Union Electric Steel Co. v. Imperial Bank

286 F. 857, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2771
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 28, 1923
DocketNo. 2929
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 286 F. 857 (Union Electric Steel Co. v. Imperial Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Electric Steel Co. v. Imperial Bank, 286 F. 857, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2771 (3d Cir. 1923).

Opinion

DAVIS, Circuit Judge.

The object of this writ of error is to review the judgment entered in the District Court on a verdict directed by the trial judge.

The proceedings in this case were instituted by the Imperial Bank of Canada, against the Union Electric Steel Company, a corporation of Delaware, doing business in the Western district of Pennsylvania, to recover the amount of three “trade acceptances” or bills of exchange drawn by the Volta Manufacturing Company, Limited, of Canada, a foreign corporation, and accepted by the Steel Company. The issues raised on all three bills are alike, and so we shall consider only those pertaining to the following bill:

“Welland, Ontario, January 31, 1921. $5,500.00.
“Sixty days after date, pay to the order of ourselves fifty-five hundred no/100 dollars. The obligation of the acceptor hereof arises out of the purchase of goods from the drawer, maturity being in conformity with the original terms of the purchase.
“Volta Manufacturing Company, Limited,
“Per Chas. W. Sims, Secretary-Treasurer.”

[859]*859There were other bills of the same nature, previously drawn by 'the Volta Company, accepted by the Steel Company, and still held by the bank. Shortly after the bill of January 31st was given, an earlier one became due. The Steel Company was unable to pay it, and, desiring an extension, sent it to the Volta Company, which took it to the bank and had it renewed. About this date, and before maturity, the bank discounted the bill under consideration and credited the proceeds, less discount and interest, to the current account of the Volta Company. The Volta Company drew against this account and when the bill became due, it was not paid, and the bank charged it back to the account of the Volta Company and credited the company with that amount on the indirect liability ledger. This increased the existing overdraft in the account of the Volta Company. The bank brought suit on this bill against the Steel Company, the acceptor, and the trial judge directed a verdict in favor of the bank.

All the assignments of error support the propositions that the trial judge erred in holding that the bank was the owner and holder of the bill for value, that it had not been paid, and that there were no questions requiring submission of the case to the jury.

The Steel Company contends that the bank was not the owner of the bill, because “there is no competent testimony showing that Volta Company checked out the proceeds of these alleged discounted acceptances.” But the testimony, admitted without objection, and in fact brought out on cross-examination, shows beyond question that the bill was discounted and the proceeds were placed to the credit of the Volta Company in its current account. This account was checked against by the Volta Company, and when the renewal bill became due this same current account was overdrawn. There is no hint that the proceeds of the discounted bill disappeared in any other way than through checks drawn against that account by the Volta Company.

Defendant further contends that, if the bank ever had title to the bill, it was lost when the bill, upon nonpayment, was charged back to the Volta Company; that this could not have been done, if title had been in the bank, and not in the Volta Company. The bank has, as books of entry, a collection register, a discount register, a direct-liability ledger, and an indirect-liability ledger. The Volta Company indorsed the bill, and when it was discounted the proceeds were placed to the credit of the Volta Company, and a charge was made against the company in the indirect-liability ledger as an indorser. When the bill was not paid at maturity it was protested, and the Volta Company became primarily liable, and so the bank credited the Volta Company with the amount of the bill on the indirect-liability ledger, and charged it with the same amount on the direct-liability ledger. The Volta Company was liable all the time, and the “charging back” was not the creation of a liability where none existed before. It was a mere bookkeeping transaction, to show direct and indirect liability. The bill was complete and regular on its face, and was discounted in good faith by the bank before maturity without notice of any infirmity in it, and the bank was therefore a holder for value in due course. Section 52, Negotiable Instruments Daw (P. D. Pa. 1901, p. 202).

[860]*860In the case of Standard Trust Co. of New York v. Commercial National Bank et al., 240 Fed. 303, 153 C. C. A. 229, one Sol N. Cone, of Greenboro, N. C., drew his check in favor of Latham, Alexander & Co., of New York City, on the Commercial National Bank of Greenboro. Latham, Alexander & Co. deposited the check in the Standard Trust Company of New York City, which placed it as cash to the account of Latham, Alexander & Co. On the same day Latham, Alexander & Co. drew checks against the deposit to its full amount. In due time the check reached the Commercial National Bank, and, Cone in the meantime having become insolvent, the check was protested, returned to the Standard Trust Company and charged to the account of Latham, Alexander & Co., which, contrary to belief and reputation, was actually insolvent when the deposit was made, and had gone into bankruptcy before the check was returned. In a suit by the Standard Trust Company against the Commercial National Bank, the bank, because the Trust Company “charged back” the check to Latham, Alexander & Co. when it was returned protested, contended that the Standard Trust Company was not the owner of the check, and that as a matter of law the check must be regarded as received merely for collection.

The facts and contentions in this case are practically identical with those in the cake under consideration. Defendants here contend, as before stated, that:

“Conceding, for the sake of argument, that plaintiff did have title to the acceptances, we respectfully submit that upon the charging back it lost all title.”

And further:

“The fact that the bánk had the right to, and actually did, charge back the unpaid acceptances to Volta, can only be explained by holding that the plaintiff simply took these acceptances for collection.”

The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in the Standard Trust Company Case, after discussing .the contention of counsel, concluded by saying:

“The practical result therefore was, whatever the form of bookkeeping, that the bank gave $5,000 for this check and never has or could get back any part of it from the payees. This being so, we deem it not doubtful that the effect of the transactions under review was to make the bank the owner of this check for value, and to clothe it as such owner with all the rights of a holder in due course of a negotiable instrument.”

When the bill in question was deposited in the bank, discounted, and. the proceeds were placed to the credit of the Volta Company, title to it, in the absence of any agreement to the contrary, was thereafter in the bank. These transactions were the ordinary method of the transfer or sale of the instrument by the holder and the purchase of it by the bank.

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Bluebook (online)
286 F. 857, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-electric-steel-co-v-imperial-bank-ca3-1923.