Without deciding the mooted question whether a check or draft of
a person on a bank in which he has deposits operates as an
equitable assignment of the fund so on deposit to the holder of the
check to the amount of it, it is clear that such check or draft
does not bind the fund in the hands of the bank until it has notice
of the draft or check by presentation for payment or otherwise.
Until then, other checks drawn afterward may be paid, or other
assignments of the fund, or part of it, may secure priority by
giving prior notice.
Appeal and cross-appeal from a decree upon a bill in equity
filed by Schuler against the Laclede Bank. The case is stated in
the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal and cross-appeal from a decree of the Circuit
Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Missouri.
Harrison B. Schuler, a citizen of the State of Kansas, brought his
bill in that court against the Laclede Bank, a corporation under
the laws of the State of Missouri, and J. T. Craig, a citizen of
the State of Texas. The substance of the bill is that the plaintiff
is the owner and holder of a draft, or bank check, drawn by C. W.
Israel & Co. on the Laclede Bank, for the sum of $11,250, dated
at Henrietta, Texas, October 20, 1885, in favor of the plaintiff,
which was duly presented for payment on the 26th day of that month,
and
Page 120 U. S. 512
that payment was refused, as the Laclede Bank alleged, on the
ground that C. W. Israel & Co., the drawers of the draft, had,
on October 24, 1885, made an assignment under the laws of Texas for
the benefit of their creditors, of which the said Laclede Bank had
been advised by telegraph. The bill proceeds upon the idea that
there were funds in the hands of the Laclede Bank to the credit of
C. W. Israel & Co., on the presentation of said check for
payment, which ought to be applied for that purpose, and charges
that, notwithstanding the general assignment for the benefit of
creditors made by C. W. Israel & Co. on October 24, 1885, the
check in question, made in favor of the plaintiff on October 20,
1885, was an assignment or appropriation of so much of those funds
to the benefit of complainant which he is entitled to enforce in
this suit. J. T. Craig, who had become substituted for Davidson,
the assignee of C. W. Israel & Co., was also made a party to
the suit, and appeared and filed an answer.
The answer of the Laclede Bank, while admitting most of the
statements made in the bill, is very long, and recites many things
not material to the issue as we look upon it, but relies upon two
substantial defenses to the suit. The first of these is that on the
morning of the 26th day of October, 1885, it received the following
telegram from C. W. Israel & Co.:
"Henrietta, Texas, 24 [meaning the twenty-fourth of October].
Laclede Bank, St. L.: We assigned this day in favor of S. Davidson;
hold funds subject to his order. C. W. Israel & Co."
It alleges that this telegram was forwarded to the bank as a
night message on Saturday night, and, although duly received at the
telegraph office, was only delivered at 8 o'clock on Monday
morning, and that the check in favor of complainant was presented
at the opening of the bank at 10:15 on the same morning, which was
the first notice that they had of it. The answer insists that the
general assignment, with the notice of it by telegraph, was a
complete revocation of the Schuler check, as well as all other
checks drawn against this defendant by C. W. Israel & Co., and
that the assignment, with this prior notice to the bank, vested in
the assignee the better right to
Page 120 U. S. 513
any funds of said C. W. Israel & Co. in the hands of the
bank. The answer also sets up transactions between C. W. Israel
& Co. and the bank by which said C. W. Israel & Co. would
be indebted, on a settlement of the transactions between the two
banks, to the Laclede Bank in a sum beyond anything which they then
held on deposit to the credit of C. W. Israel & Co. A part,
however, of the transactions which go to make up this claim of
set-off against C. W. Israel & Co. consisted of a note or notes
discounted by the Laclede Bank for said C. W. Israel & Co., but
which had not yet matured. The answer also sets up that C. W.
Israel & Co. and the Laclede Bank were corresponding banks, one
being in Texas and the other in St. Louis, Missouri, and that there
had been a long course of dealing between them, and for this reason
they had discounted the notes of C. W. Israel & Co. without any
other sufficient security.
