. 408. Appellant relies upon these cases. A comparison of the facts there with those in this case will show that they are entirely unlike. By requiring that the check be forwarded directly to the hank upon which it is drawn, the rule above stated does not mean that it should he sent in a direct line as a bird might fly, but by the usual commercial route, and the proof here shows that this was sent by the customary route. We cannot say that it was improper to send it to Chicago. A small hank, as this was, would not be likely to have a correspondent at Fort Worth. No proof need he introduced of any fact of which the court will take judicial notice, and the court will take judicial notice of the geographical, features of this and other states and countries, so far as the same may he fairly presumed to he within the general knowledge of persons of ordinary intelligence living here. Beynolds’ Stephen’s Digest of the Law of Evidence, Arts. 58 and 59. The court therefore takes judicial notice that Plainview is in the Panhandle of Texas, and that Forth Worth is the nearest large city and is on a railroad line having direct connection with Chicago, and that, according to recent maps before the court, there is no railroad connection to Plainview, and that Plainview is a long distance from Port Worth. There certainly was no delay between Sublette and Port Worth, and we are of opinion that there appears to have been no unreasonable delay between Port Worth and Plainview, and that, if the court had given the second instruction which appellant requested and the court refused and the jury had thereunder found for appellant, the verdict could not have been sustained.

The demand for payment, refusal, protest and notice of protest was proved only by the certificate of protest by a notary public of Hale county, Texas, under his notarial seal. It is argued by appellant that that proof was incompetent. Prior to the Negotiable Instruments Law of 1907 there seems to have been a distinction in Illinois between a check and a hill of exchange. The instrument here sued upon is governed by the latter Act. Section 184 thereof, omitting one word, evidently inserted by mistake, is as follows:

“A check is a hill of exchange drawn on a hank payable on demand. Except as herein otherwise provided, the provisions of this act applicable to a bill of exchange payable on demand apply to a check.”

Section 128 of said Act is in part as follows:

“An inland hill of exchange is a hill which is, or on its face purports to he, both drawn and payable within this State. Any other hill is a foreign bill.”

This is in accordance with the Law Merchant. Buckner v. Finley, 2 Pet. 586. Therefore, under the statute now in force and in force when this check was drawn in Texas, payable in Texas and was endorsed in Illinois, this is a foreign hill of exchange. Under section 88 of said Act notice of dishonor must be given to the endorser to charge him: .Under Article IV of said Act a foreign hill of exchange must he protested for non-payment, and the protest must be annexed to the hill or must contain a copy thereof, and must be under the hand and seal of the notary making it and must contain certain facts therein specified. It is the obvious meaning of that Article that the certificate of protest, so required to be annexed to the bill under the hand and seal of the notary making it, is intended to be evidence of the facts therein required to be stated. Our Negotiable Instruments Law is intended as a codification of the Law Merchant. By the Law Merchant the certificate of protest of a foreign bill of exchange was competent evidence, and, in many jurisdictions, if the certificate was in existence and obtainable, it was the only evidence of the dishonor of the bill. Bigelow on Bills, Notes and Cheques, 2nd Ed. 130; Administrator of Townsend v. Lorain Bank, 2 Ohio St. 345; Ocean National Bank v. Williams, 102 Mass. 141. This is the rule in Maine under a statute. Warren v. Warren, 16 Me. 259; Lewiston Falls Bank v. Leonard, 43 Me. 144. Appellant relies upon Vaughan v. Potter, 131 Ill. App. 334. That case was on a promissory note payable in Missouri, and was decided before our Negotiable Instruments Law was enacted.

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Bluebook (online)
168 Ill. App. 240, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sublette-exchange-bank-v-fitzgerald-illappct-1912.