Sneider v. Bank of Italy
Sneider v. Bank of Italy
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff the administratrix of the estate of George C. Sneider, deceased, is suing to recover the sum of $838.35, claimed to be the balance due on account of moneys deposited with defendant, the Bank of Italy, by said George C. Sneider during his lifetime. The present litigation is the outgrowth of a dispute over the payment of two checks for six hundred dollars each, drawn by George C. Sneider against his account with said defendant bank. These two checks, which were drawn on March 13, 1918, were indorsed by the payee and delivered to the Wells Fargo Nevada National Bank on March 14, 1918, and on the same day were sent to the clearing-house by the last-named bank. At the clearinghouse the checks were delivered to the clearing-house representative of the Bank of Italy and, in turn, for the purpose of clearing the accounts between the two banks, the Bank of Italy gave money or credit to the Wells Fargo Nevada National Bank to cover the amount represented by the Sneider checks. When the checks reached the Bank of Italy they were rejected by that bank, which sent them back to the Wells Fargo Bank by messenger on the afternoon of March 14, 1918. A slip was attached to the checks stating that the reason for the rejection was the fact that they were not *597 drawn upon the Bank of Italy. This statement was a self-evident error; there was, however, some evidence tending to show that, when the checks reached the Bank’of Italy, there were not sufficient funds in Sneider’s account to cover them, by reason of overdrafts, and that this was the real reason for the rejection. The Wells Fargo Bank, upon receiving the rejected checks, issued its own check to the Bank of Italy for one thousand two hundred dollars in order to return the sum received on account of the two cheeks in the clearing-house transaction that morning. This check was subsequently cashed by the Bank of Italy.
Later in the afternoon of March 14, 1918, after the Wells Fargo Bank’s teller had issued the refunding check and the messenger of the Bank of Italy had departed with it, it was discovered that the reason assigned for the rejection of the cheeks in question was obviously erroneous. One of the clerks of the Wells Fargo Bank telephoned to the Bank of Italy and talked with “someone,” it does not appear whom, about the matter. The last-mentioned person directed that the checks be returned to the Bank of Italy by the messenger, but, upon being informed that the messenger had left, told the clerk of the Wells Fargo Bank to put them through the clearing-house again. Accordingly, the Wells Fargo Bank sent these checks to the clearing-house on the morning of March 15th. When they again reached the Bank of Italy, the latter again rejected them, this time on the ground that Sneider, the drawer of the checks, had died that morning. A second reclamation was made against the Wells Fargo Bank and one thousand two hundred dollars, covering the checks in question, was included in a cheek issued by the Wells Fargo Bank to the Bank of Italy by way of reclamation, although it is claimed that the Wells Fargo Bank in fact refused to reclaim these checks a second time and that the one thousand two hundred dollars was included in the refunding check by mistake. After considerable controversy with the Wells Fargo Bank and the administratrix, the Bank of Italy turned one thousand two hundred dollars over to the Wells Fargo Bank, took up the two checks, and, on March 29, 1918, charged Sneider’s account with the amount of the checks, leaving Sneider’s estate chargeable with an overdraft of $361.61.
*598 The trial court held that the administratrix was entitled to recover the amount on deposit at the time of death of the intestate without any deduction on account of the two six hundred dollar checks and, accordingly, rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $838.35. Defendant appeals from the judgment.
*600 A situation similar to that presented in the instant ease was passed upon in the ease of Eastman Kodak Co. v. National Park Bank, 231 Fed. 320 (affirmed, 247 Fed. 1002, [159 C. C. A. 662]). In that case, a check.which was presented through the clearing-house was refused by the drawee and returned to the presenting bank, which refunded the money received through the clearing-house to cover the check; the reason assigned by the drawee for the rejection of the check was based upon a mistake of fact. The court held there had been no payment of the check and, in discussing the question of the mistake in rejecting the check, said: “The mistake was quite irrelevant. Had the National Park Bank refused to honor the check willfully and for no reason whatever, no liability would have attached to it; the payee can sue only the drawer, and the drawer must look to the drawee.” The fact that the presenting bank, upon receiving the rejected check, issued its own check to the drawee by way of reclamation, thus, in form, making a “repayment,” instead of changing the clearing-house entries, was also held an immaterial factor in the determination of whether or not there had ever been an actual payment. Upon this phase of the case the court said: “In form that was a repayment, but it was not such in its whole setting; it was only to avoid garbling the original entries and the footings, and so confusing the bookkeeping.” The clearing-house settlement between the banks is only a tentative arrangement of balances for the facilitation of business, and the refunding of money or credit received in the course of such a preliminary settlement is no more than a step in the correction of errors in bookkeeping temporarily tolerated in the interests of expedition.
There are other indications that the Bank of Italy did not consider that these checks had been paid on March 14th. At the close of banking hours on March 14th, there was, due to additional deposits on that afternoon, a balance on hand in Sneidcr’s account which more than covered the amount of the *602 checks in question. After the direction to the Wells Fargo Bank to return the checks in question through the clearinghouse, the defendant bank did not then and there debit them to Sneider’s account, but, on the contrary, on the ensuing morning paid and honored other checks of Sneider’s to the amount of $939, thereby so depleting his balance as to leave insufficient funds to meet the two checks being presented through the clearing-house. This fact militates strongly against appellant’s contention to the effect that the checks in question were paid as between the banks, conversationally or otherwise, on March 14th.
The facts of the case show that there was no payment of the two six hundred dollar checks prior to March 15, 1918, and the trial court was, therefore, correct in holding that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the balance to the credit of Sneider without deducting the amount of the two checks.
The judgment is affirmed.
Angellotti, C. J., Olney, J., Wilbur, J., Sloane, J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
All the Justices concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- EMMA SNEIDER, as Administratrix, Etc., Respondent, v. BANK OF ITALY (A Corporation), Appellant
- Cited By
- 14 cases
- Status
- Published