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  "name": "Earl Kane, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. American National Bank & Trust Company, Defendant-Appellant",
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    "parties": [
      "Earl Kane, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. American National Bank & Trust Company, Defendant-Appellant."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "Mr. JUSTICE SEIDENFELD\ndelivered the opinion of the court:\nThe plaintiff, Earl Kane, payee of two checks drawn on insufficient funds at the defendant bank, American National Bank & Trust Company (hereinafter American), sued to recover the balance due on the checks alleging that American had held the checks beyond its midnight deadline and thereby became liable to the plaintiff. The trial court entered judgment for $66,262.20, plus interest, and defendant appeals.\nAmerican contends that certain regulations of the Federal Reserve Board and operating circulars of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago apply to avoid the midnight deadline under the facts of this case; and that alternatively plaintiff has waived his right to claim that the bank is accountable under provisions of section 4 \u2014 302 of the Uniform Commercial Code. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1971, ch. 26, par. 4 \u2014 302 (hereinafter UCC).\nOn July 18, 1966, the plaintiff received two checks of the same date from the Heggemeier Livestock Corporation. At that time Heggemeier owed the plaintiff approximately $108,000 for lambs, feed and wool. The larger check, for $67,413.40, contained the notation \u201cFor Fat Lambs\u201d, and the smaller check, for $11,849.20, contained the notation \u201cFor Wool\u201d. The next day plaintiff delivered the checks without endorsing them to the Blackhawk Production Credit Association (BPCA) to whom he was indebted, and BPCA credited his account for the amount of the checks. BPCA deposited the checks at the Freeport State Bank on July 20 and the account of the association was so credited.\nThe checks went to the Continental Bank in Chicago, then the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, and were received by the defendant, American National, on Friday, July 22, 1966. American returned the checks that same day for lack of endorsement. Although at this time the Heggemeier Corporation account did not contain sufficient funds to cover payment on the checks, the checks were not so stamped and neither BPCA nor plaintiff was notified by American of Heggemeiers lack of funds. The checks returned in reverse order of their preceding journey and while at Continental were erroneously stamped \u201cpresented twice\u201d.\nOn July 26 the checks returned to the Freeport State Bank. BPCA was called and Mr. Hostetter from BPCA obtained a power of attorney from the plaintiff, who was leaving for a vacation. Mr. Hostetter came down to the Freeport State Bank and supplied the missing endorsements. The checks were then sent back on the 27th; this time directly by mail to American at the request of BPCA. The checks were sent directly to American because the amounts were large and the collection time would have been much longer if the checks were processed through normal collection channels.\nAccompanying the checks was a standard collection form containing instructions and identifying the sender, the checks, the amounts, and the date sent. The instructions printed in the lower right hand comer read:\n\u201cWe enclose for collection and return items as stated above.\nINSTRUCTIONS:\nNO PROTEST.\nSurrender documents attached only on payment.\nReturn at once if not paid, stating reasons for non-payment.\nReturn this sheet. No other letter is necessary.\u201d\nOn Thursday, July 28, the checks were received at American by Bernice Collins, who worked at the draft-and-collection window of American, She ignored the instructions contained on the printed form which, she stated, was a matter of normal practice. At this time the Heggemeier account did not contain sufficient funds to cover the two checks.\nOn Friday, July 29, the midnight deadline expired.\nOn Tuesday, August 2, Freeport State Bank sent a tracer to American requesting advice on payment of the two checks sent for collection on Heggemeier Livestock Corporation. The tracer was returned by American on August 3, 1966, with the notation \u201cStill NSF\u201d, and received by Freeport State Bank on the 4th.