American Exchange National Bank v. Theummler

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion, of the court:

When appellee left her draft, which was payable to her order, with the South Side Savings Bank of Milwaukee, she endorsed the draft in blank. She did not sell the draft to the South Side Savings Bank of Milwaukee, but left it for collection only. The draft was sent by the South Side Savings Bank of Milwaukee to the appellant to be collected, but the appellant, it is conceded, had no notice or knowledge, that the draft had been left with the Milwaukee bank for collection only and that the Milwaukee bank received the draft from appellee, as agent, and not as owner. So far as appellant knew, under the admitted facts, the South Side Savings Bank of Milwaukee was the owner of the draft. The draft itself was not introduced in evidence, and, therefore, it is impossible to say whether there was anything upon the face of the draft, which was calculated to put appellant upon inquiry as to whether the South Side Savings Bank held it for collection, or as owner. The instructions, asked by the appellant and refused by the court, announced to the jury that the possession by the South Side Savings Bank of the draft in controversy, endorsed in blank by the appellee, was prima facie evidence that the South Side Savings Bank was the owner of the draft, and that appellant had the right to treat the South Side Savings Bank as the owner thereof, and that appellant had the right to apply the proceeds of the collection of the draft-to the payment or reduction of an overdraft of the South Side Savings Bank in the manner and under the circumstances set forth in the statement preceding this opinion, if, at the time appellant so applied the proceeds of the draft, it had no notice that the South Side Savings Bank held such draft for collection only for the appellee.

Under the decisions of this court, and under the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States followed and endorsed by this court, the instructions so refused stated the law correctly, and their refusal was error. The instruction, actually given by the court to the jury at the request of the jury, made an announcement, which was to some extent in conflict with the doctrine thus embodied in appellant’s refused instruction.

In Bank of the Metropolis v. New England Bank, 1 How. 234, it appeared that there had been for several years mutual and extensive dealings between the Bank of the Metropolis and the Commonwealth Bank, and an account current kept between them, in which they mutually credited each other with the proceeds of all paper remitted for collection when received, and charged all costs of protests, postage, etc.; that accounts were regularly transmitted from the one to the other and settled upon these principles, and that the paper transmitted always appeared upon its face to be the property of the respective banks and to be remitted by each of them upon its own account; and it was there held, that there was a lien for a general balance of account upon the paper thus transmitted, no matter who might be its real owner, the Supreme Court of the United-States there saying: “If the notes remitted had been the property of the Commonwealth Bank, there would be no doubt of the right to retain; because it has been long settled, that wherever a banker has advanced money to another, he has a lien on all the paper securities, which are in his hands, for the amount of his general balance, unless such securities were delivered to him under a particular agreement. The paper in question was, however, the property of the New England Bank, and was endorsed and delivered to the Commonwealth Bank for collection without any consideration, and as its agent in the ordinary course of business; it being usual, and indeed necessary, so to endorse it, in order to enable the agent to receive the money. Yet the possession of the paper was prima facie evidence that it was the property of the last mentioned bank; and without notice to the contrary, the plaintiff in error had a right so to treat it, and was under no obligation to inquire whether it was held as agent or as owner; and if an advance of money had been made upon this paper to the Commonwealth Bank, the right to retain for that amount would hardly be disputed. We do not perceive any difference in principle between an advance of money and a balance suffered to remain upon the faith of these mutual dealings. In the one case as well as the other, credit is given upon the paper deposited or expected to be transmitted in the usual course of the transactions between the parties.”

In Russell v. Hadduck, 3 Gilm. 233, this court referred to the case of Bank of the Metropolis v. New England Bank, supra, stated its facts and endorsed its doctrine, quoting from it the statement therein made that there is no dif- • ference in principle between an advance of money and a balance suffered to remain upon the faith of the mutual dealings there referred to, inasmuch as in the one case as well as in the other, credit was given upon the paper deposited or expected to be transmitted in the usual course of transactions between the parties.

In Bank of the Metropolis v. New England Bank, 6 How. 227, the same case again came before the Supreme Court of the United States, and the second opinion, as well as the first, was delivered by Mr. Chief Justice Taney, who summarized the doctrine previously announced by him in certain instructions which, as it was therein declared, should have been given by the lower court to the jury. Those instructions were as follows: “If, upon the whole evidence before them, the jury should find that the Bank of the Metropolis, at the time of the mutual dealings between them, had notice that the Commonwealth- Bank had no interest in the bills and notes in question, and that it transmitted them for collection merely as agent, then the Bank of the Metropolis was not entitled to retain against the New England Bank for the general balance of the account with the Commonwealth Bank. And if the Bank of the Metropolis had not notice that the Commonwealth Bank was merely an agent, but regarded and treated it as the owner of the paper transmitted, yet the Bank of the Metropolis is not entitled to retain against the real owners, unless credit was given to the Commonwealth Bank, or balances suffered to remain in its hands to be met by the negotiable paper transmitted or expected to be transmitted in the usual course of the dealings between the two banks. But if the jury found that, in the dealings mentioned in the testimony, the Bank of the Metropolis regarded and treated the Commonwealth Bank as the owner of the negotiable paper which it transmitted for collection, and had no notice to the contrary, and, upon the credit of such remittances made or anticipated in the usual course of dealing between them, balances were from time to time suffered to remain in the hands of the Commonwealth Bank, to be met by the proceeds of such negotiable paper, then the plaintiff in error is entitled to retain against the defendant in error for the balance of account due from the Commonwealth Bank.”

