1. Where by state statute with reference to which a bank and its
depositors presumably contracted, the bank is held only to the
exercise of due diligence in forwarding checks for collection, and
its liability is conditioned on receipt of final payment from the
collecting bank, thus making the relation between bank and
depositor (until final payment is received) one of agency merely,
the depositors have a right of action against the collecting bank
for any default in collection or remittance. P.
290 U. S.
146.
2. Upon the record in this case,
held that a bank to
which checks were forwarded by another for collection stood in the
relation of agent to the depositors of the individual items in the
forwarding bank, and was liable to them for failure to remit cash
or its equivalent in satisfaction of the amounts collected. P.
290 U. S.
147.
3. A bank against which an action is brought to recover a debt
owed by it individually to the plaintiff bank
held not
entitled to set off a demand which it asserts in an agency
capacity. P.
290 U. S.
148.
4. Where, at the time of the insolvency of a collecting bank,
which had sent drafts to a forwarding bank in settlement for items
collected by it, the collecting bank remained liable as
sub-agent
Page 290 U. S. 144
to the depositors of the collection items in the forwarding
bank,
held that the forwarding bank was not entitled to
set off, in a suit against it on a debt owed by it individually, an
asserted cause of action in its own right based on the drafts.
Distinguishing
Bank of the Metropolis v. New
England Bank, 1 How. 234. Pp.
290 U. S. 149,
290 U. S.
152.
63 F.2d 592 reversed.
Certiorari, 289 U.S. 722, to review a judgment affirming a
judgment of the district court allowing a setoff in an action by
the receiver of a national bank.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action on the common counts and on an account stated
brought in the United States District Court for Northern Florida by
the receiver of First National Bank of St. Petersburg, Florida,
against the People's Bank of Clearwater, Florida, a state bank. In
addition to pleas of the general issue, the defendant pleaded
specially that the St. Petersburg bank was indebted to the
defendant in a sum in excess of plaintiff's claim by virtue of the
delivery to defendant of four drafts drawn by plaintiff on the
Chase National Bank of New York to the defendant's order which had
been dishonored.
The plaintiff replied that certain checks or drafts drawn on the
St. Petersburg bank or other banks in St. Petersburg
Page 290 U. S. 145
were deposited for collection with the Clearwater bank; were
forwarded by the Clearwater bank to the St. Petersburg bank for
collection; the St. Petersburg bank collected the items drawn on it
by charging the accounts of its depositors and those on other local
banks by settlement of balances with them; the four drafts in
question were sent to the Clearwater bank as remittances of the
amounts so collected, pursuant to the collection letters
accompanying the checks; neither bank carried an account or deposit
in the other, and, for a long period, each bank had been sending
checks and drafts to the other for collection and remittance, and
averred that, by reason of the facts stated, there was no mutuality
in the debts or demands existing between the parties at the time
the action was brought, and the defendant was not entitled to the
setoff sought in its pleas. The District Court sustained a demurrer
to the replication, and, as plaintiff refused to plead further,
entered judgment for the defendant for the excess of its demand.
The plaintiff appealed to the Circuit Court of Appeals, where the
present respondent was substituted as appellee, the Clearwater bank
having gone into liquidation. That court affirmed the judgment and,
upon the plaintiff's petition, we granted certiorari.
The statute of Florida [
Footnote
1] permits setoff of "demands mutually existing . . . at the
commencement of the action." The question is whether the debts were
mutual. The Circuit Court of Appeals answered in the affirmative,
basing the decision on the section of the Florida statutes which
provides: [
Footnote 2] "The
holder of a negotiable instrument
Page 290 U. S. 146
may sue thereon in his own name, and payment to him in due
course discharges the instrument," saying that, since the
Clearwater bank might maintain a suit in its own name for the
amount due by the petitioner, the demand might be set off, and that
it was a matter of no concern to the petitioner whether the
Clearwater bank held the checks for collection or for value. The
petitioner urges that this holding bases the right of setoff upon a
rule of procedure, and ignores the substantive requirement that the
demands must be mutual in quality, and says that the debt of the
St. Petersburg bank was not to the Clearwater bank, which was a
mere collecting agent, but to the depositors. The conclusion is
that, while the Clearwater bank individually owed the receiver of
the St. Petersburg bank, the latter did not own the former, but, at
best, the claim was made as an agent. If this be true, setoff may
not be allowed, for a defendant sued upon his individual debt may
not avail himself for this purpose of a demand against the
plaintiff held in a fiduciary capacity.
