Wells Oil Co. v. Marcus Oil & Supply Co.

221 N.W. 547, 206 Iowa 1010
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 23, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 221 N.W. 547 (Wells Oil Co. v. Marcus Oil & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells Oil Co. v. Marcus Oil & Supply Co., 221 N.W. 547, 206 Iowa 1010 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Faville, J.

This cause' was submitted on a- stipulation of facts, from .which it appears that, on or about the 5th day of April, 1921, the appellant sold to the appellee á carload of gasoline, .which, was shipped to the appellee at Marcus, Iowa. The *1011 appellant drew a sight draft upon the appellee for the amount of the purchase price of said car of gasoline, and this, together with a bill of lading for said shipment, was forwarded, at the appellant’s instance, by the Chatsworth Savings Bank, of Chatsworth, Iowa, to the First National Bank of Marcus, Iowa. ' It' is stipulated that the said First National Bank, ‘ as the collecting agent’ ’ of the appellant, received said -draft and bill of lading,- and notified the appellee thereof. At said time, the appellee was a customer of the' said First National Bank and a depositor therein,' and had money and" funds on deposit in said bank in excess of the amount of said sight draft.' The appellee called-at said bank, and executed and delivered its check for the total amount of said sight draft, drawn upon its account in said bank. Said check was made payable to the said First National Bank; and was réceived by said bank and duly canceled oil said date, and marked “paid;” and the stipulation recites that' the bank' “paid the-same, charged the same against the aforementioned deposit on account of the appellee, and delivered the sight draft and bill of lading to the-appellee.” Thereafter, and on the same day, the said First National Bank of Marcus drew its draft upon the Security National Bank of Sioux City, Iowa, for'the amount of said sight draft, making its said'draft payable to the order of the forwarding bank;'the Chatsworth Savings Bank, and the same was mailed in due course to the said forwarding bank. The draft cleared through banks in Chicago, before it was presented to the drawee bank, and when it was presented, payment was refused, becauise of the fact that the said First National Bank of Marcus had closed its doors, the day prior to said presentation. It is stipulated that the First National Bank of Marcus had actual cash in its vaults at Marcus, Iowa, in excess of the amount of said check, with which to pay and meet the same at the time the said check was presented for payment. -It is also'stipulated that the said First National Bank subsequently closed its doors on the 14th day of April, and was in fact insolvent on all of the days involved in said transaction.

But one question ds presented for our determination in this case, and that is whether or not, under the stipulated facts, the appellee made payment for the carload of gasoline. The appellant invokes the general rule that, where one undertakes'to collect a money demand, as agent-for another, in the absence of *1012 special instructions, the agent has no authority to accept anything but money- .in payment, and hence -there was no payment to the collecting bank. It is to be noticed that in this case there is no question involved in regard to any preference claimed as to any fund in the hands of the receiver of the insolvent bank.

A review of some of our own cases will be of value at this point. In British & American, Mtg. Co. v. Tibballs, 63 Iowa 468, we considered a case where the plaintiff sent a note and-coupon, together with a release of mortgage, by mail to a bank for collection. The letter accompanying same directed that the note, mortgage, and release should be delivered “in exchange for a New York draft,- free of exchange,” for the money represented by the note. The note and • mortgage were presented to the debtor, for payment by. the cashier of the collecting bank. The debtor paid to the bank a certain portion of the money due in cash, and delivered to the cashier of the bank, as . part payment, a demand certificate of deposit issued by the collecting bank, representing money that the debtor had actually deposited in said bank. The bank made no remittance of any of the proceeds, and shortly thereafter suspended payment. The creditor was not advised that the debtor had paid part of the debt by the surrender of the certificate of deposit until after the bank had suspended payment, when it repudiated said transaction, and brought action to recover for the debt.. The evidence showed that, on the day on which the transaction occurred, the bank was paying in cash all' certificates of deposit which were presented to it, and on that day had on hand cash in excess of the amount of said debtor’s certificate of deposit. The plaintiff in said case claimed that the debtor should have presented his certificate of deposit at the bank counter, and had the money counted out to him, and then counted it back to the cashier, to effectuate a .payment. In regard thereto, we said: “The law does not require any such vain and unnecessary formality in the transaction .of business. ’ ’ There was .evidence in the case that the bank was in fact insolvent on the day of the transaction. The evidence, however, did not show that the debtor knew .that-the bank was insolvent at the time he turned, over the certificate of deposit in payment of his debt. We held that the delivery of said certificate of deposit to the collecting bank, under the- circumstances shown, where the bank had in its vaults, cash in excess of the *1013 amount of said certificate of deposit, and accepted the same in payment, and the notes and mortgages were delivered to the debtor, constituted payment of the debt. A dissenting opinion was filed in said cause by Mr. Justice Reed.

In Harbach v. Colvin, 73 Iowa 638, we considered a case where an attorney held a note and mortgage belonging to his client. A junior mortgagor, for the purpose of securing his ówn claim, desired to pay the amount' due on the first' mortgage, and procure an assignment. In pursuance of an agreement that this should be done, he accordingly drew his check to' the attorney, and delivered the note and mortgage to him. The attorney deposited the check to his own credit in. the bank, and the check was paid, on presentation, by the bank on which it was drawn. The attorney converted the money to his own use. As in the case at bar, it was argued that the transaction did not amount to á payment of the debt, for the reason that the attorney had no authority to receive anything but money in payment. We recognized the general rule above stated, and said:

“If, however, he. [the agent] receives the money on á .cheek which he has- taken in. payment, there can be no question that that would amount to payment.. If the debt should not be satisfied by the acceptance of the check, it clearly would be by the receipt of the money thereon. Now, while the money was not actually delivered to Creighton [the agent] on the check,.what was done was equivalent to that. The bank in which he deposited it gave him credit for the amount, and paid it' to' him when he chose to draw it out, and the bank upon which the cheek was drawn paid the amount when the check was' presented.*’

The opinion in this case was written by Mr. Justice Reed.

Bank of Montreal v. Ingerson, 105 Iowa 349, is relied upon by appellant.

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