The same doctrine has been announced by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in the case of Wood v. Boylston Nat. Bank, 129 Mass. 359, where the case of Bank of the Metropolis v. New England Bank is referred to, and the case of Lawrence v. Stonington Bank, 6 Conn. 521, is distinguished from such cases as the case there in hand, and here at bar. It appears that in the Connecticut case, the bank to whom the draft was sent for collection had notice that it was held for collection merely, and knew of the failure of the remitting bank before the draft was paid.

In Morris v.Preston, 93 Ill. 215, this court said (p. 221): “With all such paper possession is evidence of ownership, and the commercial value of such paper would be greatly impaired and its negotiability would be destroyed, if the taker was required to investigate the title and to seek for latent equities before receiving it. But the law has imposed no such burthen upon him until he has notice, or knowledge of facts which on inquiry would lead to notice. Appellant, when she placed the notes thus endorsed in the hands of Durham, thereby empowered him to sell and pass the title, however much he may have disregarded his duty or her instructions. Nor would the purchaser be required to see that he paid to her the proceeds, nor could he, when he was wholly uninformed of her rights, or that she had any, even the slightest, claim. She had invested Durham with what appeared to the commercial world an absolute title, with nothing to excite suspicion or to demand inquiry. Having done so, and he having abused his trust by pledging the notes for his own purposes in disregard of her rights, she must suffer the loss. He had the power, by being thus invested with evidence of title, to deal with the paper with all persons not having notice, precisely as though it was his own, and appellant cannot look to appellees to make good the loss occasioned by his bad faith, or the abuse of trust by her agent. It is, no doubt, a great hardship that she should sustain the loss, but she, by misplaced confidence, empowered her agent to wrong either her or others, and as one or the other must suffer the loss, she having placed it in Durham’s power to perpetrate the fraud, it must fall on her.”

Again, in the recent case of Doppelt v. National Bank of the Republic, 175 Ill. 432, this court held that a blank endorsement of a check by the payee transfers a good title to the holder, free from all equities in the payee’s favor; and that a bank receiving from another bank a check endorsed in blank by the payee, is authorized to collect the check, credit the proceeds to the forwarding bank and honor its drafts against the credit; and the payee cannot, upon the insolvency of the forwarding bank, recover from the bank which made the collection, without proof that the latter had notice that the forwarding bank received the check merely as the payee’s agent for collection; and it was there said: “Under the pleadings it became incumbent on appellant to show that he deposited these checks with Kopperl for collection, only. He endorsed them in blank, without any restrictions whatever, and, under the well settled rule of this State, he thereby transferred a good title to Kopperl, free from all equities in his favor. * "x" * Under these circumstances appellee could not know that he claimed or pretended to any rights in the paper, and it was authorized to act upon Kopperl’s endorsement of the checks, and proceed to collect the same and credit his account with the proceeds.”

Cases in New York are referred to which hold the contrary of the doctrine here announced. (McBride v. Farmers’ Bank, 26 N. Y. Rep. 450.) But it is to be noted, that the courts in the State of New York have refused to follow the doctrine, laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States in Bank of the Metropolis v. Neio England Bank, supra, while the Supreme Court of this State has adopted the doctrine of the United States Supreme Court upon this subject.

The instructions, asked by appellant and refused by the court, required the jury to find from the evidence that the appellant applied the proceeds of the collection of the draft in controversy to the payment of the overdraft before it had any notice of the insolvency of the South Side Savings Bank of Milwaukee, as well as before it bad any notice that the South Side Savings Bank received the draft as agent and for collection only. This feature of the refused instructions was correct under the doctrine laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States in Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania v. Armstrong, 148 U. S. 58, where the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Brewer, say: “We also agree with the circuit court, in its conclusions as to those moneys collected by sub-agents to whom the Fidelity was in debt, and which collections had been credited by the sub-agents upon the debts of the Fidelity to them, before its insolvency was disclosed, for there the moneys had practically passed into the hands of the Fidelity, and the collection had been fully completed. It was not a mere matter of bookkeeping between the Fidelity and its agents; it was the same as though the money had actually reached the vaults of the Fidelity. It was a completed transaction between it and its sub-agents, and nothing was left but the settlement between the Fidelity and the principal— the plaintiff.”

For the errors above indicated, the judgment of the Appellate Court and the judgment of the circuit court are reversed, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed. r

„ , , 7 , Reversed and remanded.

Boggs and Hand, JJ., dissenting.