Central National Bank
v. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co., 104 U. S.
54;
Libby v. Hopkins, 104 U.
S. 303;
Western Tie & Timber Co. v. Brown,
196 U. S. 502;
United States v. Butterworth-Judson Corp., 267 U.
S. 387,
267 U. S.
394-395;
Thomas v. Potter Title & Trust
Co., 2 F. Supp.
12.
Were the cross-demands of the parties of the same quality, or,
to state it otherwise, did each claim from the other in the same
right? In the ordinary case, the unrestricted indorsement and
deposit of checks with the Clearwater bank would create the
relation of debtor and creditor, and the bank would collect the
items not as agent for the depositors, but as owner.
Exchange
National Bank v. Third National Bank, 112 U.
S. 276;
Douglas v. Federal Reserve Bank,
271 U. S. 489. A
statute of Florida, however, requires of the bank of deposit only
due diligence in the forwarding of such a check for collection,
and, in the absence of negligence, conditions liability for the
amount
Page 290 U. S. 147
of the check on receipt of final payment from the collecting
bank. [
Footnote 3] The parties
are presumed to have contracted with reference to this statute
(
Federal Reserve Bank v. Malloy, 264 U.
S. 160), and the situation is as if they had expressly
agreed that the Clearwater bank was to act as agent only, and was
not to become the debtor of the depositors unless and until it had
received actual and final payment of the checks. Since, then, the
Clearwater bank acted as the agent of depositors in forwarding
checks to the St. Petersburg bank, the depositors have a right of
action against the latter for any default in collection or
remittance.
Federal Reserve Bank v. Malloy, supra. See
also Miami v. First National Bank, 58 F.2d 561. The Florida
courts have reached the same conclusion.
Atlantic National Bank
v. Pratt, 95 Fla. 822, 116 So. 635;
Edwards v. Lewis,
98 Fla. 956, 124 So. 746;
Myers v. Federal Reserve Bank,
101 Fla. 407, 134 So. 600.
Much is made of the absence of any showing that the Clearwater
bank did not credit the depositors in account immediately on
receipt of the items for collection; but, in the absence of
evidence to the contrary, we must assume the relation was what the
statute made it -- one of mere agency, rather than one of debtor
and creditor. As was said in the
Malloy case, the effect
of the statute might
Page 290 U. S. 148
be avoided by agreement or by clear and certain custom known to
the depositor, but no such agreement or custom was pleaded by the
defendant. The replication asserts the checks were deposited with
the Clearwater bank for collection, and were forwarded to the St.
Petersburg bank for collection and remittance, and the defendant's
demurrer admits these averments. On this record, we are bound to
hold that the St. Petersburg bank stands in the relation of agent
to the individual depositors of the items, and is liable to them
for failure to remit cash or equivalent in satisfaction of the
amounts collected. The Clearwater bank must therefore sue as
representative or agent of depositors, for a recognition of its
right to sue as owner would destroy the cause of action of the
depositors against the St. Petersburg bank or leave that bank
subject to a possible double liability. If the cross-demand is
asserted in an agency capacity, the debts are not held in the same
right by the two banks, lack mutuality, and the one cannot be set
off against the other; if it is asserted by the Clearwater bank as
owner of the drafts, the demand cannot be maintained, for the
reason that no showing is made that the agency relationship was
altered to that of debtor and creditor.
The respondent, however, seeks to support the judgment on
another ground. He says that the Clearwater bank accepted the
drafts, forwarded by the St. Petersburg bank, as payment, thus
assumed ownership of them, acknowledged the change in the
relationship to its depositors from that of collecting agent to
that of debtor, and so properly pleads the offset. We think this
position cannot be maintained.
