Citizens State Bank of Hamilton, Montana v. E. A. Tessman & Co.

Citation140 N.W. 178,121 Minn. 34
Decision Date28 February 1913
Docket Number17,799 -- (183)
PartiesCITIZENS STATE BANK OF HAMILTON, MONTANA, v. E. A. TESSMAN & COMPANY
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota (US)

Action in the district court for St. Louis county against E. A Tessman & Co. and P. G. Kraemer to recover $ 2,016 upon five bank checks. Among other matters, the complaint alleged that defendant Kraemer duly indorsed and delivered the checks in suit to plaintiff, who thereby became the owner thereof; that plaintiff duly indorsed and presented them for payment to the bank in Duluth on which they were drawn, but payment was refused by the bank on the ground that defendant E. A Tessman & Co., subsequently to the drawing of the checks had directed the bank not to pay them; that defendant company had so directed the bank; that immediately thereafter defendant Kraemer was notified that the checks had been presented for payment and payment refused.

Defendant E. A. Tessman & Co. in its answer admitted that payment of the checks was refused by the bank at Duluth upon the ground that the answering defendant had stopped payment of the checks and that this defendant had so directed the bank. It also alleged that prior to the commencement of the action and while defendant Kraemer was the owner of the checks, and without knowledge that plaintiff claimed any interest in the checks or was the holder thereof, and upon the belief that defendant Kraemer was the owner thereof, the answering defendant paid and satisfied the amount of the checks to defendant Kraemer, and he agreed with the answering defendant that the checks should be canceled and discharged.

In his answer defendant Kraemer alleged that the checks described were sent by him to plaintiff and received and retained by it solely as agent for defendant for collection only, for the purpose of placing the proceeds of the same to defendant's account in plaintiff's banking house, and for no other purpose. The other material allegations of the complaint were denied.

The amended reply to the answer of E. A. Tessman & Co. denied the new matter in that answer and alleged that plaintiff purchased two of the checks before their dishonor in good faith, and in due course of business, without notice of any failure of consideration, or other defect, and paid a valuable consideration therefor, and at all times plaintiff was a bona fide purchaser of the checks for value in the regular course of business, without knowledge or notice of any defect therein or defense thereto.

The case was tried before Dancer, J., who made findings and ordered judgment in favor of plaintiff against defendant E A. Tessman & Co. From the judgment entered pursuant to the order for judgment, and from an order denying its motion for an amendment of the conclusions of law, defendant E. A Tessman & Co. appealed. Affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

SYLLABUS

Payment of checks stopped -- action against drawer.

1. Defendant Kraemer had a deposit and check account with plaintiff bank. He deposited five checks given by defendant Tessman & Co., a corporation, and received credit for the amount. At about the same time he gave to Tessman & Co. and its officer checks on plaintiff bank for nearly the same amount. Plaintiff paid these checks, but on presenting Tessman & Co.'s checks for payment they were dishonored, leaving Kraemer's account overdrawn in at least that amount. Substituted checks were then given by Tessman & Co., for the same amounts as the original ones with protest fees added, and were forwarded in lieu thereof to plaintiff bank with a general indorsement. The bank advised Kraemer that these checks would be taken for collection, and Kraemer acquiesced. Tessman & Co. then stopped payment on these checks and settled with Kraemer therefor, knowing that plaintiff had the checks. Held, that plaintiff bank can maintain an action on the checks against Tessman & Co.

Action by indorsee under unrestricted indorsement.

2. An unrestricted indorsement of a check confers on the indorsee the legal title and the right to sue thereon, although the check is taken for collection.

Indorsement "for collection."

3. If the indorsement is restricted by the words, "for collection," no right to sue is conferred.

Revocation of authority to collect -- settlement with drawer.

4. Where the indorsement is unrestricted, but there is an agreement that the indorsee is in fact merely an agent for collection, that fact may be shown, and if the agency is a naked agency to collect, the indorser may revoke the agency and make a settlement with the drawer of the checks.

Agency irrevocable, when.

5. Where the agency is coupled with an interest, or where it is given for a valuable consideration, or where it is part of a security, the agency is irrevocable.

Same.

