A bank check is a "bill of exchange" within the meaning of that
term as used in the Statutes of Illinois prescribing the term of
five years after the cause of action accrues, and not thereafter,
as the time within which an action founded upon it must be
commenced.
This was an action of assumpsit brought by Henry J. Rogers,
January 26, 1884, against William F. Durant and others, as
"surviving partners of the late firm of James W. Davis and
associates," in the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Northern District of Illinois, upon twenty instruments in writing
bearing various dates from April 12, 1869, to February 12, 1870.
Durant alone was served with process. The original declaration
consisted of the common counts, and was subsequently amended by the
addition of special counts upon each of the pieces of paper sued
on, describing eighteen of them as bills of exchange and two as
banker's
Page 140 U. S. 299
checks. All were payable at sight or on short time after date,
and it was admitted that more than five years had elapsed after
they became due before action was brought. The defendant filed
eight pleas, which were ordered to stand as pleas to the amended
declaration. The fourth plea was as follows:
"And for a further plea in this behalf to said plaintiff's
declaration, and each of the counts thereof, the said defendant,
William F. Durant, says
actio non, etc., because he says
that the said several supposed causes of action, and each and all
of them, in said plaintiff's declaration, and each of the several
counts thereof mentioned, are founded upon bills of exchange, and
that no cause of action has accrued upon any or either of said
bills of exchange to the said plaintiff, or the holder thereof,
within five years next before the bringing of this suit, as the
plaintiff hath above complained against him, the said defendant,
but that each and all of said supposed causes of action accrued, if
at all, after the 10th day of February, A.D. 1849, and prior to the
4th day of April, A.D. 1872, and this he is ready to verify.
Wherefore he prays judgment."
etc. To this plea plaintiff interposed a general demurrer, which
was overruled by the court, and, the plaintiff electing to abide by
his demurrer -- the other pleadings being also at the same time
disposed of -- judgment was rendered for the defendant, and the
cause brought here on writ of error.
Page 140 U. S. 300
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the case, delivered the
opinion of the Court.
If the fourth plea was sufficient in law to bar the maintenance
of this action, it is not necessary to set forth the other
pleadings and the action of the court thereon. The first and second
sections of an act of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois
entitled "An act to amend the several laws concerning limitation of
action," approved November 5, 1849, Laws Ill.2d Sess. 1849, p. 44;
Gross' Ill.Stat. 1870, 3d ed., p. 430, §§ 17, 18,
provided:
"SEC. 1. That all actions founded upon any promissory note,
simple contract in writing, bond, judgment, or other evidence of
indebtedness in writing, made, caused, or entered into after the
passage of this act, shall be commenced within sixteen years after
the cause of action accrued, and not thereafter."
"SEC. 2. All actions founded upon accounts, bills of exchange,
orders, or upon promises not in writing, express or implied, made
after the passage of this act shall be commenced within five years
next after the cause of action shall have accrued, and not
thereafter."
An act revising the law as to limitations was passed by the
twenty-seventh General Assembly, April 4, 1872, Laws Ill. 1871-72,
p. 556, and forms part of the Revised Statutes of Illinois of 1874,
and the Act of November 5, 1849, was expressly repealed, with a
saving clause, thus expressed in the Revised Statutes:
"When any limitation law has been revised by this or the
twenty-seventh General Assembly, and the former limitation law
repealed, such repeal shall not be construed
Page 140 U. S. 301
so as to stop the running of any statute, but the time shall be
construed as if such repeal had not been made."
Rev.Stats. 1874, c. 131, §§ 5, 6;
Dickson v.
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, 77 Ill. 331.
Conceding that the Act of November 5, 1849, is applicable, it is
contended that checks are not bills of exchange, and therefore that
the fourth plea did not fully answer the declaration, and that,
moreover, checks did not fall within the second section, which
prescribed five years as the bar to actions "upon accounts, bills
of exchange, orders, or upon promises not in writing, express or
implied," but within the first section, which as to "any promissory
note, simple contract in writing, bond, judgment, or other evidence
of indebtedness in writing," prescribed sixteen years.
In the view which we take, the demurrer, which was general, was
properly overruled if the checks were within the second section, as
the eighteen bills or drafts confessedly were.
Simons v.
Butters, 48 Ill. 226.
Daniel comprehensively defines a "check" to be
"a draft or order upon a bank or banking house, purporting to be
drawn upon a deposit of funds, for the payment at all events of a
certain sum of money to a certain person therein named, or to him
or his order, or to bearer, and payable instantly on demand."
2 Dan.Neg.Inst. § 1566. And in a note to that section he
gives these definitions and descriptions of checks from the text
writers: "A
check' on a banker is, in legal effect, an inland
bill of exchange drawn on a banker, payable to bearer on demand."
Byles on Bills, (Sharswood's ed.) 84.