As respects the setoff of cross-demands, the rights of the
parties became fixed at the moment of the insolvency of the St.
Petersburg bank and consequent suspension of payment,
Scott v.
Armstrong, 146 U. S. 499,
146 U. S. 511;
Davis v. Elmira Savings Bank, 161 U.
S. 275,
161 U. S. 290,
and the right
Page 290 U. S. 149
to set off is governed by the state of things existing at the
moment of insolvency, not by conditions thereafter arising,
Yardley v. Philler, 167 U. S. 344,
167 U. S. 360,
or by any subsequent action taken by any party to the transaction,
Evansville Bank v. German-American Bank, 155 U.
S. 556. What, then, was the situation as disclosed by
the record when the St. Petersburg bank closed its doors? That
bank, as subagent for the Clearwater bank's depositors, had made
collection and sent the drafts for the amount to the Clearwater
bank. It is incorrect to say that the St. Petersburg bank paid the
amounts collected by forwarding drafts to the Clearwater bank, or
that the Clearwater bank, upon receipt of the drafts, was bound to
accept them as payment, and its depositors were likewise thereupon
bound to treat the agency of the Clearwater bank and that of the
St. Petersburg bank as ended and the relation of debtor and
creditor as established between them and the Clearwater bank.
Equally inaccurate is the assertion that receipt and retention of
the drafts required the Clearwater bank, unless its depositors
asserted ownership of them at once, to credit the depositors with
the amount of the items represented by the drafts. The bank was not
bound to assume the relation of debtor until, in the words of the
statute, it had received final payment --
i.e., cash or
its equivalent -- and we should not presume that it did so.
Until these drafts were paid, the subagent had not discharged
the obligation resting upon it, and remained liable to suit by the
persons whose checks had been forwarded for collection and
remittance.
Bank of Washington v. Triplett
& Neale, 1 Pet. 25;
Wilson
& Co. v. Smith, 3 How. 763, 768 [argument of
counsel -- omitted];
Federal Reserve Bank v. Malloy,
supra. While the drafts were in course of collection, the St.
Petersburg bank failed. At the moment of suspension, it remained
liable as subagent to the depositors of the Clearwater bank, as we
have shown. Could it also
Page 290 U. S. 150
be subjected to an independent liability to the Clearwater bank?
Was it not entitled to treat the agency relation originally
existing as still in force, in the absence of notice from the
owners of the collection items that the status had been altered?
Could any position taken by the Clearwater bank of its own
initiative affect without the depositor's consent the preexisting
relation of principal and subagent between the depositors and the
St. Petersburg bank? We think not.
Compare Evansville Bank v.
German-American Bank, supra. Those depositors had an election
either to sue the St. Petersburg bank or to bring action against
the Clearwater bank for want of due diligence, or to treat the
drafts as payment and hold the Clearwater bank as their debtor, but
there is no intimation in the record that they made any election
prior to the subagent's insolvency, nor indeed that they then knew
whether collection had been effected or remittance received by the
Clearwater bank. There is no reason to presume that they elected to
stand on their cause of action against the Clearwater bank for lack
of due diligence in accepting drafts instead of currency, and thus
created a right of action in that bank against the St. Petersburg
bank by way of subrogation, or to affirm that the agency had
terminated and its status become that of a debtor. Nor is any
custom pleaded whereby the Clearwater bank was to become the debtor
of the depositors of the checks upon receipt of something other
than cash or equivalent from the subagent.
Compare Federal
Reserve Bank v. Malloy, supra.
This view does not, as claimed, permit the St. Petersburg bank
to assert on behalf of the owners of the checks an ownership in the
drafts which they have never claimed. On the contrary, the subagent
merely asserts its continuing liability to its principals as a
reason why the forwarding agent may not, without showing the
Page 290 U. S. 151
agreement of the principal, seek to assert another and a
different cause of action based on alleged ownership of the drafts
by the forwarding bank. The question is not one of transference of
ownership of the drafts to the customers of the Clearwater bank,
but of the attempted use by that bank of the cause of action on the
drafts as its own in the teeth of the undenied existence of another
cause of action arising out of the same transaction in favor of the
bank's principals.
