{
  "id": 8725442,
  "name": "First National Bank, Paris v. McKeen",
  "name_abbreviation": "First National Bank v. McKeen",
  "decision_date": "1939-03-20",
  "docket_number": "4-5326",
  "first_page": "1060",
  "last_page": "1071",
  "citations": [
    {
      "type": "official",
      "cite": "197 Ark. 1060"
    },
    {
      "type": "parallel",
      "cite": "127 S.W.2d 142"
    }
  ],
  "court": {
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    "id": 8808,
    "name": "Arkansas Supreme Court"
  },
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      "cite": "140 S. W. 992",
      "category": "reporters:state_regional",
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    {
      "cite": "100 Ark. 537",
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      "cite": "176 Ark. 387",
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        4669
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    {
      "cite": "9 S. W. 2d. 1064",
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    {
      "cite": "177 Ark. 1138",
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  "analysis": {
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    "char_count": 23366,
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  "last_updated": "2023-07-14T22:44:13.530812+00:00",
  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
    "source": "Harvard",
    "batch": "2018"
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  "casebody": {
    "judges": [
      "Smith, Frank Gt., McHaney and Holt, JJ., dissent.",
      "I am authorized to say that Justices Smith and Mc-Haney concur in this dissent."
    ],
    "parties": [
      "First National Bank, Paris v. McKeen."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "GrieeiN Smith, C. J.\nThis appeal questions a decree finding that First National Bank at Paris did not have the right to charge appellee\u2019s account with certain checks drawn on it by Blue Ribbon Corporation, such checks having been received as part of a deposit with which ap-pellee was credited.\nThe checks were issued Saturday, February 29,1936, payable to laborers in mines distant from Paris. Appel-lee cashed some of the checks. Others were accepted in trade or on account, such transactions having occurred on Saturday at appellee\u2019s store. The bank closed at three o \u2019clock, Appellee insists that checks aggregating $776.31, and other checks, were cashed by him just as the bank was closing Saturday afternoon, and that he received $898. Appellant\u2019s explanation' is that appellee presented the checks Monday, March 2, in connection with a deposit; that an adding machine slip was attached to the deposit ticket, showing a total of $1,515.43 in checks. Five hundred dollars cash was deducted and paid to appellee, whose account was credited with the difference of $1,015.43. It is not clear whether all checks comprising the claim of $776.31 were with the Monday deposit, or some were included in the list cashed Saturday.'\nIt is admitted by Blue Ribbon Corporation\u2019s secretary that the checks were issued to workers February 29, but were dated March 2 \u2014 this for record purposes. If ap-pellee accepted checks February 29 post-dated March 2, he {lid so with notice. However, the issue was intended for release on the 29th, and if the bank in these circumstances cashed them for appellee, the fact that '\u00a1grima facie they were not payable until March 2 is immaterial.\nThe bank\u2019s original ledger sheet, showing Blue Ribbon Corporation\u2019s account, reveals that 129-checks were cashed from February 17 to February 28. On the 28th Blue Ribbon\u2019s credit balance was $50.64. February 29 $999 was deposited, and $1,498.50 was deposited March 2. Balance at the close of business March 2 was $2,475,80,\nThe February 29th credit was established through deposit of a check for $1,000 drawn in favor of Blue Ribbon Corporation by United Sales Company of Kansas City, Missouri, less exchange of $1. The $1,498.50 credit resulted from deposit of a $500 check drawn by Independent Lumber & Coal Company, of St. Joseph, Missouri, and a $1,000 check of United Sales Company, less exchange of $1.50. The checks were drawn on Missouri Valley Trust Company, of St. Joseph.\nAccording to appellant\u2019s agents, the bank received a telegram from St. Joseph Monday afternoon near four o\u2019clock stating that payment had been stopped on the three checks deposited by Blue Ribbon Corporation. Ap-pellee says he was called by the bank about six o\u2019clock Monday evening (after dark) and was told not to accept any more Blue Ribbon checks \u2014 that \u201csomething had happened. \u2019 \u2019\nTuesday morning, March 3, appellee received from appellant sixteen Blue Ribbon checks on which appellee had received credit of $776.31.