Opinion by
Porter, J.,The plaintiff, for a few months prior to the transaction out of which this controversy arose, had a small deposit account in the defendant bank. He avers that on April 22,1916, there was due him in his account with the bank the sum of $60.33, the defendant asserts that upon that day the balance due the plaintiff was only 33 cents. The testimony disclosed that there was no controversy between the parties as to the deposits which the plaintiff had made in the bank; the only question of fact in dispute is as to whether the plaintiff had, on April 4, 1916, drawn a check for $60, which the defendant bank had paid. The plaintiff, on April 22, 1916, drew a check upon the defendant bank in favor of the Empire Printing Company for $45, which check the bank refused to pay and it was returned to the payee marked “Insufficient funds.” The plaintiff subsequently brought this action to recover damages for the alleged injury to his “reputation and business credit.” The trial in the court below resulted in a verdict for $500, upon which judgment was entered, and the defendant appeals.
The plaintiff testified in his own behalf and during his examination in chief gave a detailed account of all his dealings with the defendant bank and produced a number of checks which he positively testified were all that he had given during the month of April, 1916, and according to his testimony there was, on April 22, 1916, a balance of $60.33 in his favor upon his account with the bank, when he gave to the Empire Printing Company his check “No; 130” for $45, payment of which was by the bank refused. Having thus in his examination in chief given what purported to be a full account of his *4dealings with the bank, it was entirely competent for tbe defendant, upon cross-examination, to fully develop tbe details of the course of dealings. Tbe cross-examination developed tbe fact that tbe plaintiff bad, on April 22, 1916, himself gone to tbe bank with bis check “No. 128” for $100 wbicb be presented for payment and payment was refused by tbe cashier of tbe bank, who told him that tbe balance in bis favor was only about $50, whereupon tbe plaintiff destroyed tbe check for $.100 wbicb tbe bank bad refused to pay, and wrote bis check “No. 129” for $50, wbicb be presented to tbe bank and it was paid. It is proper here to observe that although tbe check for $100 wbicb tbe bank refused to pay to tbe plaintiff personally bore tbe lower serial number “No. 128” than tbe check which was given to tbe Empire Printing Company and payment of wbicb was refused (tbe latter being “No. 130”), both checks bear tbe same date. These facts having been elicited on cross-examination, tbe witness was asked tbe following question: “Q. So that you, knowing at tbe time you gave this check for $45 to tbe Empire Printing Company, that there was some discrepancy between your account that you kept and tbe account kept by tbe State Bank of Philadelphia, you didn’t make any investigation at tbe time to find out where this discrepancy existed?” Tbe court sustained an objection, on behalf of tbe plaintiff, to this question, to wbicb ruling tbe defendant excepted and upon it tbe first specification of error is founded.
Tbe plaintiff is seeking to recover damages for tbe injury to bis reputation and business credit, caused by tbe failure of tbe bank to pay bis check. “There is something more than a breach of contract in such cases; there is a question of public policy involved,......and a breach of tbe implied contract between the bank and its depositor entitles tbe latter to recover substantial damages”: Patterson v. Marine N. Bank, 130 Pa. 419. Tbe implied contract of tbe bank with its depositor is that it will pay bis checks when presented in proper *5form so long as lie has funds with the bank to meet them. The effect upon the business credit of a merchant, such as this plaintiff, caused by the refusal of his bank to pay his check is of the same nature as that which results when his commercial paper goes to protest. The reason for the rule that a depositor whose check is improperly refused shall be permitted to recover substantial damages was clearly stated by our Brother Head, in Weiner v. North Penn Bank, 65 Pa. Superior Ct. 290: “The banks of the country, through which the great volume of our commercial business is transacted, have a deserved reputation for accuracy and care in the conduct of their affairs. Hence, when the check of a depositor is refused at the counter of his bank, that portion of the commercial world, greater or less, that comes within the sphere of his transactions, promptly imputes the blame to him rather than to the bank. This results in an injury to him none the less real and substantial because he may be unable to prove its exact extent. In such cases, as in many others where affirmative proof of the precise money value of an injury, which is to be compensated, ex necessitate, in damages, is difficult if not impossible, it must be left to the common sense and sound discretion of the jury.” The same principle was applied in Nadel v. Peoples Bank, 66 Pa. Superior Ct. 396. The very nature of the injury for which compensation is sought and the principles upon which a recovery is permitted, without proof of actual damage, render it proper to admit evidence as to the manner in which a plaintiff has taken precautions to guard his own reputation in his course of dealing with the defendant and all the circumstances in which the plaintiff gave the check, payment of which has been refused by the bank: Love v. Tioga Trust Co., 68 Pa. Superior Ct. 447. “That portion of the commercial world, greater or less, that comes within the sphere” of the transaction, is certainly in some measure dependent upon the circumstances in which the check is issued and payment re*6fused. When a depositor goes to a bank and presents his own check, refusal of payment is certainly less likely to become known to the business world than when a check is issued in the regular course of business to another party and it is returned to that party marked “No funds.” When a depositor is the only person who knows that payment of his check has been refused, he cannot increase the amount of damages to which he might be entitled by publishing the fact to the world. In this case the plaintiff had presented his own check for $100, at a time when if his testimony is correct, he had a balance of $110.33 to his credit, and the bank had refused payment of that check, the cashier telling him that his balance was only $50. When the bank refused to pay that check, if the plaintiff’s testimony is true, the breach of duty was complete and he might have brought his action at once. The plaintiff then knew that there was a discrepancy between the account as he had kept it and that of the bank, and knowing this he presented another check for $50, the amount of his balance according to the books of the bank, and that check was paid. In these circumstances it was entirely proper for the defendant to ask him, upon cross-examination, whether knowing these facts he gave his check to the Empire Printing Company, without making any investigation as to the character of the discrepancy between his account and that of the bank. The first specification of error is sustained.
The second specification of error refers to the refusal of the court to affirm a point asking an instruction that if the plaintiff drew the check negligently without investigation as to the condition of the account, the verdict should be in favor of the defendant. This point was properly refused by the learned judge of the court below. The plaintiff was seeking to recover damages for the breach of an implied contract. If the jury were satisfied under the evidence that the plaintiff had with the bank funds sufficient to pay the check, then he was entitled to *7recover, although it was proper for the jury to consider the circumstances under which the check was given in determining the amount of the damages to which he was entitled. The plaintiff testified that he had not given a check for $60 on the 4th of April, 1916. The books of the bank offered in evidence indicated that such a check had been charged against him in his account. The defendant did not produce that check, nor did it attempt to prove that it had been returned to the plaintiff. The books of the bank were evidence, but they were contradicted by the testimony of the plaintiff, and the question was for the jury.
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.