Bank of the Metropolis v. New
England Bank, 1 How. 234,
42 U. S. 239,
presented a totally different situation from that here disclosed.
In that case, the forwarding bank, for all that appeared, was the
owner of the paper. There was neither contract nor statute to the
contrary. The course of dealing between the forwarding and the
collecting bank was for the mutual exchange of items for
collection, which each treated as owned by the other, and the
credit of the items as received in an account of the sender and
periodical settlement of the balances of account. When the
forwarding bank failed, it notified the collecting bank that
certain items then held for collection belonged to the New England
bank. In a suit by the latter against Metropolis bank, the defense
was that, at the date of the forwarding bank's failure, there was
due from it to the Metropolis bank more than the amount claimed.
The defense was held good, this Court saying:
"We do not perceive any difference in principle between an
advance of money and a balance suffered to remain upon the faith of
these mutual dealings. In the one case as well as the other, credit
is given upon the paper deposited or expected to be transmitted in
the usual course of the transactions between the parties."
But here, we have no credit extended by the St. Petersburg bank
to the Clearwater bank on the faith of the checks forwarded for
collection, and no mutual deposit
Page 290 U. S. 152
accounts, but a mere agency evidenced by a collection letter
requiring collection and remittance. The fact that no credit was
extended to the forwarding bank by the collecting bank leaves it
open to the depositor to assert his claim against the latter, even
though it had no notice that the relation between the depositor and
the forwarding bank was one merely of agency.
See Sweeny v.
Easter, 1 Wall. 166;
Beaver Boards Cos. v.
Imbrie & Co., 287 F. 158, 163.
The respondent was not entitled to set off an asserted cause of
action in its own right based on the drafts drawn by the
petitioner. The suggestion that the petitioner's demand was for the
amount of checks the Clearwater bank had collected and failed to
remit is beside the point. If the petitioner was, for that or any
other reason, not entitled to sue in its own right, the fact would
only be a further reason for denying the setoff.
The judgment must be
Reversed
[
Footnote 1]
"All debts or demands mutually existing between the parties at
the commencement of the action, whether the same be liquidated or
not, shall be proper subjects of set-off, and may be pleaded
accordingly."
Compiled General Laws of Florida, § 4326.
[
Footnote 2]
Compiled General Laws of Florida, § 6810.
[
Footnote 3]
"When a check, draft, note or other negotiable instrument is
deposited in a bank for credit, or for collection, it shall be
considered due diligence on the part of the bank in the collection
of any check, draft, note, or other negotiable instrument so
deposited, to forward en route the same without delay in the usual
commercial way in sue according to the regular course of business
of banks, and the maker, endorser, guarantor or surety of any
check, draft, note, or other negotiable instrument so deposited
shall be liable to the bank until actual final payment is received,
and, when a bank receives for collection any check, draft, note, or
other negotiable instrument and forwards the same for collection as
herein provided, 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."
Compiled General Laws of Florida, § 6834.
MR. JUSTICE STONE, dissenting.
I think the judgment should be affirmed.
The case was tried upon the pleadings alone, and we are asked to
determine an important question of law on only a partial
presentation of the facts upon which its correct solution depends.
Upon the facts disclosed, it would seem that the petitioner could
not rightly defeat respondent's counterclaim by setting up that the
drafts which are the subject of it are held by the Clearwater bank
upon an agency in behalf of some of its depositors which they are
not bound and have not chosen to assert. But, even if that could
properly be allowed, the burden rests on petitioner to show that
the agency of the Clearwater bank, created by the deposit of the
items for collection, was continued with respect to the drafts
which are the subject of the counterclaim, so that they were
held
Page 290 U. S. 153
by the collecting bank as agent, not as owner. This the
petitioner has failed to do.