6. In this case the bank had an agency coupled with an interest. It had the legal title, with power to act in its own name, and a substantial interest in the subject-matter. Kraemer had no power to revoke the agency or to demand a return of the checks or their proceeds, or to prejudice the rights of the bank by a settlement with Tessman & Co. as long as the overdraft was unpaid.

Pleading and proof.

7. The allegations of the complaint are to the effect that plaintiff is the owner of the checks. Such an allegation is sustained by proof of any legal title. The legal title proved in this case is sufficient to sustain these allegations.

Finding of indorsement and delivery -- finding of "ownership."

8. A finding that checks were indorsed and delivered to the plaintiff imports everything necessary to pass the legal title from the indorser to the indorsee. A finding of "ownership" in express terms is in such case not necessary to support a judgment.

Indorsee for value.

9. It is only where a defense arises before indorsement that the question whether the plaintiff is an indorsee for value within the law merchant becomes material.

Warner E. Whipple, for appellant.

Alford & Hunt, for respondent.

OPINION

HALLAM, J.

Defendants Tessman & Co. and Kraemer are both engaged in business in Duluth. Plaintiff bank is located at Hamilton, Montana. In 1909 defendant Kraemer opened a checking account with the bank, and continued to be a depositor and customer until after the occurrence of the events hereinafter narrated.

Some time early in 1910 defendant Tessman & Co. gave defendant Kraemer five checks on a Duluth bank aggregating $ 2,000. These checks were indorsed and delivered by Kraemer to plaintiff bank and deposited therein to his credit. One thousand nine hundred and sixty-five dollars of this amount was immediately checked out by Kraemer, and paid by the bank on checks payable either to Tessman & Co. or to its officer, Christ Sanders. When the checks issued by Tessman & Co. were presented to the Duluth bank for payment they were all dishonored, and plaintiff bank charged them back to Kraemer and returned them to him. As a result of these transactions the account of Kraemer in plaintiff bank was overdrawn by the amount of these checks, and in fact more, and said overdraft has never been reduced below that amount. Subsequently Tessman & Co. executed and delivered to Kraemer a second batch of five checks on said Duluth bank, in lieu of the first batch, and for the same amounts with protest fees added, and Kraemer indorsed and delivered them to plaintiff, in lieu of the dishonored checks, and to make good the overdraft caused thereby. These are the checks sued on in this action.

Prior to this time there was no express agreement as to terms and conditions upon which checks and other commercial paper deposited by Kraemer should be received and held by the bank. It had come to be the custom and understanding between them, however, that all checks deposited by Kraemer should be credited to his checking account, and if any were dishonored, that they should be charged back and returned to him.

Upon receipt of the second batch of checks plaintiff declined to credit the amount to Kraemer's account, but entered and held them for collection. Kraemer was so advised, and acquiesced. These checks were in due course presented to the Duluth bank for payment. In the meantime Tessman & Co. had stopped payment on them, and payment was refused. The checks were thereupon returned to plaintiff bank, and it has held them ever since. No part thereof has ever been paid.

Prior to this suit Kraemer and Tessman & Co. had an accounting and settlement, in which Kraemer received and acknowledged payment of all sums due him from Tessman & Co. on account of, or growing out of, all prior dealings between them. This settlement was without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff. At the time the settlement was made, defendants had full knowledge of the possession of said checks by plaintiff bank. The court on these facts gave judgment for plaintiff against Tessman & Co. for the amount of the checks and interest, and Tessman & Co. appeals from the judgment.

1. On principle the bank should recover. It gave Kraemer a fictitious credit of $ 2,000, based entirely on Tessman & Co.'s dishonored checks. By reason of this fictitious credit, Tessman & Co. and its officer were enabled to draw out of this bank $ 1,965 on checks issued to them by Kraemer. Tessman & Co. then gave a second batch of checks, which were forwarded to make good the overdraft caused by its own acts and default. It then stopped payment on these checks, and knowing that the bank had the checks, it now claims to have paid them to Kraemer instead of to the bank. It defends this suit on the ground that the bank declined to credit the second batch of checks as cash, but, instead, entered them for collection, and claims that it was accordingly justified in ignoring the bank and making settlement...

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