"A 'check' is a written order or request addressed to a bank, or
to persons carrying on the business of bankers, by a party having
money in their hands, requesting them to pay, on presentment, to
another person, or to him or bearer, or to him or order, a certain
sum of money specified in the instrument."
Story on Prom.Notes § 487. "A check is a brief draft or
order on a bank or banking house, directing it to pay a certain sum
of money." 2 Parsons on Notes and Bills 57. "A check drawn on a
bank is a bill of exchange payable on demand." Edwards on Bills
396.
Page 140 U. S. 302
The question presented is not one, however, of general
commercial law, requiring a discussion of the distinctions existing
between checks and bills of exchange, but merely whether checks
were intended to be included within the words "bills of exchange,"
as used in the statute. In
Bickford v. First National
Bank, 42 Ill. 238, and
Rounds v. Smith, 42 Ill. 245,
it was held that a check might be regarded as substantially an
inland bill of exchange, and many authorities were cited to the
proposition that the rules applicable to such bills are applicable
to checks. But the opinion of the court, by Mr. Justice Breese, did
not proceed upon the ground that checks and domestic bills are
identical, and the differences between them have been repeatedly
recognized by the Illinois courts.
Bank v. Ritzinger, 118
Ill. 484;
Stevens v. Park, 73 Ill. 387;
Heartt v.
Rhodes, 66 Ill. 351;
Willetts v. Paine, 43 Ill. 432;
Allen v. Kramer, 2 Ill.App. 205.
It has also been decided that an instrument is not less a check
because it orders payment "on account of A,"
Bank v.
Patton, 109 Ill. 479, and that its character as a check is not
changed by the fact that it is payable in another state than the
one in which it is drawn,
Bank v. Banking Co., 114 Ill.
483;
Union National Bank v. Oceana County Bank, 80 Ill.
212. And the settled rule in that jurisdiction is that where a
depositor draws his check on a banker who has his funds to an equal
or greater amount, it operates to transfer the sum named in the
check to the payee, who can sue for and recover the amount from the
banker, and that a transfer of the check carries with it the title
to the sum named in the check to each successive holder.
Brown
v. Leckie, 43 Ill. 497;
Munn v. Burch, 25 Ill. 35,
and cases
supra.
Without pausing to examine the points of resemblance and the
points of difference between these instruments, it is enough that
the result of the decisions in Illinois puts them so far on the
same footing as to involve the conclusion that checks were fairly
embraced under the description "bills of exchange" in the second
section of the statute under consideration. In
Moses v.
Franklin Bank, 34 Md. 574, it was held that checks were
embraced within the description "inland
Page 140 U. S. 303
bills of exchange" in the article of the Maryland Code relating
to protests, and the court said:
"According to all the text writers on bills and notes, as well
as in numerous decisions, a 'check' is denominated a species of
inland bill of exchange, not with all the incidents of an ordinary
bill of exchange, it is true, but still it belongs to that class
and character of commercial paper. The same reason, therefore, that
would authorize the protest of an inland bill of exchange for
nonpayment would authorize the protest of a check the payment of
which had been refused on presentment."
See also Lawson v. Richards, 6 Phila. 179.
So in
Eyre v. Waller, 5 Hurls. & Norm. 460, the
Court of Exchequer decided that checks were within the "summary
Procedure on Bills of Exchange Act," 18 and 19 Vict. c. 67, not
only within the mischief, but within the words of the act. And
while these cases are referred to by way of illustration merely, it
seems to us clear that whatever the legislative reason for the
discrimination between the subjects of the first and of the second
section, that reason manifestly requires checks to be placed in the
same category as bills of exchange. Again, we are of opinion that
checks might properly be held comprised in the word "orders," as
associated with bills of exchange, rather than otherwise. Orders
are frequently a kind of informal bill of exchange, and a check is,
of course, an order for the payment of money, and we do not
consider that by any reasonable construction checks should be
included in the term "other evidence of indebtedness in writing,"
as used in the first section, rather than in "bills of exchange" or
"orders," as used in the second.
Counsel ingeniously argue that the first section specified
obligations of a higher class than those mentioned in the second,
and that checks, as contradistinguished from orders, belonged to
the former; but it is difficult to perceive why checks should be
classified with bonds, judgments, and promissory notes, rather than
with bills of exchange, or why the simple contract or evidence of
indebtedness in writing, of the first section should necessarily be
regarded as of higher dignity than a draft or an order for
money.
Page 140 U. S. 304
The fourth plea was inaccurate in its reference to a former
statute of limitations, approved February 10, 1849, but that is
immaterial, and, stripped of surplusage, it averred that the cause
of action set forth in each of the twenty special counts, as well
as the common counts, did not accrue within five years next before
the bringing of the suit. The court properly held that, such being
the fact, the drafts and checks were barred, and, as there was no
pretense that there was any other cause of action, the judgment was
right, and it is
Affirmed.