From the pleadings, it appears that the checks were deposited
with the Clearwater bank by its customers, in the usual course, for
collection, and were forwarded by it, in turn, to the St.
Petersburg bank for collection; that the St. Petersburg bank
collected the checks and paid the amount of the collection to the
Clearwater bank by the drafts in question, made payable to its
order. The two banks had each, for a long time, been sending drafts
and checks to the other for collection and remittance, and the
demand of the St. Petersburg bank, to which the counterclaim was
interposed, was for an amount similarly due for items which had
been collected for it by the Clearwater bank. It is not shown what
credits were given by the Clearwater bank to the depositors for the
checks when received, or that any of them were restrictively
indorsed, or that, in the transactions between the two banks,
either appeared to the other to be acting otherwise than as owner
of the checks which it forwarded for collection.
See Douglas v.
Federal Reserve Bank, 271 U. S. 489. On
the argument, it was conceded that all were indorsed without
restriction. There is no allegation that the Clearwater bank ever
held the drafts, received from the St. Petersburg bank, as agent
for its depositors, and none that the depositors ever asserted such
an agency, or that they have made any claim to the drafts. Whether
or not, in the usual course of business, it credited its depositors
with the amount of the drafts on their receipt is not revealed.
The authority and duty of the Clearwater bank as an agent for
collection was to receive legal tender in payment of the collection
items, and nothing else. In receiving and retaining the drafts made
payable to its own order without designating the bank as agent, it
took
Page 290 U. S. 154
them not as agent, but for its own account. By taking them in
payment, it discharged the drawers of the collection items. Having
thus precluded collection in legal tender, it at once became the
bank's duty to credit its depositors with the items collected.
Federal Reserve Bank v. Malloy, 264 U.
S. 160,
264 U. S. 165.
By thus crediting the drafts, it would have performed fully its
duty as a collecting agent, for such a credit was all that was
expected or could have been required if the collection had been
made in legal tender. In either case, the agency would then have
come to an end beyond recall, the bank would have become a debtor
to its depositors and the unqualified owner of the drafts which it
had accepted in payment of the collections.
See Commercial Bank
v. Armstrong, 148 U. S. 50,
148 U. S. 58;
Marine Bank v. Fulton
Bank, 2 Wall. 252;
Planters'
Bank v. Union Bank, 16 Wall. 483,
83 U. S. 501;
Phoenix Bank v. Risley, 111 U. S. 125;
Burton v. United States, 196 U. S. 283,
196 U. S. 297;
Douglas v. Federal Reserve Bank, supra. There is no
presumption, even under the Florida statute, that an agency of a
bank to collect paper for its depositors survives the receipt by it
of drafts in payment of the collection. Its survival necessarily
depends on special circumstances not here disclosed. It cannot be
presumed, in the absence of appropriate allegations or proof that
the depositors have claimed any ownership in the drafts or that, in
the absence of such claim, the Clearwater bank did not, as it was
legally bound to do, credit its depositors with the amount of the
drafts on or after their receipt, or that it afterward occupied any
relationship to its depositors other than that of debtor. There is
thus a failure to allege directly or by any necessary inference the
essential facts on which the petitioner's case depends to show that
the depositors of the Clearwater bank have any right to treat the
drafts in its hands as their property.
Page 290 U. S. 155
But, even if we are to say on this record that the depositors
were entitled to claim ownership of the drafts in the hands of the
Clearwater bank, they have not done so, and the St. Petersburg bank
may not assert for them an interest in the drafts which they are
not bound to assert and have never claimed for themselves. Unless
Federal Reserve Bank v. Malloy, supra, on which the
opinion of the Court relies, is to be overruled, neither the St.