\nKane found out on Friday morning, August 5, that American planned to return the checks. He went to the Freeport bank and talked with BPCAs attorney. Friday evening Kane reached Heggemeier, president of the Heggemeier Livestock Corporation, and was told that Hegge-meier had a balance of some $53,000. Plaintiff then wrote a check for $27,041.36 to Heggemeier to have him deposit it so plaintiff could then collect on the two Heggemeier checks at American. The check was drawn on an inactive account of plaintiff at the Sycamore Bank which had a balance at the time of only $31. The check was post-dated August 12, plaintiff expecting to increase his account in the interim.\nPlaintiff told his attorney what he had done, his attorney was upset, and payment on this Sycamore check was stopped on August 10, after the Heggemeier checks were returned. There was also some fear that Heggemeier might divert the Sycamore Bank check for uses not contemplated.\nOn August 8, the Freeport State Bank called American to return the two Heggemeier checks. On the 9th they were received at Freeport and BPCA\u2019s account was charged back for the amount of the checks. Kane\u2019s account with BPCA was also charged back for the amount of the returned checks. Kane then made other arrangements with BPCA to repay his loan to them, and BPCA returned the checks to Kane. After the checks were returned to BPCA, Kane received $13,000 from Heggemeier and elected to apply it on the larger check.\nAmerican argues that former Federal Reserve Regulations G and J, and former Operating Circulars No. 4 and No. 7 of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, all in effect at the time the Heggemeier checks were sent to American, require that the checks when sent directly to American be treated as \u201cnon-cash items\u201d with the result that the midnight deadline would not apply. American reasons that because the checks were sent directly accompanied by special instructions they required special handling so that American became only \u201can agent for collection\u201d (former Reg. G, 12 C.F.R., sec. 207.3(c), and former Operating Circular No. 7, par. 13(c)), and was required only to give \u201ccredit when paid\u201d. Former Operating Circular No. 4, par. 24.\nThe plaintiff contends, inter alia, that the Federal Reserve Regulations do not apply to this transaction. We agree. Federal Reserve Regulations G and J and the operating circulars thereunder relied upon by American do not apply to collections of items not sent through the Federal Reserve collection channels.\nThe relevant purposes of former Regulation G and Regulation J are to provide rules governing the clearing house operations provided by the Federal Reserve system for the collection of cash and noncash items, and to protect the Federal Reserve system from liability and inconveniences in conducting these operations. There is thus no need and no purpose in the Federal Reserve system regulating check clearing procedures that operate outside its system and have no effect on it.\nThe regulations and operating circulars relied upon themselves disclose that they only apply to regulate Federal Reserve transactions. Former Regulation G provides for regulation where banks send noncash items to any Federal Reserve bank for collection (12 C.F.R. sec. 207.3(a)) and also prescribes the authority for Reserve banks to promulgate rules, but limits the binding effect of such rules to member or nonmember banks \u201cwhich send any noncash item to such Federal Reserve banks for collection\u201d. (12 C.F.R. sec. 207.4.) Former Operating Circular No. 7 promulgated under Regulation G by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Emits its applicability to the collection of items passing through the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago; paragraphs 1 and 6 of the circular state that Regulation G and the circular prescribe the terms and conditions upon which the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago will receive and handle noncash items for collection. See also former Fed. Res. Reg. J, 12 C.F.R. secs. 210.2(b), 210.5. 210.6; former Operating Circular No. 4, par. 1.\nSince the Federal regulations have no controlling applicability to the transaction before us, the case must be decided under the provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code, supplemental principles of law and the agreements of the parties.