In general terms, it may be said that the law imposes upon the holder of a bank check the duty of presenting it for payment within a reasonable time; and, if he fail to present'the check seasonably, the delay is at his own peril. What is a reasonable time will.depend upon the facts in each case ; yet in the absence of exceptional circumstances, such reasonable time has been fixed. Thus it has been defined to be “the shortest period, within which, consistently with the ordinary employments and duties of commercial business, the duty of presentment and demand could be performed.” Boone on Banking, 173 ; Story on Promissory Notes, 497.
In the case of Industrial Trust Title and Saving Co. v. Weakley, 103 Ala. 458, this court recognized and applied the rule, which requires the holder of a check, receiving it at the same place in which the drawee transacts business to present it for payment, within banking hours, on the day it is received, or the following secular day.
In the case now before us, a check drawn on a bank, at Greenville, Ala., by the appellant, a debtor, was sent by him to the appellees, his creditors, at Philadelphia, Pa., and hence we are required to determine what diligence the appellees ought to have exercised in the collection of the check, which they received and accepted, at a place remote from the location of the bank upon which it was drawn.
Speaking of the duty of a holder of a check, under the circumstances stated, Judge Story says : “Where he receives the check from the drawer in a place distant from the place of payment, it will be sufficient for him to forward it by the post to some person at the latter place on the next secular day after it is received; and the person to whom it is thus forwarded, will not be bound to present, it for payment until the day after it. has reached him by the course of the post. If the payment is not thus regularly demanded, and the bank or bankers should fail before the check is presented, the loss will be the loss of the holder, who will have made the *270check his own by his laches.” — Story on Promissory Notes, 493.
A check is intended for payment, not circulation; and as between the original parties to it, the time allowed for its presentation will not be enlarged by successive transfers.
These principles seem to be well established and to be recognized by the standard text writers. — 2 Daniel on Neg. Inst., § 1592 ; Boone on Banking, 173 ; 2 Morse on Banks and Banking, §421; Tiedeman on Com. Paper, §' 443 ; 3 Randolph on Com. Paper, § •1106; Byles on Bills, § 20 ; Chitty on Bills, (13th Am. ed.), p. 436.
Undoubtedly cases may be found, some of which are cited by council for appellees, where a longer time than that above stated, was, under exceptional and peculiar circumstances, allowed for presentation of a check. Here, no extraordinary or unusual circumstances, calling for a relaxation of the settled rule are presented; and, hence, the simple and definite requirement, imposing the duty of sending the check to a person, bank or other collecting agency at Greenville for presentation, without the selection of a circuitous route or the intervention of intermediate and successive collecting banks, whereby of necessity the presentation would be unduly delayed, must be applied.
The appellees having received the check of the appellant on December 12, 1893, at Philadelphia, it was their duty to forward it to Greenville, Ala., at the latest, on the following day. This duty they could perform in person, or they might entrust it to a local bank.'
The latter course they pursued, by depositing the check on December 13, 1893, with the Union National Bank of Philadelphia for collection. This, however, did not enlarge the time for transmitting the instrument to the place of payment; and in the collection of the check the bank acted as the agent of the holders.
In sending the check to Charleston, S. C., whence it went, first to Montgomery, Ala., and thence to Greenville, Ala., the place of payment, whereby' presentation .and demand was delayed until December 19, 1893, after the failure of the drawee bank, there was negligence, imposing upon the appellees whatever loss the appellant suffered from, the laches. — Gifford v. Hardell, 88 Wis. *271538 ; s. c. 43 Am. St. Rep. 925 ; First National Bank v. Miller, 37 Neb. 500 ; s. c. 40 Am. St. Rep. 499. There is nothing in the evidence from which it can be inferred that the method pursued -was within the contemplation or expectation of the appellant, nor that it was according to any previous course of dealing between the parties, or that he expressly or impliedly assented to the delay. Neither can we judicially know that any custom existed in Philadelphia whereby checks received for collection on Greenville, Ala., were sent by way of Charleston, S. C., for presentation; nor if such a practice prevailed, that.it was known to the appellant. If any one of these things, or all combined, would authorize the inference that he assented to the intervening delay, or could justify a holding that he could not complain of a delay — questions we do not now consider — it was incumbent upon the appellees to introduce into the record evidence of the existence of such facts. It is satisfactorily established, by letters incorporated in the bill of exceptions, and from the post marks on the envelopes, admitted to be the true dates on which the letters were mailed at Philadelphia and received at Greenville, that by due course of mail a letter posted at the former place, on December 13, 1893, at any time up to 7:30 o’clock P. M. would have reached the latter point not later than 10 o’clock P. M.. on the 15th of the same month, or within forty-eight hours. Thus, the original envelope sent-up for our inspection, shows that the letter, enclosing a receipt for the check, mailed at 7:30 o’clock P. M. on December 12 at Philadelphia, arrived at Greenville at 1 o’clock P. M. on December 14th, or in less than two days. Hence, if the check had been forwarded directly to Greenville on December 13th,when it was sent to Charleston, it would, with the diligence the law requires, have been presented to the bank, upon which it was drawn, on Saturday, December 16th, and of consequence prior to the failure on Monday the 18th.