Craig, as assignee for C. W. Israel & Co., filed a separate
answer in which he sets out mainly the same matters found in the
answer of the Laclede Bank, and he also makes a part of his answer
the assignment of C. W. Israel & Co. to Davidson for the
benefit of all their creditors.
There were no replications to either of these answers, but a
stipulation is filed in regard to facts that are agreed upon by the
parties, which closes with this paragraph: "All other facts in the
bill and answer not inconsistent herewith are to be taken as part
of this agreed statement."
The decree of the court was as follows:
"This cause came on for hearing at this term of the court on the
bill of complaint, answers of defendants, and stipulations on file,
and the court, being fully advised concerning the premises, finds
that at the date of the presentation to the said Laclede Bank of
the check set out in the bill of complaint there was to the credit
of the account of C. W. Israel & Co. in said bank the sum of
$5,912.41 subject to the payment of said check, and that said check
operated in equity as an assignment of said sum, as against said
defendants, to said complainant. It is therefore ordered, adjudged,
and decreed that the
Page 120 U. S. 514
said complainant have and recover of and from said defendants
the said sum of $5,912.41, together with interest at six percent
per annum from the 26th day of October, 1885, amounting to
$6,073.99, and it is further ordered that execution issue therefor
against said defendant the Laclede Bank."
From this decree both Schuler and the bank appealed. The
assignee, Craig, did not appeal.
The question of how far and under what circumstances a check of
a depositor in a bank will be considered an equitable assignment to
the payee of the check of all or any portion of the funds or
deposits to the credit of the drawer in the bank is one which has
been very much considered of late years in the courts, and about
which there is not a unanimity of opinion. In this Court it is very
well settled that such a check, unless accepted by the bank, will
not sustain an action at law by the drawee against the bank, as
there is no privity of contract between them.
Marine
Bank v. Fulton, 2 Wall. 252;
Bank of
Republic v. Millard, 10 Wall. 152;
Bank v.
Whitman, 94 U. S. 343.
But while this may be considered as the established doctrine of
this Court in regard to the rights of the parties at law, and is
probably the prevailing doctrine in nearly all the courts, it is
urged in this case, and several respectable courts have so decided,
that such a check is an appropriation of the amount for which it is
drawn of the funds of the drawer in the hands of the bank.
Roberts v. Austin, 26 Ia. 315;
Fogarties v. State
Bank, 12 Rich. 518;
Munn v. Burch, 25 Ill. 35;
German Savings Inst. v. Adae, 8 F. 106.
But however this doctrine may operate to secure an equitable
interest in the fund deposited in the bank to the credit of the
drawer after notice to the bank of the check, or presentation to it
for payment -- a question which we do not here decide -- we are of
opinion that as to the bank itself, the holder of the fund, and its
duties and obligations in regard to it, the bank remains unaffected
by the execution of such a check until notice has been given to it
or demand made upon it for its payment.
Page 120 U. S. 515
In the case before us, it is a conceded fact that before the
bank had any knowledge or notice whatever of the check on which the
plaintiff brings this suit, it had received a distinct notification
from the drawer of that check that he had made a general assignment
for the benefit of his creditors, with an express direction to hold
the funds subject to the order of the assignee. Therefore, even if
the check could be considered as an attempt on the part of C. W.
Israel & Co. to assign or appropriate this amount in the hands
of the bank to Schuler, the general assignment for the benefit of
all their creditors of all their assets, including those in the
hands of the bank, was made and brought to the attention of the
bank, with directions to turn them over to this assignee, before it
had any notice of the check in favor of Schuler.