\n\u25a0 June 20, 1936, appellant charged to loss $846.61\u2014 the difference between the March 2d balance of $2,475.80 and $1,629.19. At the same time, the latter item was ch\u00e1rged off. Checks drawn by Blue Ribbon Corporation and cashed by the bank or handled by parties other than appellee made up the loss of $846.61.\nThe rule supported by the great weight of authority is that when .a check is offered for deposit in the bank on which it is draAvn, the bank has the right as against such depositor to reject it dr refuse to pay it, or to receive it conditionally ; but if it unqualifiedly accepts the check and places it to the credit of the depositor, it cannot thereafter, in the absence of fraud or collusion, repudiate the transaction. \u201cThe reason for this rule,\u201d says American Jurisprudence, \u201cis that the unqualified acceptance of the check constitutes a completed transaction, the effect of which is the same as though the check had been paid in cash and cash in turn deposited in the account. As a consequence, as between the bank and the depositor, the former must bear the loss if the check proves to be an overdraft on the drawer\u2019s account. The title to the check passes to the bank, which then becomes a debtor for the amount of such check. It is not necessary, in order to complete the credit to the depositor, that the check be debited to the drawer and marked \u2018paid\u2019/\u2019 -\nTo the same effect is Corpus Juris Secundum, vol. 9, \u00a7 284, at page 592. There it is said that \u201cWhere a bank has unqualifiedly accepted and placed to the credit of a depositor a check drawn on itself, it may not thereafter, in the absence of fraud or collusion, repudiate such completed transaction, although a depositor who has suffered no loss through dishonoring of the check may not recover of the bank, and by agreement the right to charge back may be preserved.\u201d\nA leading case from which the rule seems to have been constructed is First National Bank of Cincinnati v. Burkhardt, 100 U. S. 686, 25 L. ed. 766, where it was said:\n\u201cWhen \u00e1 check on itself is offered to a bank as a deposit, the bank has the option to accept, or reject it, or to receive it upon such conditions as may be agreed upon. If it be rejected, there is no room for any doubt or question between the parties. If, on the other hand, the check is offered as a deposit and received as a deposit, there being no fraud and the check genuine, the parties are no less bound and concluded than in the former case. Neither can disavow or repudiate what has been done. The case is simply one of an executed contract. There are the requisite parties, the requisite consideration, and the requisite concurrence and assent of the minds of those concerned.\u201d\nLaw of the Burkhardt Case was applied by this court \u2014or, rather, the principle was stated \u2014 in Arkansas Valley Bank v. Kelley, where it was said: \u201cSome innocent person must suffer; and, as the bank\u2019s election to treat as a cash deposit the check from Payne by 'Burroughs, instead of receiving it for collection, as might have been done, caused the loss to fall upon it, the loss must remain there.\u201d\nIn Rogers Commission Company v. Farmers Booth of Leslie, Mr. Justice Kirby said: \u201cIt was not necessary to the bank\u2019s liability that it should have on deposit to the drawers\u2019 credit more than the amount of the \u00a1check at the time of its presentation, for it would have ! become liable to its payment by an acceptance of it, and \u25a0 could have permitted an overdraft as it had usually done, or Avithheld its own check, which it claimed to have in its drawer against the account of the makers of the check, [which latter the testimony indicates it did do.\u201d\nAppellant insists that the propf, including admissions of appellee, shows it was customary for the bank to accept without question checks drawn by its depositors, and at the close of the day\u2019s business to charge back all worthless items.\nBlue Ribbon Corporation mines at Scranton, where pay checks were delivered, closed at three o\u2019clock. Ap-pellee customarily cashed such checks because appellant bank closed a.t three o\u2019clock. Because of simultaneous closing hours, the miners could not get to Paris in time to present their checks at the bank.\nAppellee was asked how the bank received his deposit. His reply was that when a deposit was tendered \u201cThey checked [the list], and if there was [a check] not good they would hand it back to me.\u201d\n\u201cQ. Prior [to the time in question] you had deposited checks that were bad, and they brought them back to you, and charged them back to you? A. I have gotten back several small ones, but not the day I deposited them. They would charge them back and deliver them to me \u2014 one or two dollar checks. Q. You have had that to arise since this time on several little checks \u201c\u2014 When yon deposit a bunch of checks, don\u2019t they just look at your indorsement, and if the check is not good they charge it hack?