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I I THE DISTRICT COURT OP THE UNITED STATES
I
FOB THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA.
CAPITAL GRAIN & FEED COLtPANY
VS.

1TO. 659
AT LAW.

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ATLANTA

This is an action at law for damages on account of
alleged negligence of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta in
the handling of a check sent it for collection.

Demurrers

to the petition and to the answer are for decision.
The petition sets up that petitioners, a partnership
doing business under the name Capital Grain & Feed Company, having
a deposit of more than $7,500.00 in the Merchants Bank of Montgomery,
Alabama, drew their check for that sum, payable to the order of
Fifth National Bank of Hew York, had it certified by the Merchants
Bank and sent it to the Fifth National Bank for collection and
credit, it being agreed with the latter bank as follows:
"This bank acts only as collecting agent and
assumes no liability on account of delay or loss
while items are in transit, or until it receives
final actual payments from its correspondents."
The check was forwarded by the Fifth National Bank to the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York and by the latter to defendant, who received it on the morning of December 19th,
1922.

On the afternoon of the next day the check was sent

for payment direct to the drawee, Merchants Bank of Montgomery, which was a member bank of defendant, reaching it on
the morning of December 21st.

Merchants Bank charged the

check to plaintiff's account and sent its draft on the defendant in payment, which was received in Atlanta December
22nd.



Though there were funds to the credit of the Merchants

X-4P.48U
Bank sufficient to pay the draft, it r o s not paid :vnd pro/.
ceeds remitted to the New Yorlc bank.

The following day the

Merchants Bank was put in the hands of a receiver, and it is
now impossible to collect from it beyond some dividends paid
by the receiver, which have reduced the loss to $3,750.00.
Negligence is claimed in that defendant knew the weak condition of the Merchants Bank and should not have delayed collecting the check as it did, should not have sent it direct
to the drawee but should have presented it for payment in
cash over the counter, the Merchants Bank having on hand all
during December, 1932, cash sufficient to pay it, and should
not have accepted the draft in payment, or having done so,
should not have delayed paying the draft until after the
failure of the Merchants Bank.

Notice of the facts was

not given by defendant until the afternoon of December 23rd,
and this is also charged as negligence.
1.

The first contention urged is that the defendant

had no such relations with plaintiffs as to be liable to
suit by them, but is answerable only to the forwarding bank.
Under the quoted agreement with the Fifth National Bank, that
bank did not accept ownership of the check, though it was
payable to it, but was to act only as an agent for its collection.

Had there been no other stipulation, since the

transaction was in the course of banking business done in
Hew York, what is termed"the New York rule" would have applied, by which it would be held that the Fifth National
Bank had undertaken to make the ultimate collection, furnish-




ing the necessary agencies and means therefor and. not merely
to procure for the plaintiffs other agents to make it.

Ex-

charge National Bank v. Third National Bank, 112 U. S. 276.
The result would " e that the correspondent "banks to which
b
the check was forwarded would be the agents of the Fifth
National Bank and not of plaintiffs, and for non-feasance,
at least, would not he accountable to plaintiffs, as they
would be if their agents.

The plaintiffs would be enti-

tled to hold the Fifth National Bank, and it alone, responsible.

But the New York rule is, after all, only a presump-

tion of law as to what the parties to such a transaction intended to agree to.

It may be altered or abrogated by

statute, or departed from by mere agreement otherwise.

Fed-

eral Reserve Bank of Richmond v. Malloy, et al., 264 U. S.
160/» In that case the deposit for collection was made in
Florida where the legislature had enacted that "When a bank
receives for collection any check . . . and forwards
the same for collection as herein provided ( i.e. without delay, in usual commercial way in use according to the regular course of business of banks), it shall only be liable
after actual final payment is received by it, except in case
of want of due diligence on its part as aforesaid."

This

statute was held to enter into the contract of deposit for
collection, and since the effect of it was to relieve the
receiving bank from liability for the defaults of its correspondents, they were held to be intended not to be agents
of the receiving bank and answerable only to it, but—aJL,the




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owner of the check and answerable to him.

Otherwise the

owner would " e wholly without remedy on the one hand and on
b
the other a principal would have escaped responsibility for
the negligence of its own agents, and those agents have escaped responsibility to any person.

In the present case

the agreement is that the receiving bank "assumes no liability
on account of delay or loss while items are in transit or
until it receives final actual payments from its correspondents .

The substance of this agreement is exactly the

same as the Florida statute and must be held to have the
same consequences.

Bach correspondent is the agent

of plaintiffs and answerable to them for its conduct.
The plaintiffs may therefore sue the defendant for its negligence.
2.

