Tillman County Bank v. Behringer

257 S.W. 206, 113 Tex. 415, 36 A.L.R. 1302, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 176
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1923
DocketNo. 3857.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 257 S.W. 206 (Tillman County Bank v. Behringer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tillman County Bank v. Behringer, 257 S.W. 206, 113 Tex. 415, 36 A.L.R. 1302, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 176 (Tex. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice PIERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

The following is quoted from the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals as a statement of the case:

“Dell Behringer brought this suit against the Tillman County Bank of Grandfield, Oklahoma, to recover damages alleged to have resulted from the negligence of the bank in the matter of the collection of a cashier’s check issued by the Thrift-Waggoner Bank of Thrift, Texas, for the sum of $3150.00, payable to Dell Behringer, and deposited by him with the defendant bank for collection. The case was tried before the court and judgment rendered for plaintiff.

‘1 On June 1, 1920, Dell Behringer delivered to the Tillman County Bank a cashier’s check issued by the Thrift-Waggoner Bank, of Thrift, Wichita County, Texas, in his favor, for the sum of $3150.00. The Tillman County Bank credited Behringer with the amount of the cheek, and he drew $400.00 out of the account. The Tillman County Bank immediately sent the check as a cash item to its correspondent, the City National Bank of Commerce, of Wichita Falls, Texas. This was its customary way of collecting items drawn on banks in the vicinity of Wichita Falls, Texas. Nothing was said by Behringer to the Tillman County Bank in regard to the manner or method of collecting this check, and no instructions were given in reference thereto. The Wichita Falls bank promptly notified the Tillman County Bank of the receipt of the check and credit of. same to its account. The Thrift-Waggoner Bank was located at Thrift, Texas, a small town off the railroad about twenty miles from Wichita Falls. There was another bank, Johnson Bros. Bank, located at this place. On June 3rd, promptly after receipt of the cheek, the Wichita Falls bank sent it by mail as a cash item to the Thrift-Waggoner Bank, with instructions to remit in- payment. The bank cashier *419 testified that this was its customary way of handling such items. Receiving no report from the Thrift-Waggoner Bank, the Wichita Falls bank sent out successive inquiries about June 8th and June 11th, but received no response. It had been having trouble for some time before this transaction in securing remittances from the ThriftWaggoner Bank on items sent it. At one time it had been clearing such items through the First National Bank at Burkburnett, but such bank refused to handle such collection further because of the trouble in securing returns from the Thrift-Waggoner Bank. On June 16th the Wichita Falls bank sent an agent to Thrift and collected some $3000.00 ‘to apply on some of its items’, but the plaintiff’s check was not included in the amount thus collected. If the check had been presented and payment demanded ‘over the counter’ at any time prior to the evening of June 16th, it would have been paid. The Thrift-Waggoner Bank failed on June 16th, without ever having remitted in payment of plaintiff’s check which it had received and retained. The Wichita Falls bank thereupon charged the amount of the check back to its account with the Tillman County Bank, and notified such bank of the facts. This was the first notice the Tillman County Bank had that the check had not been paid. This bank in turn charged the plaintiff’s account with the amount of the check and demanded payment of $400.00 required to cover the deficiency.

“It is conceded that there are only two questions for decision on this appeal: First, whether the Wichita Falls bank was the agent of the Tillman County Bank, or of the plaintiff (Dell Behringer). Second, whether the facts support a finding that the Wichita Falls bank was negligent in the matter of the collection of the cheek.”

The trial court found that the Wichita Falls bank was negligent in the matter of handling said collection, and it also "found that said bank was the agent of the Tillman County Bank, and, therefore, that the Tillman County Bank was liable to defendant in error, Dell Behringer, for such negligence of its correspondent the Wichita Falls bank. The Court of Civil Appeals approved the holding of the trial court, both as to its findings of fact and as to its conclusion of law.

The question here to be determined is whether the Wichita Falls bank was the agent of plaintiff in error, the Tillman County Bank, or of defendant in error, Dell Behringer; or, abstractly stated, whether a correspondent bank, to which another bank has sent a customer’s negotiable paper for collection, is the agent of the forwarding bank or of the owner of the paper, and whether the forwarding bank may be held for the negligence of its correspondent bank.

This question has never been passed on by this Court, though it has been referred to in several cases in which the question was not directly involved.

*420 In Waggoner Bank & Trust Company v. Gamer Company, 113 Texas, 5, 213 S. W., 927, Chief Justice Phillips, after discussing some of the important facts and issues, uses the following language:

"The Waggoner Bank was under no absolute obligation to collect the check. The duty it was charged with was to use due diligence for its collection and due care in its selection of an agency for the purpose. It forwarded the cheek in accord with business custom to its correspondent at Dallas, a reputable and reliable bank. Its correspondent, in keeping with its custom and having no reason to apprehend that by the means adopted the check would not be duly remitted for, sent it for collection to the drawee bank. It was the only bank at the place of payment. Under this condition, the Gamer Company had no right to expect that a different means of collection would be used, or to require a different method. The correspondent bank was not guilty of negligence, under the circumstances, in sending the check for collection to the drawee bank. First National Bank v. City National Bank, 106 Texas, 297, 166 S. W., 689, L. R. A. 1918E, 336.”

Some expressions in the quotation, taken literally, would seem to support the rule maintained by plaintiff in error. However, under the facts and discussion of issues in that ease it is clear that this particular question was not necessary to its decision.

There is much conflict over this question. THE NEW YORK RULE is that the correspondent bank to which commercial paper has been sent by a forwarding bank is the agent of the forwarding bank, and that the forwarding bank is liable to the depositor for the negligence of its correspondent. Allen v. Merchants’ Bank, 22 Wend., (N. Y.), 215, 34 Am. Dec. 289. THE MASSACHUSETTS RULE is that when a bank receives negotiable paper to be collected at a distant point, and transmits the same with -due diligence and care to a reputable and proper corespondent at or near the place where the collection is to be made, it has discharged its duty, and is not responsible for the negligence of such correspondent, but that such correspondent becomes the agent of the owner of the paper. Dorchester & Milton Bank v. New England Bank, 1 Cush., (Mass.), 177.

The Supreme Court of the United States is in harmony with the New York Rule. Exchange National Bank v. Third National Bank, 112 U. S., 276, 28 L. Ed., 722. However, that court held just to the contrary in the earlier case of Bank of Washington v. Triplett, 1 Peters, 25, 7 L. Ed., 37, in an opinion by Chief Justice Marshall. The New York Rule has been followed by our Courts of Civil Appeals in the following cases, to-wit: State National Bank of Fort Worth v. Thomas, 17 Texas Civ. App., 214, 42 S.

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Bluebook (online)
257 S.W. 206, 113 Tex. 415, 36 A.L.R. 1302, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tillman-county-bank-v-behringer-tex-1923.