Court Opinion

ID: 3513066
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:23:58.345752+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:26:32.686750
License: Public Domain

On December 8, 1931, the appellant (People's Gin Company) sent to the Bank of Moorhead, a branch of the Grenada Bank, a check drawn by the Sunflower Cotton Oil Company, payable to the appellant, on which was indorsed: "For deposit only in Bank of Moorhead." This check was received by the Bank of Moorhead, credited subject to payment, and forwarded for collection to the Canal Bank  Trust Company of New Orleans, La., one of the appellees, which received it on December 9, 1931.
Prior to December 8, 1931, the appellant, by its secretary, signed and delivered to the Bank of Moorhead a signature card reading, on its face: "The Grenada Bank or branch bank, Bank of Moorhead, is hereby authorized to recognize the signature executed below in payment of funds on deposit, or the transactions of other business with the undersigned. All conditions printed on the reverse side of this card have been read and are hereby *Page 637 
agreed to. Authorized signatures ____ And or when signed ____ Date ____, Address ____." And on the back as follows: "It is understood and agreed that this bank acts only as a depositor's collecting agent when receiving items for deposit or collection, and does not assume responsibility beyond the exercise of due care, and that items so deposited and credited, are accepted subject to final payment in cash or its equivalent, and the bank will not be liable for default or negligence of its duly selected correspondents, nor for loss in transit. And each correspondent so selected shall not be liable except for its own negligence. The right is reserved to send items direct or indirect to any bank, including the payor, and to accept drafts of such banks (but only subject to payment) as conditional payment in lieu of cash, the bank reserving the right to charge back any item at any time before final payment, whether returned or not, also any item drawn on this bank not good at the close of business on day deposited. It is agreed no order for stop payment of any check drawn on this bank by depositor shall be valid unless the notice be in writing. It is agreed that if average balance of depositor shall be less than fifty dollars for the time of thirty days, and if three or more checks be drawn against the account within the time, a service fee of one dollar per month may be charged against the account without notice, or if the average daily balance shall be in excess of fifty dollars, but less than one hundred dollars, for the time of thirty days, and there shall be five or more checks drawn against the account within the time, a service fee of fifty cents per month may be charged against the account of the depositor without notice. It is agreed that this bank will not be liable for dishonoring any overdraft by reason of such charges."
The check above mentioned, with other items, aggregating five thousand eight hundred twenty-eight dollars and twenty-one cents, was, by the Canal Bank  Trust *Page 638 
Company, forwarded, on December 9, 1931, to the Bank of Indianola, the drawee, and in payment of the aggregate of items thus sent to it, the Bank of Indianola remitted its exchange on the Bank of Commerce  Trust Company, of Memphis, Tenn., for five thousand, eight hundred twenty-eight dollars and twenty-one cents, dated December 12, 1931. This exchange was received by the Canal Bank  Trust Company, forwarded by it for collection to Memphis, Tenn., but when it arrived in Memphis the Bank of Indianola had been closed for liquidation by the state banking department and the exchange was not paid. On December 15, 1931, the Canal Bank  Trust Company was advised that the exchange of the Bank of Indianola on the Bank of Commerce  Trust Company had been dishonored, and it promptly wired the Bank of Moorhead to that effect; and on the 16th it also wired that the Bank of Indianola was reported closed and the exchange dishonored. Thereupon, the Canal Bank  Trust Company charged the amount of the one thousand dollar check back to the Bank of Moorhead, which, in turn, charged the same to the appellant. Both banks refused to pay the appellant the amount of the check, and thereupon this suit was instituted to recover from each or both.
When the one thousand dollars was sent by the Canal Bank 
Trust Company to the Bank of Indianola, the drawer of the check had funds in that bank sufficient to pay the check, and the check was paid, marked paid and canceled, and turned over to the drawer, the Sunflower Cotton Oil Company.
At no time was this check ever recovered from the Sunflower Cotton Oil Company, nor returned to the appellant by either the Canal Bank  Trust Company or the Bank of Moorhead.