While the relationship between plaintiffs and

the collecting bank is controlled by the law and the contract at
the place of deposit, as has just been ruled, the duty of the
correspondent bank is primarily regulated by the law and
the customs of banking at the place where it does its business, and may be affected likewise by special instructions given it or agreements made.

When the Fifth National

Bank, through the Federal Reserve Bank of Hew York, procured
the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta to act for plaintiffs
in collecting this check, the parties must have expected the
thing to be done according to the law and customs applying
in Atlanta and Montgomery.

While the original rule of law

was that a check ought not properly to be sent for payment




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direct to the drawee 'bank. Reserve Bank v. Malloy, supra.,
yet in both Georgia and Alabama there are closely similar
statutes enacting that checks drawn on a bank in another
city within or without the state may "be sent for payment by
a collecting bank direct to the drawee bank without incurring
liability;

"Provided, however, such forwarding bank shall have

used due diligence in other respects in connection with
the collection of such instrument."

See Georgia Acts 1919,

page 207 Sec. 36; Alabama Acts 1519, page 856, Sec. 1.

Un-

der this legislation the mere sending the check to the drawee
for payment is not negligence and the collecting bank is not
rendered liable for consequences whicl-* were not reasonably
to be foreseen by it.

If, however, the drawee bank is

known to the collecting bank to be in a failing condition,
as is alleged here, and liable at any time to suspend payments, due diligence may require some extra effort at collection to be made.

Whether such was the case here and

what due diligence would have required to be done under the
circumstances, are questions of fact to be determined by a
jury.

Ordinarily a forwarding for presentment on the day

after receipt of a check is considered sufficient diligence,
5. Cyc« 532; Comer v. Dufore, 95 Ga. 376.

but here again notice

of special circumstances might be considered by the jury to
require greater haste.
3.

The general rule of law is that a collecting

bank which accepts in payment of the check to be collected
the draft of the drawee on another bank takes the risk of the




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draft "being paid, Reserve Bank v. Malloy, supra.

The defend-

ant here, while it did not pay the draft on it sent " y the Montb
gomery "bank, did not return it and demand the check back,
"but let matters stand, so that it may "be found to have accepted
it.

But it is contended that no harm was done thereby,

because the Alabama bank had the right, under the Alabama
statute approved September 30th, 1920, to tender the draft
in payment.

The material part of this statute is:

"Whenever a check or checks are forwarded or
presented to a bank for payment by any Federal Reserve bank, express company or post office employee,
other bank, banker, trust company or by any agent
or agents thereof, or through any other agency or
individual, the paying bank or remitting bank may
pay or remit the same at its option either in
money or in exchange drawn on its reserve agent or
agents in the city of 2 f w York or in any reserve
\e
city within the Sixth Federal Reserve District.11
This Act is said to be unconstitutional in that thereby the
state of Alabama has made something else than gold and silver
coin tenderable in payment of the debts of the Merchants
Bank to its depositors.

The holder of an uncertified check

has no debt against the bank; First national Bank v. Whitman,
94 U. S. 343.

Where, however, the bank has certified the

check for the drawer, as was done here, a direct and primary
ooligation arises on the part of the bank to pay it;
Bank v. State Bank, 10 Wal. 604, at p. 647, 548.

Merchants

It may well

be, however, that the payment due on the certified check is
only in such medium and at such time and place as would have
been proper had the check not been certified.

So it becomes

necessary to examine the application of this statute to or-




w

6

fj < %
A s

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X-4248

dinary checks.

In Thompson v. Biggs, 5 Wal. 663, where

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the point at issue was the proper medium of payment, it was said:
"Where the deposit is general and there is
no special agreement proved, the title to the
money deposited, of whatever kind, passes to the
"bank and the bank he comes liable for the amount
as for a debt which can only be discharged by such money
as is by law a lawful tender."
In Farmers Bank v. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, 262 TJ. S.649,
a statute of North Carolina, which gave the bank the right to
pay its check by another check, except where the
depositor, in drawing his check, specified that it should be
payable in money, was good, because it did not deprive the
depositor of the right to collect his debt in money but simply made his failure to specify that mode of payment a consent to the payment by check.

!Ehe statute here goes much

further and is fundamentally different.

It offers no basis

of permitted consent in the payment of a particular check
and could involve the consent of the depositor only by supposing
that in making his deposit with such a law on the
statute books he consented thereto.

But the statute

does not pretend to regulate the terms on which deposits in
banks in Alabama shall be made.

It baldly enacts an option

of payment of them whereby the bank may have an absolute
choice of paying in cash or by check.