- A. That is the way they did these. I guess it is the ordinary way the bank handl\u00e9s them.\u201d\nThis is the strongest testimony tending to prove a custom or practice known to appellee. By this evidence it is sought to raise a legal presumption that the bank conditionally accepted Blue Ribbon checks. If such custom prevailed, it is immaterial whether items comprising the charge-back were cashed on Saturday, or were included in the Monday deposit. If, on the other hand, the right to charge arises solely on account of reservation's expressed on the deposit ticket, such right must have been exercised not later than the close of business of the day of conditional acceptance.\nAdmittedly no checks were charged Saturday, nor was there a debit to appellee\u2019s account on Monday. None of the items comprising the claim was charged to Blue Ribbon Corporation\u2019s account. Presumably they were carried as cash from Saturday (if appellee\u2019s testimony is correct) or from Monday afternoon\u2019s closing hour (if appellant\u2019s explanation is the proper one) until Tuesday morning. Appellant does not contend appellee was notified Monday that the checks would be charged to him. It is only insisted he was advised not to accept other similar -checks.\nThe evidence is not sufficient to avouch a custom. Appellant insists it relied upon appellee\u2019s indorsement; that he was a customer of known responsibility; that his checks were examined only for the purpose of verifying the amounts and the total.\nConspicuous \u2014 and we think controlling \u2014 is the fact that during all of Monday\u2019s banking day, Blue Ribbon\u2019s account showed a credit balance of $2,475.80. Not until four o\u2019clock was there any indication, even to the bank, that this balance was synthetic \u2014 and this was an hour after doors had been closed. If appellee, or anyone entitled to the information, had asked bank officials at any period of the day if Blue Ribbon checks were good, an affirmative answer would have been given.\nThe hank elected to treat the foreign checks deposited by Blue Ribbon Corporation as so much cash. It charged $2.50 as exchange for handling them.\nThere was evidence of a custom whereby Blue Ribbon Corporation would not deposit its out-of-town checks until the pay roll was due. The bank, although having-complained of the practice, permitted it..\nMiscellaneous checks charged to Blue Ribbon account June 18 were cashed March 2 (or possibly February 29) because appellant elected to treat Blue Ribbon\u2019s deposit as an established credit insofar as third parties were concerned.\nIf the bank had any doubt about the' St. Joseph checks, a relatively inexpensive telegraph message or telephone call Avould have put that doubt at rest. :By an expenditure of approximately $1.50 the deposit could have been verified. If custom is to be relied upon, appel-lee has shown that it was appellant\u2019s pr\u00e1ctice to accept as cash Blue Ribbon\u2019s eleventh-hour deposit of foreign checks.\nOf those concerned in the case at bar, only the bank had expressed disapproval of the practice of withholding deposits until pay rolls were ready to be released, yet in spite of its apprehension appellant continued to accept the business and to establish credits which Blue Ribbon Corporation was authorized to check against.\nAppellee, if forced to sustain the loss, would be a victim of conditions he did not set in motion and over which he had no control. Of course, he could have refused to cash the checks. Extreme prudence might have suggested an inquiry regarding their status; but proof is conclusive that the only answer possible would have been one confirming his own belief that they were good.\nThe decree is affirmed.\nSmith, Frank Gt., McHaney and Holt, JJ., dissent.\nAmerican Jurisprudence, v. 7, \u00a7 457, p. 327.\nSee list of annotated cases referred' to in American Jurisprudence, v. 7, p. 327 [note 5].\n176 Ark. 387, 3 S. W. 2d 53, 58 A. L. R. 808.\n100 Ark. 537, 140 S. W. 992.\nOn the face of the deposit ticket was printed: \u201cAll checks and drafts are credited subject to payment under conditions stated on back of duplicate ticket.\u201d On the reverse side of the ticket the following appears: \u201cIn receiving items for deposit or collection, this bank acts only as depositor\u2019s collecting agent. . . . All items are credited subject 'to final payment. . . [The Bank] may charge back any item at any time before final payment whether returned or not;.also, any item drawn on this bank not good at close of business on day deposited [may be charged back].\u201d",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "GrieeiN Smith, C. J."
