RISK IN SENDING CHECK TO DRAWER’S BANK FOR CERTIFICATION.

Question—We received a check from one of our customers and sent it to the customer’s bank for certification. The bank failed before the end of the next day and our check was not paid. Can we not return it to the maker and demand the face of it from him?

Reply: If the drawer of the check in this case had sufficient money on deposit to meet it our correspondents have no other recourse except against the assets of the insolvent bank; the depositor is discharged. The usual rule is that when a check is delivered that is drawn upon a bank in the same place in which the payee resides the drawer guarantees the solvency of the bank during the remainder of the day on which the check was delivered and the whole of the next day. The holder has this much time in which to present the check and draw the money; if the bank fails meanwhile the loss is upon the drawer of the check and the holder takes the risk of failure after the second day. But this rule does not apply when the holder of the check takes it to the bank and has it certified before the end of the next day after he receives it. Certification binds the bank and releases the drawer. So far as the drawer and holder are concerned, the effect is precisely the same as if the holder had drawn the money and had then deposited it to his own credit in the same bank.

Opinion No. 45.