\nUnder the Commercial Code, sending checks for collection directly to the drawee bank constitutes a valid method of presentment. (UCC \u00a7 4\u2014204; Central Bank & Trust Co. v. First Northwest Bank (E.D. Mo. 1971), 332 F.Supp. 1166, 1169, affd, 458 F.2d 511; Farmers Cooperative Livestock Market, Inc. v. Second National Bank of London (Ky.App. 1968), 427 S.W.2d 247.) In the absence of an agreement authorizing the payor bank to do otherwise, such bank normally will be accountable or hable for retaining demand items beyond its midnight deadline without paying or returning the items or sending notice of dishonor. (UCC \u00a7 4\u2014302(a); Rock Island Auction Sales, Inc. v. Empire Packing Co., Inc. (1965), 32 Ill.2d 269; Central Bank & Trust Co. v. First Northwest Bank (E.D. Mo. 1971), 332 F.Supp. 1166, 1169, aff'd, 458 F.2d 511.) The fact that the checks were sent \u201cfor collection\u201d does not alter this result. (Farmers Cooperative Livestock Market, Inc. v. Second National Bank of London (Ky.App. 1968), 427 S.W.2d 247, 249-250.) In the instant case the desire to expedite the collection process was the reason the Heggemeier checks were sent directly by mail to American (see also Official Comment 2 to UCC \u00a7 4 \u2014 204), and an instruction requesting immediate return if not paid accompanied the checks. Yet American held the checks without paying, returning, or notifying Free-port State Bank of dishonor until Freeport sent a tracer which was returned almost a week later by American.. Under these circumstances we conclude that American should be held accountable for the unpaid balance of the checks, unless, as defendant further claims, plaintiff has ratified or waived defendant\u2019s nonaction.\nAfter the midnight deadline expired, the plaintiff issued a check on August 5, 1966, to Heggemeier for $27,041.36, and postdated it August 12. His purpose in doing so was to have Heggemeier deposit the check to the Heggemeier account at American which plaintiff was told had a balance of $53,000. Heggemeier\u2019s account would then total approximately $80,000 so that plaintiff\u2019s checks from Heggemeier, totaling $79,262.60, could be paid. The check contained the notation \u201cFeed Bill to date Pd. in full\u201d above the endorsement. Heggemeier attempted to deposit this check at American before his checks to plaintiff were returned, but American, according to the testimony of one of its officers, did not \u201clike the looks\u201d of the check and refused to accept it for collection. On August 10, after the Heggemeier checks to plaintiff were returned, plaintiff stopped payment on the $27,041.36 check he gave to Heggemeier.\nAmerican argues that plaintiff\u2019s action in delivering the check to Heggemeier waived his right to complain or constituted a ratification of American\u2019s failure to observe its midnight deadline. American\u2019s claim of waiver and ratification is based upon the reasoning that plaintiff\u2019s plan to have his post-dated check deposited in Heggemeier\u2019s account to make good the Heggemeier checks at American could not have succeeded unless American continued to hold the Heggemeier checks for collection beyond the midnight deadline.\nAmerican first points to UCC \u00a7 1 \u2014 107, and contends the plaintiff\u2019s check delivered to Heggemeier constituted a written waiver of plaintiff\u2019s rights under UCC \u00a7 4 \u2014 302 against American.\nUCC \u00a7 1 \u2014 107 provides:\n\u201cAny claim or right arising out of an alleged breach can be discharged in whole or in part without consideration by a written waiver or renunciation signed and delivered by the aggrieved party.\u201d\nUCC \u00a7 1 \u2014 107\u2019s counterpart for commercial paper is contained in UCC \u00a7 3 \u2014 605. Neither UCC \u00a7 1 \u2014 107 nor UCC \u00a7 3 \u2014 605 seems to apply to breach of a statutory duty and consequent liability imposed by statute. Even if the applicability of these sections to the type of liability in question is assumed, we cannot conclude that plaintiff\u2019s check to Heggemeier was intended to be or contained sufficient formal requisites to constitute a written waiver or renunciation as contemplated by UCC \u00a7 1 \u2014 107 and UCC \u00a7 3 \u2014 605. Thus the determination of whether plaintiff\u2019s delivering of a check to Heggemeier signifies an effective implied waiver is to be decided by resort to principles of the law of waiver which exist outside the Commercial Code. UCC \u00a7 1 \u2014 103.\nBoth parties agree on the applicable definition of waiver as stated in Ferrero v. National Council of Knights and Ladies of Security (1923), 309 Ill. 476, 481:\n\u201cTo constitute a waiver it is essential that there is an existing right, benefit or advantage, knowledge, actual or constructive, of its existence, and an intention to relinquish it * *\nSee also Vermilion County Production Credit Ass\u2019n v. Izzard (1969), 111 Ill.App.2d 190, 195.