      },
      {
        "text": "Holt, J.\n(dissenting). I cannot agree with the majority opinion in this case. The effect of it is to say to every bank in this state that when one of them credits a customer\u2019s account with a check (or checks) drawn on it, it does so at its peril. In other words, should the bank after having given its customer\u2019s account credit for the check drawn on it, find out, at the close of business, on the same day during which the deposit was made, that there Avere insufficient funds in the account on Avhich the check Avas draAvn to cover it, then the bank regardless of any custom, or agreement with the customer, Avould not be permitted to charge the amount of the check back to the account of the depositors, but .must assume and pay the amount of this check itself. I do not think this is the Irav of this state. If it should be and the majority opinion alloAved to stand, then Arkansas banks must, of necessity, add new employees and increase the expense of operation to an unprofitable and unjust degree.\nThe effect of this decision is that Avhen customers, such as large department stores in the larger cities of this state, that accept literally hundreds of checks daily,' go to make their deposits, the bank teller, before crediting the grand total of these checks on the passbook of this depositor, must leave his cage, go back to the bookkeeper and ascertain Avhether each one of these hundreds of checks is good. This might conceivably take hours Avhile the line of customers Avaited. Such a rule would, in my opinion, paralyze banking and is not the laAV of this state.\nThe facts in the instant case disclose that appellee, a graceryman at Paris, Arkansas, had for a number of years on Saturday afternoon, after banking hours, cashed a large number of checks for coal miners in that neighborhood Avho held checks draAvn on the Blue Ribbon Corporation\u2019s account in appellant bank. This practice of appellee Avas not only to accommodate these employees in cashing their checks, but naturally we must assume that it Avas good business on his part for the reason that a large number of these coal miners Avould spend the proceeds of these checks Avith appellee in the purchase of merchandise. I think the undisputed proof sIioavs that tAvelve of the sixteen checks in question were cashed by appellee on a Saturday and deposited with appellant bank on the folloAving Monday, March 2, and the great weight of the testimony shows that the other four checks were deposited on tlie same day. Tlie evidence also shows that it was the custom of appellant bank to accept checks drawn on it, for deposit when offered by appellee, and at the close of 'business on the same day the deposit was'made, to charge back to ap-pellee\u2019s account any and all checks that were not good, and that appellee understood and agreed to this custom cannot be doubted.\nThe uncontradicted evidence also shows that within the passbook in which appellee\u2019s deposits were entered with appellant bank, and on the face of' the deposit ticket used by appellant, was printed the following contract and agreement between appellant and appellee: \u201cAll checks and drafts are credited subject to payment under conditions stated on back of duplicate ticket.\u201d On the reverse side of the ticket the following- appears: \u201cIn receiving items for deposit or collection, this bank acts only as depositor\u2019s collecting agent . ... All items are credited subject to final' payment. (The Bank) may charge back any item at any time before final payment whether returned or not; also, any item drawn on this bank not good at close of business on day deposited (may be charged back).\u201d Appellee had been doing business with appellant bank for more than ten years and as to the custom under which such business was done, referred to above, I think appellee\u2019s own testimony settles that issue. We quote from the record his own words, as follows: \u201cA. I have got back several small ones, but not the day I deposited them. Q. When would you get them? A. Afterwards. Q. They would charge them back to you and deliver them back to you? A. One or two dollar checks. Q. You have had that to arise since this time on several little checks\u2014 when you deposit a bunch of checks don\u2019s they just look at your indorsement and if the check is not good they charge them back? A. That is the way they did these. Q. That is the ordinary way of handling checks on that bank, isn\u2019t it? A. I guess it is.\u201d\nNot only does appellee admit the custom which had sprung up between him and appellant, but states further tliat he even permitted appellant to return checks after-wards and accept these charges against his account after the close of business on the day of deposit. The size of the checks in proving custom can he of no consequence. The fact remains that appellee did permit these checks to be charged back to his account. I think that we cannot, and should not, say that the day\u2019s business in any bank in this state ended at three o\u2019clock in the afternoon or at any other hour when its doors were closed to the public on that day. Certainly there must be additional time given to the bank and its employees to check through its daily business and determine the status thereof. It may be said to be a matter of' common knowledge that a large part of the bank\u2019s business is performed after its doors are closed.\nOf course, if appellant bank intended unqualifiedly to accept these sixteen checks in question when deposited by appellee on March 2, then appellee would be entitled to recover; on the contrary.if appellant intended to accept these checks only on condition of their payment, then appellant should not be held liable for their payment.