The learned judge who decided the case on the circuit rested his
judgment, in an opinion which is found in the record, on the
proposition that as between these two equities -- namely the
equities of the general creditors under the assignment to Davidson
and this implied assignment in equity by the drawing of the check
-- the latter was superior. In this it would seem that he was
somewhat influenced by the fact that he was enabled to trace the
sources of some of the deposits to the credit of C. W. Israel &
Co., in the Laclede Bank, to money which in a roundabout way had
been collected for the payment of a debt to Schuler, and had
finally been deposited to the credit of C. W. Israel & Co. in
the Laclede Bank. But there is no allegation in the bill, nor any
evidence in the testimony, nor any reason to believe, that the bank
knew anything of this connection between the sums received from
several of the banks with which Israel was connected at different
times and the debt of Schuler. This is expressly denied, and we can
see no reason why the bank should be held in any way to regard the
deposit made by C. W. Israel & Co. as, in law or in equity,
funds in which Schuler had an interest. It must therefore be left
entirely out of the argument in the contest between the bank and
Schuler.
Apart from this matter, it is not easy to see any valid reason
why the assignment of an insolvent debtor, for the equal
Page 120 U. S. 516
benefit of all his creditors, of all his property does not
confer on those creditors an equity equal to that of the holder of
an unpaid check upon his banker. The holder of this check comes
into the distribution of the funds in the hands of the assignee for
his share of those funds with other creditors. The mere fact that
he had received a check, a few days before the making of the
assignment, on the bank, which had not been presented until after
the general assignment was made and notified to the bank, does not
seem, in and of itself, to give any such superiority of right. The
assignment was complete and perfect, and vested in the assignee the
right to all the property of the assignor immediately upon its
execution and delivery, with due formalities, to the assignee, and
the check of this assignee, like the check of Israel & Co.,
could have been paid by the bank with safety, if first presented.
The check given by the same assignor a few days before was only an
acknowledgment of a debt by that assignor, and became no valid
claim upon the funds against which it was drawn until the holder of
those funds was notified of its existence. This, we think, is the
fair result of the authorities on that subject.
In the case of
Spain v. Hamilton's
Administrator, 1 Wall. 624, this Court says:
"Any order, writing, or act which makes an appropriation of a
fund amounts to an equitable assignment of the fund. The reason is
that, the fund being a matter not assignable at law nor capable of
manual possession, an appropriation of it is all that the nature of
the case admits of, and therefore it is held good in a court of
equity. As the assignee is generally entitled to all the remedies
of the assignor, so he is subject to all the equities between the
assignor and his debtor. But in order to perfect his title against
the debtor, it is indispensable that the assignee should
immediately give notice of the assignment to the debtor, for
otherwise a priority of right may be obtained by a subsequent
assignee, or the debt may be discharged by a payment to the
assignee before such notice."
The same principle is also laid down in
Christmas
v. Russell, 14 Wall. 69; Story's Eq.Juris.
§§ 1047, 1057, 1035
a.
See especially
the authorities cited in note 1 to this latter section.
Page 120 U. S. 517
See also Ward v. Morrison, 25 Vt. 599, and
Loomis
v. Loomis, 26 Vt. 198.
For these reasons, we are of opinion that at the time of the
presentation of the check to the bank, the bank held no funds
subject to its payment, whether we consider the delivery of it by
C. W. Israel & Co. to Schuler as intended to create an
equitable assignment or not. An earnest effort is made in the
argument of counsel in this Court to impeach the general assignment
as being void under the laws of Texas, where it was made, and also
in the State of Missouri, where this fund was. As there is nothing
in the statute of Missouri which would make this assignment
absolutely void, and there is nothing brought to our attention to
prove that it was void by the laws of Texas, and as the assignment,
though mentioned in the original bill of complainant, is not
assailed, nor any ground set forth to show its invalidity, we do
not think there is any reason why it should not be held in this
proceeding to be a valid assignment. As this assignment had the
effect, when the bank was notified of it, to transfer to the
assignee all right to any funds in its hands which Israel could
assert, we need not consider the other questions connected with the
case.
The result of these views is that
The decree against the bank must be reversed, and the case
remanded with instructions to dismiss the bill.