The Canal Bank  Trust Company had an agreement with the Grenada Bank which, among other things, contained the following: "The undersigned hereby agrees *Page 639 
to the terms and conditions printed on the reverse hereof," and contains the authorized signature. And on the reverse or back side appears the following: "This bank will handle checks, drafts and other items, subject to the following terms and conditions, and each correspondent and clearing bank which sends checks for deposit or collection to this bank, or any other bank for our account, will be understood to have agreed to such terms and conditions, and by such action shall be deemed (a) to authorize this Bank to handle such items subject to the following terms and conditions; (b) To warrant its own authority to give this Bank authority, and (c) To agree to indemnify this Bank for any loss resulting from its failure to have such authority; . . . 3. Checks, drafts and other items drawn on other cities, will be handled subject to the following terms and conditions, (a) This bank will act only as the agent of the customer from which it receives such items, and will assume no responsibility, or liability, except for its own negligence, or guaranty of previous endorsement; (b) This bank may present such items for payment or send such items for collection, direct to the bank on which they are drawn, or at which they are payable, or in discretion may forward them to a collecting agent with authority to present them for payment, or send them for collection direct to the Bank on which they are drawn, or at which they are payable. . . . (d) This bank and/or collecting agents may, in their discretion, and at their option, accept either cash or bank drafts in payment of, or in remittance for, such items, and they shall not be held liable for any loss resulting from the acceptance of bank drafts in lieu of cash, or for failure of the drawee bank, or any collecting agent to remit for such item, or for the nonpayment of any Bank draft accepted in payment, or as a remittance from the drawee bank, or any collecting agent. (e) The amount of any check for which payment in actual and finally collected funds is not received, may be *Page 640 
charged back to the customer, regardless of whether or not the check itself can be returned."
Mississippi is controlled by what is known as the Massachusetts rule in regard to sending out checks through banks for collection, and that is that each bank that receives the item acts as an agent for the depositor. Some, and perhaps a majority, of the states, have what is known as the New York rule, which is that only the bank first receiving the item is responsible to, or is the agent of, the depositor; the other banks being the agent of the bank, in the process of the collection. Under the Massachusetts rule in force in Mississippi, as stated, the Canal Bank  Trust Company was the agent of the appellant in making the collection, and it had no right to bind the appellant by its agreement with the Bank of Moorhead, because the check showed on its face, by its indorsement, that it was not a transfer of funds from one to another, but was a deposit, with the Bank of Moorhead, marked, "For Deposit only," and was not for assignment or transfer except for the purpose of collection.
If we concede that the Canal Bank  Trust Company had the same rights in reference to the collection that the Bank of Moorhead had, it still would not be absolved from liability, because, under that agreement, the authority to send the check direct and receive checks in payment was only authority to receive a check as a conditional payment, and it would have no right to surrender the check sent for collection for cancellation as a completed payment. If the check sent by the collecting bank to the Canal Bank  Trust Company was not paid, it would have to reclaim the check sent and return it to the sender or the depositor.
In addition to this, the item taken from the Bank of Indianola in payment was not merely a check in payment of the one thousand dollars involved in this suit, but was a check received in payment of other items *Page 641 
aggregating five thousand eight hundred twenty-eight dollars and twenty-one cents, which the Bank of Indianola gave to said bank as a settlement of a number of items.
It is fundamental, of course, that instruments like agreements contained on the signature cards are to be construed most strongly against banks in favor of depositors, and the terms will not be enlarged in order to protect the bank undertaking to collect a check. It will be held strictly to the terms of the contract in that regard.
In addition to the facts stated above, the Canal Bank  Trust Company filed the check of the Bank of Indianola on the Bank of Commerce  Trust Company with the state banking department as a claim against the assets of the Bank of Indianola.
It is true that the testimony on behalf of the bank showed that this was done for the purpose of protecting all the parties involved; but nevertheless the legal title to that check was in the Canal Bank  Trust Company, and it was never returned or assigned to the depositor.
By reason of the transaction, all right of the appellant to collect from the drawer of the check (the Sunflower Cotton Oil Company) is lost. The obligation of that check, so far as the Sunflower Cotton Oil Company is concerned, was discharged by the application of its funds in the Bank of Indianola to the payment of its check and the surrender of the check and its being marked canceled and paid before the bank closed for liquidation by the state banking department.
The Canal Bank  Trust Company filed a cross-bill against the Grenada Bank and the Bank of Moorhead, one of its branches, seeking to indemnify itself in case it was required to pay to the appellant the amount of this check. The court below dismissed both the bill and the cross-bill, it being of the opinion that the appellant had no right of action at all, and consequently, on this item, the Bank of Moorhead was under no duty to protect the *Page 642 
Canal Bank  Trust Company under the signature card above referred to.
We are of the opinion that the chancellor was in error in holding that the appellant was not entitled to recover from the Canal Bank  Trust Company. It should have been awarded a judgment for the amount of that check against the Canal Bank 
Trust Company for the reasons above stated.
The chancellor did not decide what the rights were between the Bank of Moorhead and the Canal Bank  Trust Company, and, consequently, we cannot decide that question here.
The judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to render judgment in favor of the appellant against the Canal Bank  Trust Company for the amount of the check, and to pass upon the questions involved in the case of the Canal Bank  Trust Company against the Bank of Moorhead.
Reversed and remanded.