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Dingley v. McDonald

Supreme Court of California
Mar 24, 1899
124 Cal. 90 (Cal. 1899)

Summary

conflicting decisions concerning whether the first day should be included in the computation of time was "set at rest by section 12 ..., which requires the exclusion of the first day"

Summary of this case from Shalabi v. City of Fontana

Opinion

         Department One

         Hearing in Bank denied.

         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of the City and County of San Francisco, and from an order denying a new trial. James M. Troutt, Judge.

         COUNSEL:

         Sawyer & Burnett, for Appellant.

         H. A. Powell, and W. A. Dow, for Respondent.


         JUDGES: Pringle, C. Haynes, C., and Britt, C., concurred. Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., Van Dyke, J.

         OPINION

          PRINGLE, Judge

          [56 P. 791] This action is brought against stockholders of the Pacific Bank to recover the portions of the debts of the bank for which they are respectively liable as stockholders. Many claims are consolidated. But only in the case of two claims are questions presented on this appeal.

         1. The complaint alleges that on the twenty-third day of June, 1893, there was on deposit in said bank belonging to and to the credit of H. D. Rowe, the assignor of the plaintiff, the sum of $ 4,891.01; that on said twenty-third day of June the bank closed its doors and suspended business. The answer denies that on the twenty-third day of June there was on deposit to the credit of Rowe any more than $ 228.25. The court finds that there was on deposit, as alleged in the complaint, the sum of $ 4,891.01. Appellant claims that the evidence is insufficient to justify the finding. The evidence shows that Rowe had that amount, $ 4,891.01, on deposit on the 17th of June; that on that day and on the 21st of June he drew two checks for drafts or bills of exchange by the Pacific Bank on the National Bank of Illinois at Chicago in favor of Charles A. Capwell. These checks were charged against his account and reduced the account on the books to $ 228.25, the balance shown by his bank book on June 22d. The checks were not paid in money, but were given for the drafts. The drafts were refused payment, were protested and returned to Rowe, and by him surrendered to the Pacific Bank. The bank gave him credit on his bankbook for the amount of the checks which it had charged against him, restoring his credit account to $ 4,891.01. This credit was not entered on the bankbook until December 14, 1893.

         The appellant claims that by the issuance of the drafts payable to Capwell the bank assumed a liability to him different to its liability to Rowe for his original moneys on deposit; and that, whatever may be its liability on the drafts, it was not for moneys on deposit as charged in the complaint. But that is not of the substance of the transaction as between the bank and Rowe. Rowe had moneys on deposit with the bank. He instructed the bank to pay his moneys to Capwell in Chicago, and drew a check to appropriate moneys for such payment. The bank, by its draft upon Chicago, ordered payment to be made to Capwell, but the bank failed, payment was not made to Capwell, and the draft was protested and returned to the bank. This is the meaning of the transaction between Rowe and the bank, consisting of check and of draft protested and returned. There was no payment of the check which could withdraw Rowe's deposit. The draft was not received in payment of the check. It is well settled that a note, even if it be the note of a third person, or a bill of exchange in favor of another, does not operate as payment except by express agreement. The presumption is not in favor of its being received as payment. (Comptoir d' Escompte de Paris v. Dresbach , 78 Cal. 15, in which it was said that, when a check is given for payment of a debt, the giving of a receipt in full does not establish an agreement for an absolute payment; Steinhart v. National Bank , 94 Cal. 362, 28 Am. St. Rep. 132, in which the original note was stamped as "canceled"; Savings etc. Soc. v. Burnett , 106 Cal. 516, where the old obligation was surrendered.)

         Appellant claims that it was error to admit in evidence the "claim" delivered by the bank to Rowe in the place of the bank-book surrendered by him. The claim is as follows:

         " $ 4,891.01-100. No. 1059.

         " Certificate of Proof of Claim.

         " San Francisco, August 5, 1895.

         " This is to certify that the Bank of Sisson, Crocker & Co. (for Claim No. 52, H. D. Rowe, manager) has this day made legal and satisfactory proof that it is a creditor of the Pacific Bank, of San Francisco, California, to the amount of forty-eight hundred and ninety-one dollars and one cent, upon the following claim, to wit: Balance due on open account of said H. D. Rowe, manager, as per passbook now on file in Pacific Bank (for proof of claim see No. 52, filed December 12, 1893), and said bank, or the lawful assignee of this claim, will be alone entitled to the dividends thereon. No assignment of this claim or any portion thereof will be recognized in the payment of dividends, unless notice of such assignment is given and entered upon the books of the bank before such dividends are declared, as evidenced by the indorsements hereon. This certificate is to be surrendered to the bank upon the payment of the final dividend.

