1. Aji indorsement for collection, or the like, is not a conti’act of indorsement, but the creation of a power, the indorsee being a mere agent to receive or enforce payment for the indorser’s use. Central Railroad v. First National Bank, 73 Ga. 383 ; Tiedeman Com. Pap. §268 ; 1 Daniel Neg. Instr. §§698-698(d) ; 2 Randolph Com. Pap. §§724-5-6-7, 1009 ; 1 Morse Banks, §217 ; 2 Id. §§ 583, 593 ; Bolles’ Banks & Depositors, §§220, 384(e) et seq.; Benj. Chalmers’ Bills, Notes & Cheeks *47(2 Am. ed.), 132 ; Commercial National Bank v. Armstrong, 39 Fed. Rep. 684 ; National B. & D. Bank v. Hubbell, 117 N. Y. 384.
A suit is not maintainable by the indorsee against the indorser. White v. National Bank, 102 U. S. 658. And see Lee v. Chillicothe Bank, 1 Bond, 387.
To sue other parties in order to enforce payment is deemed within the delegated power of the agent; and by reason of the great favor shown by the law to commercial paper, the restricted indorsee is allowed in some jurisdictions to sue in his own name. Wilson v. Tolson, 79 Ga. 137 ; Boyd v. Corbitt, 37 Mich. 52 ; 2 Randolph Com. Pap. §726 ; Benj. Chalmers’ Bills, Notes & Checks (2 Am. ed.), 133, 149.
The maker of a restricted indorsement can follow the bill or its proceeds over any number of subsequent indorsements, the terms of his indorsement being notice of his title. Elementary works cited supra; First Nat’l Bank v. Reno Co. Bank, 3 Fed. Rep. 257 ; Bank of the Metrop. v. First Nat’l Bank, 19 Id. 301 ; First Nat’l Bank v. Bank of Monroe, 33 Id. 408 ; In re Armstrong, Id. 405 ; Commercial Nat’l Bank v. Hamilton, 42 Fed. Rep. 880. The last case is criticised from the standpoint of bankers, but only with reference to transmitting the proceeds of collection from the collecting bank to the intermediary through whom the bill was received. The expert opinion seems to be ‘that transmission according to custom, by correspondence and proper entries of debit and credit founded thereon, the entries being made after collection, will serve commercially, and therefore legally, as the equivalent of paying over the money or forwarding it by mail or express ; and consequently that transmission by such entries, each bank making the appropriate entry for itself, will discharge the collecting bank. See 45 Banker’s Magazine, 241 ; 4 Banking Law Journal, 3. The learned United *48States circuit judge who decided the case which is thus criticised took a different view.
The bill of exchange upon which the question in the present case arises was drawn at Kansas City. Mo., by S. A. Brown & Co. upon F. A Boss, Agent Central Bailroad, Macon, Ga., payable at sight to their own order. It was indorsed by them thus : “For deposit to the credit of S. A. Brown & Co.” Following this indorsement was another in these terms : “Pay Exchange Bank, or order, for collection account of National Bank of Kansas City. M. Andmon, Cashier.” The bill, after its receipt for collection under the latter indorsement, was paid to the Exchange Bank at Macon, and thereupon, whilst that bank had possession of the money, a garnishment, issued at the instance of Freeman as a creditor of S. A. Brown & Co., the drawers and payees of the bill, was served upon it. No facts are in evidence as to the actual ownership of the money at the time the garnishment was served except the bill itself and the indorsements thereon. The legal import of the first indorsement, that of S. A. Brown & Co., being that the ownership of the bill was retained by them, the terms of the second indorsement, that made by the cashier of the National Bank of Kansas City, are of no consequence. As the indorsements stand, there is iio express link of connection between them — no written link naming or constituting the National Bank of Kansas City a holder of the bill for any purpose whatever. But in virtue of being an actual holder, that bank would have the right to fill up the first indorsement so as to make it read thus: “Pay to the National Bank of Kansas City, or order, for deposit to the credit of S. A. Brown & Co.” There might be other terms in which the full indorsement which that bank would be authorized to supply could be expressed; but on the state of facts before us, that bank would have no *49authority to inset any terms which would vary substantially the legal import of the original indorsement, or render it other than a restrictive indorsement confining ownership of the bill and its proceeds to S. A. Brown & Co. Lee v. Chillicothe Bank, 1 Bond, 383. The proceeds would .be impressed with this ownership, until they were actually so deposited. The garnishment fastened upon them before this did or could take place, for the money was in the hands of the collecting bank, the Exchange Bank of Macon, when the garnishment was served. The agency created by the owners of the bill by means of their indorsement had not been fully executed. The Kansas City bank was still the immediate agent under them, and the Macon bank was a sub-agent under it. The latter hold the money as a bailee for the ultimate use and benefit of the owners. It could discharge itself by transmitting to the Kansas City bank at any time before the garnishment was served, but could not do so after such service, ' the fund being then in gremio legis.
There being in evidence no facts extrinsic to the bill itself and its indorsements to throw light upon the question of title, we are not to be understood as holding that such facts might not exert a controlling influence on the question, Indeed, there is authority for giving them such eflect when duly proved. A deposit of paper in bank by a customer, he indorsing it “ For deposit,” may operate to clothe the bank with title under certain circumstances. National Commercial Bank v. Miller, 77 Ala. 168 ; 2 Morse on Bank. §577. But the general rule is, that by a restrictive indorsement the depositor retains the title. Bolles on Banks and Depositors, §220.
2. The indorsement to be construed being free from ambiguity and having a clear and definite legal meaning, expert testimony to aid in its interpretation was *50not admissible. The duty of construing such an indorsement, by its own terms and without the opinion of witnesses, devolves upon the court, or upon the jury, the case being on appeal in a justice’s court. Mr. Cabaniss, the cashier of the bank garnished, deposed to no fact which actually transpired in relation to this particular indorsement, but only gave his opinion*, founded upon his expert knowledge, as to what had probably transpired between the Kansas City bank and the payees.of the bill, and as to the legal effect of such an indorsement. His opinion was wholly irrelevant and inadmissible. But as no ground of objection to his evidence is stated in the petition for certiorari, we cannot say that the superior court ought to have sustained the certiorari because of this error committed by the justice’s court.
3. That it is not the legal duty of the justice of the peace presiding over a jury trial in his court to instruct the jury as to the law of the case, has been heretofore ruled more than once. Johnson v. Nelms, 21 Ga. 192 ; Adams v. Clark, 64 Ga. 648 ; Bendheim v. Baldwin, 73 Ga. 594.
But inasmuch as the jury, under the evidence before them, erred in finding in favor of the garnishee, the certiorari should have been sustained for that reason, and the superior court erred in not sustaining it.
Judgment reversed.