\nWe think the rule of law governing the instant case to be as stated in Corpus Juris, Yol. 17, \u00a7 24, titled \u201c Customs and Usages\u201d, wherein the text-writer said:\n\u201cThe better authority seems to support the rule that the established usage of a bank is binding on persons dealing with it whether they have actual knowledge thereof or not, particularly where it has been so long established that its customers may well be presumed to have known of it, where they have had previous dealings with the bank, or where it is a general custom among the banks of the place; but there are numerous decisions more in consonance with the general rules relating to usages which hold that the usage of a particular bank will not bind the party dealing .with it, unless he has express knowledge of it. Other authorities hold that as in other cases a banking\u2019 usage must either be known or so well established as to raise the presumption that it was known.\u201d\nIn Townley v. Exchange National Bank of Tulsa, 108 Okla. 144, 234 P. 574, under facts similar to the instant case, the rule is stated by the court as follows: \u2018 \u2018 On accepting a deposit, that the law usually creates the relation of debtor and creditor is not in dispute in this case, and that, when such deposit is made in the form of a check drawn upon the bank by another depositor and there is no want of good faith on the part of the depositor, the giving of the depositor of credit to the amount of the check precludes the bank from recalling or repudiating the credit. 3 R. C. L. 153; 7 C. J. 635; (and other citations). On the strength of the same authorities, we think that it is equally well settled that such acceptance, to constitute this relation of debtor and creditor as set out above, must be an unconditional one, and that where a custom is Tmown to a depositor, or so well established it should be known to him, such checks are accepted 'by the bank on condition that an examination of the drawee\u2019s account discloses sufficient credit to warrant the payment of the check by the bank, that such conditional acceptance, under said custom, does not create the relation of debtor and creditor until iho custom has spent itself, and the bank has liad the opportunity to determine whether the check should be honored or charged back against the deposit of the customer.\nIn the case of Pollack v. National Bank of Commerce, 168 Mo. App. 368, 153 S. W. 774, it was said: \u2018Where a depositor of a bank presented to it a check for deposit, with knowledge of the custom of the bank to take checks and defer payment for a reasonable time until the bank ascertained whether there were sufficient funds of the drawer to pay it, the depositor was estopped from asserting that the bank, giving him credit for the deposit, could not, on finding insufficient funds to pay the checks, charge the depositor\u2019s account with the amount thereof.\u2019 That such custom and established usage on the part of the defendant bank, as well as other banks in the city of Tulsa, existed was known to the plaintiff or should have been known to him, was the defense pleaded by the bank. The defendant bank further pleaded that on tlie passbook of tlie plaintiff on which he received the credit was printed: \u2018Checks on this bank will be credited conditionally. If not found good at the close of the day of deposit, they will be charged back to depositors, and the depositor notified, etc. . . .\u2019 That such custom or usage as to such checks obtained was shown by the evidence, not only in the conduct of the business of the defendant bank, but in the other banks of said city.\u201d\n\u25a0See, also, First Nat. Bank v. Burkhardt, 100 U. S. 686, 25 L. Ed. 766, wherein the court said: \u201cIf the check were to be considered as received on deposit when it was left with the teller, and Cannamon was the debtor of the bank and the bank his creditor from the time, then the transaction was not within the guaranty, and Burkhardt was not liable. If, on the other hahd, the bank had the right to hold the check until after banking hours, and then to make its election, and to .credit the depositor and charge Cannamon with the amount, as' was done, the check was covered by the guaranty, and the bank was entitled to recover.\u201d\nOn this same question of custom in the case of Bank of Charleston v. Hill, 177 Ark. 1138, 9 S. W. 2d. 1064, this court held, as is shown by the third headnote, as follows: \u201cWhere the banking custom, in the absence of a special agreement, was to receive checks for collection only, to be recharged in the event of collection not being made, though credit was given to the depositor at. the time of the deposit, the presumption would be that the bank and depositor contracted with reference to this custom.\u201d __\nSince, therefore, the uncontradicted proof in this case shows the existence of, liot only a custom between appellant and appellee to charge 'back the checks in question, but also a written agreement clearly giving this right to appellant, it is my view that this case should be reversed, and, since it appears to have been fully developed, dismissed.\nI am authorized to say that Justices Smith and Mc-Haney concur in this dissent.",
        "type": "dissent",
        "author": "Holt, J."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Arnett & Shaw, for appellant.",
      "White & White and J. M. Smallwood, for appellee."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "First National Bank, Paris v. McKeen.\n4-5326\n127 S. W. 2d 142\nOpinion delivered March 20, 1939.\nArnett & Shaw, for appellant.\nWhite & White and J. M. Smallwood, for appellee."
  },
  "file_name": "1060-01",
  "first_page_order": 1076,
  "last_page_order": 1087
}