This is, on its

face, a plain effort to make a debt by general deposit dischargeable by something else than gold or silver coin or




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other medium fixed " y the constitutional Federal authority.
b

The

depositor so far from being presumed to consent thereto,
should rather he presumed to have treated the law as void and
without effect on his rights.

Had the act merely made the

place of payment optional and authorized the drawee to refer
the holder of the check to its reserve cities for payment, or if the check to be given on.the reserve city were
made only tentative and to be payment when itself paid in legal
money, the case would have been different.

It is true that a

check, as between the parties giving and receiving
it, is ordinarily not payment until itself paid, unless
expressly taken as payment, but in the case of a commercial
check presented and paid by another check, the first check
is taken up and marked "paid11 and charged to the drawer, and
he and all prior endorsers are discharged.

There is no

dishonor and protest or other means taken to hold them livable.

The second check is thus, by force of commercial

custom, necessarily payment.

And this statute so declares*

Moreover, the statute is so broad as to appear to apply also
to the second check given in payment of the first, if on an
Alabama bank.

So that it, when presented, might itself be

paid by another check and so no money ever be collectible
in Alabama, or any other state where a similar law should be
enacted.

The statute, as written, %is an effort by a state

to make a class of debts payable at the option of the debtor
in something else than gold and silver coin, and is void.
It affords no reason why the defendant here should not have




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demanded money in payment of the check in its hands for collection.
4.

It is also contended that the Reserve Board regu-

lation J, Series 1920, sub-section 8, which was in force at
this time, authorized the* sending of this check direct to
the drawee, ar-d the remittance back by draft.

This regula-

tion, I think, is not such a Departmental action as Till be
judicially noticed without pleading, as a statute would be.
Its provisions, not appearing in the petition, cannot be considered on a demurrer thereto.
5.

Furthermore, the petition alleges that the draft

which the Merchants Bank sent to defendant was good and that
defendant neglected to pay it and remit the proceeds promptly and
that the loss really resulted from that neglect.

If that

be the truth, plaintiffs have a cause of action for this conduct
independently of all else.
6.

The demurrers to the petition will therefore be

overruled, except those to paragraphs 15 and 16, touching
the failure to give notice to the drawer of the situation.
It affirmatively appears that nothing was unpaid except the
draft made by Merchants Bank on defendant.

The drawer was

no party to it and not to be notified of its dishonor.

More-

over, notice of its non-payment, if it were bad, could have
been given only twenty-four hours before the receivership,
and plaintiff could have made no collection without procuring and surrendering this draft.

The damage, if any was

done, was not due to want of notice, nor avoidable by no-




X-4248

tice, but to the other matters discusscd above.
case mast stand or fall on these.

The plaintiffs

Paragraphs 15 and 16 Trill

be stricken.
7.

The answer is not demurrable as a whole.

Its de-

nials put tho plaintiffs on proof of many of their allegations.

It sets up that the draft sent the defendant- in

payment could not be paid when received because in excess of
available balance on hand to the credit of the Merchants
Bank, but that items in course of collection for it when
available would have rendered the draft good.

A jury

might conclude that the defendant acted prudently in holding the draft to await these collections instead of sending
it back to Montgomery.
8.

The general reference in paragraph 17 of the

answer to the rules and regulations of the Federal Reserve
Board and to business usages and customs adds nothing to
the defense.

These are not to be judicially noticed, but

must be pleaded and proved in order to be available.

On

the other hand, the general reference to the statutes of
Georgia and Alabama is unnecessary but unobjectionable, such
public laws of either state as are applicable and valid being judicially noticed and applied without pleading or proof.
9.
ed.

Paragraph 20 of the answer is defective as plead-

If the rules and regulations of the Reserve bank re-

ferred to were sufficiently pleaded, the knowledge of them
on the part of the plaintiffs would be material.

Their know-

ledge of the statutes involved is not material, for all per-




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r

sons are bound to know the statutes "binding on tanks with
which they deal.

The contention that plaintiffs knew of

the pending insolvency and failure of the Merchants Bank
and if they had succeeded in withdrawing their deposits it
would have "been a preference of then, void under the Alabama
law, seems to state a natter of defense.

The failure of

the defendant to secure a collection the benefit of which
the plaintiffs could not retain, would not be a damage to
them, it appearing that they have received equal treatment
with other creditors by the receiver.

The allegation that

one of the plaintiffs, being a director of the Merchants
Bank, ought to have known of its condition, is irrelevant
and stricken.

Such obligation would not in this case be

the equivalent of actual knowledge.

This portion of the

defense is retained, though iaeagerly pleaded, for further investigation of the law and facts that aay be applicable thereto.
Judgment may be taken upon the demurrers in accordance with this opinion.

This 8th day of January, 1925.




Sam'l

E. Sibley,

U. S. Judge.