\nGenerally, to make out a case of implied waiver of a legal right there must be a clear, unequivocal, and decisive act of the party showing such a purpose. (Jacksonville Hotel Building Corp. v. Dunlap Hotel Co. (1931), 264 Ill.App. 279, 319, affd, 350 Ill. 451; Klim v. Johnson (1958), 16 Ill.App.2d 484, 493; 28 Am.Jur.2d Estoppel & Waiver \u00a7 160 (1966); 92 C.J.S. (Waiver) 1064 (1955).) An implied waiver may arise where a person against whom the waiver is asserted has pursued such a course of conduct as to sufficiently evidence an intention to waive a right or where his conduct is inconsistent with any other intention than to waive it. (28 Am.Jur.2d Estoppel & Waiver \u00a7 160 (1966); 92 C.J.S. (Waiver) at 1061, 1963 \u2014 4 (1955); Globe Brewing Co. v. American Malting Co. (1909), 152 Ill.App. 194, 198, 200-201, red\u2019d on other grounds, 247 Ill. 622.) The burden of proof is upon the party claiming a waiver to prove the facts upon which he relies for such waiver. Ferrero v. Knights of Secur\u00edty (1923), 309 Ill. 476, 481.\nIn applying the above rules to the facts of the case before us, we note that plaintiff s check to Heggemeier was made out in an odd amount and contained the notation \u201cFeed Bill to date Pd. in full\u201d above the endorsement, which does not suggest to an uninformed party that this check was related to the Heggemeier checks which are the subject of this litigation. While it appears from the record that the notation was Heggemeier\u2019s idea, the effect of the procedure used was to disguise from American the true nature of the transaction taking place. From this it may reasonably be inferred that the presentment of the $27,041.36 check was not an unequivocal act showing an intention to relinquish any right of action against American; nor could it be considered a specific approval or ratification of the bank\u2019s conduct in disregarding its midnight deadline and the instruction accompanying the checks to return them immediately if not paid.\nAdditionally we note that American refused to accept plaintiffs check to Heggemeier for collection. A waiver or ratification may be ineffectual because it is conditional and the attached condition fails or is rejected. (See Schenck v. State Line Telephone Co. (1924), 238 N.Y. 308, 312-313, 144 N.E. 592, 593-594; Jordan v. City of Beaumont (Tex. Civ. App. 1960), 337 S.W.2d 115, 118-119; Andrews v. Powell (Tex. Civ. App. 1951), 242 S.W.2d 656, 661.) In the instant case plaintiff\u2019s attempt to collect at least $52,000 on the Heggemeier checks was contingent for its success on American accepting plaintiff\u2019s check for collection. Having refused to do so, American cannot now successfully urge that the attempt constituted a valid waiver or ratification of its failure to timely return the Heggemeier checks.\nFor the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.\nAffirmed.\nGUILD and RECHENMACHER, JJ., concur.\n12 C.F.R. sec. 207 (eff. Aug. 21, 1959, as amended Jan. 1, 1964 and Sept. 1, 1964). Regulation G has since been consolidated under Regulation J (12 C.F.R. sec. 210) effective Sept. 1, 1967.\n12 C.F.R. sec. 210 (1960 as amended eff. Sept. 27, 1962 and Sept. 1, 1964).\nRevised Sept. 1, 1964, as amended by Supp. No. 1, May 5, 1965, and Supp. No. 2, July 12, 1965.\nRevised Sept. 1, 1964, as amended by Supp. No. 1, May 5, 1965.\nAmerican does not make the argument in this appeal that sending checks directly \u201cfor collection\u201d to the payor bank, by normal banking practices, is understood to authorize or permit the payor bank to hold such checks beyond the midnight deadline. (See UCC \u00a7 1 \u2014 205(2) \u2014 (5).) Because American was instructed to return the checks at .once if not paid, the argument, if made, could not succeed in any event.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "Mr. JUSTICE SEIDENFELD"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Reno, Zahm, Folgate, Skolrood, Lindberg & Powell, of Rockford, for appellant.",
      "Hunter, Madden, Plager & Hasting, of Freeport, for appellee."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "Earl Kane, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. American National Bank & Trust Company, Defendant-Appellant.\n(No. 73-10;\nSecond District\nAugust 6, 1974.\nRehearing denied September 27, 1974.\nReno, Zahm, Folgate, Skolrood, Lindberg & Powell, of Rockford, for appellant.\nHunter, Madden, Plager & Hasting, of Freeport, for appellee."
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