         " PACIFIC BANK,

         " By J. E. Farnum, Manager."

         It is contended by the appellant that this claim is a mere declaration by an officer of the bank, made after the insolvency, and that even if it be admissible against the bank it cannot affect the stockholders. If it were relied on as proof of the original deposit, there might be force in the contention. But the original deposit was clearly proved. The controversy is only over the account, whether the deposit remained undiminished or whether it was reduced to $ 228.25. And upon this question the bank-book was introduced in evidence by both sides, the appellant [56 P. 792] expressly offering it on his behalf. This claim was merely the restatement by the manager of what the bank-book offered by the appellant showed, being delivered to Rowe in place of the bank-book when he surrendered his book to the bank. Hence the appellant could not object to its competency, whatever fault he might find with its weight or significance. The bank-book which he had offered in evidence was itself merely the declaration of an officer of the bank; this claim was the declaration of its manager.

         But indeed the deposit was, as we have said, proved without the claim. The case really depends upon the effect of the checks drawn for the purchase of the drafts. If they were not paid by the drafts, the deposit stood unreduced; and this is the plaintiff's case. The subsequent declarations of officers of the bank were only corroborative of the case thus made by the plaintiff. They were not necessary to the plaintiff, and for that reason were of no injury to the defendant. Besides, they were admissible to rebut the presumption claimed by the appellant to arise from the delivery to Rowe of the bank-book showing on the 23d of June a balance in his favor of $ 228.25. Appellant claims that the failure by Rowe, for some uncertain time, to protest against the apparent reduction of his account made an account stated between the parties by reason of his presumed assent. This presumption is rebutted by the entry which the bank-book offered by him shows to have been made in it on December 14th, and by this claim, afterward substituted for the bank-book. They were both declarations, as potent to exhibit the true state of the account after the protest and surrender of the drafts as was the book before their protest.

         That the claim was a declaration made after the insolvency of the bank was in this aspect not fatal to it. The bank was still under the control and management of its directors. (Long v. Superior Court , 102 Cal. 449.) The claim was signed by the manager. It did not purport to be the creation of a new indebtedness, but to be the statement of the old account.

         2. The same point is made in reference to a deposit of $ 250 made by the plaintiff on June 13th, against which a check was drawn in purchase of a draft on Chicago. The facts are substantially the same; and the same reasoning applies.

         3. An assignment of cause of action is made by F. M. Parcells, acting for and in the name of Mrs. Fitch. Her authority to him was only verbal. But, as such an assignment is not required to be in writing, the verbal authority was sufficient.

         4. The only other point made by the appellant is, that the claim of Mrs. Fitch was barred by the provisions of section 359 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which requires the action to be brought within three years "after the liability was created." Mrs. Fitch deposited $ 208.85 on the tenth day of March, 1893. Action was brought on the tenth day of March, 1896. There were at one time conflicting decisions in England and in this country on this question, many cases holding that in the computation of time the first day should be included. The appellant cites a case to that effect. (Presbrey v. Williams , 15 Mass. 193.) But in Bemis v. Leonard , 118 Mass. 502, 19 Am. Rep. 470, Mr. Justice Gray reviews the cases in both countries with much learning and discrimination, and shows that the whole current of modern authority in both countries is in favor of excluding the first day in cases where the expression of our statute is used "after the liability was created." The case of Presbrey v. Williams, supra, is discredited in that case. (Weeks v. Hull , 19 Conn. 379; 50 Am. Dec. 249; Cornell v. Moulton , 3 Denio, 12.) In this state the case is set at rest by section 12 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which requires the exclusion of the first day. (Misch v. Mayhew , 51 Cal. 514.)

         I advise that the judgment and order denying new trial be affirmed.

         For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and the order denying new trial are affirmed.


Summaries of

Dingley v. McDonald

Supreme Court of California
Mar 24, 1899
124 Cal. 90 (Cal. 1899)

conflicting decisions concerning whether the first day should be included in the computation of time was "set at rest by section 12 ..., which requires the exclusion of the first day"

Summary of this case from Shalabi v. City of Fontana

In Dingley v. McDonald, 124 Cal. 90 [56 P. 790], the rule of exclusion of the first day was applied in rejecting the claim that the action (against the stockholders of a banking corporation) was barred by section 359, Code of Civil Procedure, requiring such action to be brought "within" three years "after the liability was created" — the money was deposited on March 10, 1893, and suit was commenced on March 10, 1896.

Summary of this case from Wixted v. Fletcher
Case details for

Dingley v. McDonald

Case Details

Full title:CHARLES L. DINGLEY, JR., Respondent, v. R. H. McDONALD et al., Defendants…

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Mar 24, 1899

Citations

124 Cal. 90 (Cal. 1899)
56 P. 790

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