Petersburg bank nor the Clearwater bank could treat the depositors
of the latter as owners of the drafts without their consent. In
that case, which arose under the statute of Florida involved in the
present case, the bank had received paper restrictively indorsed
for collection from another bank which had received it from its
customer. In turn, it forwarded the paper to another bank for
collection, from which it took a draft, payable to its own order,
in payment of the collection item. This Court held that the bank
received the paper as agent to collect it, but that, in receiving
the draft as payment instead of legal tender, the forwarding bank
acted outside its agency. Hence, it could not treat the owner of
the paper sent for collection as the owner of the draft which it
had thus wrongfully received, without his consent or ratification.
Here, the rights of the Clearwater bank upon the drafts had accrued
before the receivership of either bank. What their rights then were
they continued to be unless they were altered by some act of its
depositors. Ownership of the drafts was not in suspension. It had
already been lodged in the Clearwater bank by its own unauthorized
act. Some affirmative act of ratification or adoption was necessary
by its customers before the wrongful act of the Clearwater bank
could be relieved of its consequences and before the burden of
ownership acquired by it in its own right, because without
authority, could be transferred from it to its depositors.
Allowance of the counterclaim
Page 290 U. S. 156
upon the drafts, like payment of them before such an act of
adoption, obviously could not result in double liability of the St.
Petersburg bank, since the payment or allowance would be made to
the one entitled to receive it.
Other circumstances make the present case an even plainer one
for denying to the petitioner any right to assert that the drafts,
which the Clearwater bank received and is compelled to hold as
owner, are held upon an agency. The two banks, as the court below
pointed out, were mutual agents for collection. On the record, we
must take it that they dealt with each other as the owners of the
collection items which each bank received from the other without
notice of the interest in them of the other's depositors for
collection. In Bank of the
Metropolis v. New England
Bank, 1 How. 234,
47 U. S. 6 How.
212, this Court laid down the rule that, when banks mutually act as
agents for collection, each for the other, and paper transmitted
for collection appears on its face to be the property of the
transmitting bank and remitted for its account, they are entitled
to settle their mutual demands for items collected by striking a
balance, no matter who the owner of the collected items may be.
Each deals, and is entitled to deal, with the other in reliance
upon the security of the paper, indorsed without restriction, and
transmitted, or expected to be transmitted, in the usual course of
the transactions between them.
See also Reynes v. Dumont,
130 U. S. 354,
130 U. S. 392;
Joyce v. Auten, 179 U. S. 591,
179 U. S. 597.
The application here of the principle involved would not seem to be
affected by the fact that drafts drawn for balances due from the
one bank to the other were sent daily, rather than weekly or
monthly. Even though the depositors here might have asserted an
ownership in the drafts, which nevertheless they did not assert, it
would be a departure from this salutary principle to say that the
St. Petersburg bank can deny to the
Page 290 U. S. 157
Clearwater bank the rights of ownership in the drafts which the
latter cannot itself deny.
Not only has petitioner failed to sustain the burden of showing
that the depositors of the Clearwater bank, or any of them, have
asked or consented to be treated as owners of the drafts, or
otherwise adopted the act of the Clearwater bank, but it appears
that it would be to their disadvantage to do so. We need not close
our eyes to the obvious fact that the only possible advantage
sought in behalf of the St. Petersburg bank by resistance to the
counterclaim -- the benefit of a distribution by the Clearwater
bank to creditors larger than that of the St. Petersburg bank -- is
identical with the advantage which the depositors will retain by
treating the Clearwater bank as their debtor instead of asserting
ownership in the unpaid drafts. In the circumstances, to speak of
the Clearwater bank as suing upon its counterclaim as an agent, and
as not bearing the burden of ownership, is to speak in terms of
legal fiction, not of reality. Notwithstanding our judgment denying
to the Clearwater bank the right to counterclaim upon the drafts
because the ownership of them is not in it, but in its depositors,
the depositors, if they have not already done so, are free to prove
their claim against the Clearwater bank as a debtor, because they
have never become owners of the drafts. The Clearwater bank, then,
has no choice but to bear the burdens of ownership of the drafts
which it has received and retains as owner. It should equally be
entitled to the benefits. These include the right to set up the
drafts as a counterclaim to its indebtedness to the St. Petersburg
bank.