It may be that the appellees, or their local bank, had no correspondent at Greenville, although as to this the evidence does not inform us; or it may not have been convenient to pursue the course the law directs. If such was the case, they could easily have declined to accept the check; they were not bound to receive it; but having done so, and having undertaken its collection, *272they must bear all the burdens, and exercise all the diligence imposed by law.
At this point, the appellees invoke the well recognized rule, which declares that the drawer of a check has no cause to complain of its delay in its presentation, if he has thereby suffered no loss or damage ; and they contend that the appellant must show affirmatively that he had funds, from which the check would have been paid, in the hands of the drawee, during the period within which by the exercise of due diligence upon the part of the holders, the check would have been presented. The contention is rested upon the fourth paragraph of the agreed statement of facts, which recites merely that the appellant had the amount of the check to his credit with the drawees, at the time of the assignment and failure. As the fact is thus presented, a question is raised as to the burden of proof. In most cases of this kind to be found in the books, there is positive evidence that the drawer had, or had not funds, to meet the check, when drawn, or during the interval before the failure ; or that he had or had not withdrawn his funds. In this case, the parties have not advised us by affirmative testimony, or by agreement, as to the state of appellant’s accounts with his bankers, anterior to the time of their failure ; and, hence the refusal must turn upon legal presumptions, arising out of the facts which are stated in the agreement of the parties, constituting the evidence in the case. The important inquiry is, where rests the burden of proof? Without entering upon any prolonged discussion, it will be sufficient to say that the authorities are quite uniform in holding that checks are presumably drawn upon or against a deposit of funds, and where the drawer establishes negligence or undue delay in the presentation of his check, and the failure of the drawee bank, after the expiration of the period within which, with .due diligence, the check would have been presented, the presumption of injury arises, casting upon the holder the burden of proving the drawer has suffered no loss or damage by the delay. — Stephens v. Park, 73 Ill. 387 ; Willetts v. Payne, 43 Ill. 433 ; Anderson v. Rodgers, 53 Kas. 542 ; Little v. Phenix Bank, 2 Hill, 427 ; Planters Bank v. Merritt, 7 Heisk. (Tenn.) 177 ; 2 Morse on Banks and Banking, § 421; Daniel on Neg.Inst., § 1588 ; Story on Prom. Notes, § 498; Edwards on Bills, p. 398 ; 3 *273^Randolph on Com. Paper; § 1106, p. 94. As Kent, J., said in Cruger v. Armstrong, 3 Johns. Cas. 5 (2 Am. Dec. 126), “the presumption is, that the check would have been paid if diligently presented.”
The presumption of loss arising out of want of diligence in the presentation of a check, and the intervening failure of the drawee, may be rebutted by proof that the drawer had no available funds with the drawee to meet the check, or that he withdrew them before the failure. No such proof was produced in this case ;'on the contrary, it is admitted that the necessary amount, presumably in the bank wherewith to pay the check, remained to the credit of the appellant, with his bankers, when the failure occurred, and it is further admitted that the proprietors of the bank were still insolvent at the time of the trial. In this state of evidence, the appellees failed to meet the burden resting upon them ; the presumption of damage to appellant stands unrebutted ; and the loss must fall upon the appellees, to whose want of diligence it is attributable.
The suit was brought upon the original debt, in settlement of which the check was given, and the appellant, who was defendant, in the circuit court, interposed the plea of payment. It is contended by the appellees that the defense, arising out of the failure to present the check, whereby loss resulted, is not available under that plea. With this view we do not agree. The correct rule is thus stated by Stekritt, J., in Kilpatrick v. Home Building & Loan Association, 119 Pa. St. 30 : “It is well settled that, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, a check or promissory note, of either the debtor or a third person, received for debt, is merely conditional payment, that is, satisfaction of the debt if and when paid; but that acceptance of such note or check implies an undertaking of due diligence in presenting it for payment, &c.; and if the party from whom it is received sustains loss by want of such diligence, it will be held to operate as actual payment.”
By failure of appellees to exercise proper diligence in the collection of the check, whereby tíre appellant, if. held upon the original debt, would suffer loss, they made the check their own and turned, what was at first only a conditional payment into an absolute discharge of the debt, for which the check was given. — Boone, on Bank *274and Banting, § 181; Industrial Trust, Title and Savings Co. v. Weakley, 103 Ala. 458; Middlesex v. Thomas, 20 N. J. Eq. 39; Kahn v. Walton, 46 Ohio St. 195.
The plaintiffs were not entitled to recover, and the circuit court erred in giving the affirmative charge in their behalf.
As the facts were agreed upon by the parties, and as no inferences .entitling the plaintiff to recover were deducible therefrom, the court might well, upon request, without hypothesis, have directed the jury that upon the agreed evidence the defendant was entitled to a verdict.
Let the judgment be reversed and. the cause'remanded.
Reversed and remanded.