Mitchell gave to the O. A. Smith Roofing and Contracting Company a check on the Barnesville Savings Bank, for the amount of a debt due by him to it. This check was dated November 21, 1901, and was on that day deposited by the company with the Third National Bank of Atlanta. The Atlanta bank immediately forwarded the check to the bank in Barnesville, where, on November 22, it was received and marked paid, and the amount of the check charged to the account of the drawer, who had sufficient funds on deposit in the bank to meet the check. Subsequently the canceled check was turned over to Mitchell. On December 4, 1901, an officer of the Barnesville Savings Bank called upon Mitchell and asked him for the check, without stating what he wanted with it. Mitchell gave it to him; whpreupon the check was by the Barnesville Bank protested for non-payment, *773returned to the Third National Bank of Atlanta, and by that bank returned to the O. A. Smith Roofing and Contracting Company, to whose order it had been drawn. On December 4, 1901, the day when it returned the check to Atlanta, the Barnesville bank failed and went into the hands of a receiver. The O. A. Smith Roofing and Contracting Company, having complied with all the requirements of the law, brought suit to foreclose its materialman’s lien for. the debt to pay which the check was given. The defendant pleaded payment. The case was tried by the court, without a jury, on an agreed statement of facts, the substance of which has been given; and judgment was rendered' for the defendant, whereupon the plaintiff excepted.
As will have been gathered from the foregoing, the sole question for our determination is whether the giving of the check by the de’-. fendant, the presentation of that check at the bank upon which it was drawn, and the action of the bank in charging the amount of the check to the defendant’s account and returning the canceled check to him, constituted such a payment by the defendant of his debt to the plaintiff as will discharge him from liability to it. When the O. A. Smith Roofing and Contracting Company deposited the check for collection with the Third National Bank of Atlanta, it made that bank its agent for the purpose of collecting the check. The Third National Bank, in its turn, made the Barnesville Savings Bank its agent for the same purpose. It is not denied that Mitchell had ample funds in the Barnesville Bank to meet the check. The check was canceled, Mitchell’s account was duly charged, and the paper turned over to him. When that was done, Mitchell no longer owed the debt for which his check had been given, for the cheek had been paid; and the next step in the proper course of the proceedings would have been for the Barnesville bank to send the money called for by the check to the Third National Bank of Atlanta. It is contended, however, that the defendant, by returning to the officer of the Barnesville bank the canceled check which had been returned to him, placed it in the power of that bank to commit a fraud, and that therefore he should be held liable for the amount of the check. We can hot see the force of this reasoning. The fraud committed by the Barnesville Savings Bank was the failure to remit to the Third National Bank of Atlanta the amount of the check. The return of the check to the Atlanta bank marked *774both “paid” and “protested for non-payment” was not the fraud,— it was simply an attempt on the part of the Barnesville bank to conceal the wfong that it had done. ' The possession by Mitchell of the canceled check was merely a receipt, — an evidence of payment. It is admitted that Mitchell had a right to the possession of the check; and it would seem to follow as a logical conclusion that the fact that the cheek had been paid is also admitted.
A case very closely in point is Bailie v. Augusta Savings Bank, 95 Ga. 277. There a check on a bank in Wilmington N. C., was deposited for collection in a bank in Augusta. The check was forwarded promptly to the bank on which it was drawn, and the amount charged to the account of the drawer on the books of that 'bank. A few days thereafter, the drawee bank suspended payment and went into the hands of a receiver, without having forwarded the amount of the check to the bank in Augusta. Suit was brought against the Augusta bank by the holder of the check, who had deposited it for collection, and the trial in the lower court resulted in favor of the defendant. The judgment was reversed on writ of error to this court, where it was held that the Augusta bank “became, in the absence of any express or implied contract to the contrary, liable for any neglect of duty whereby the collection of the check was defeated, whether such neglect arose from theidefault of its own officers or from that of its correspondent or agent to whom it may have sent the check for collection, and in such case it would be immaterial whether such correspondent or agent was the bank upon which the cheek was drawn or another.” We do not, of course, lose sight of the fact that that was a suit by the indorsee of the check against the bank with which it had been deposited for collection, while this is a suit by the payee against the drawer of the check. The facts of that case, however, are very similar to those of the ease at bar; and the principle there laid down is directly applicable as indicating where the liability in the present case rests. See also Comer v. Dufour, 95 Ga. 376 ; Oddie v. Bank, 45 N. Y. 735. “A credit given for the amount of a check by the bank upon which it is drawn is equivalent to, and will be treated as, a payment of the check. It is the same as if the money had been paid over the counter on the check, and then immediately paid back again to the account or for the use for which the credit is given. This rule has been applied where the bank held the check for sev*775•eral days, during which the drawer’s account was not good, and then, the account becoming good, made the application.” 2 Morse on Banks and Banking (3d ed.), § 451. And so, in this case, the entry on the books of the Barnesville Savings Bank, charging the account of its depositor with the amount of the check, was the same as if it had paid the money over its counter to itself as agent for the bank which had sent the check for collection; and the fact that it fraudulently withheld the money from that bank and failed to enter the proper credit to its account does not render any less complete the payment by the depositor. That money is now in the hands of the agents of the payee of the check, and the drawer is as completely discharged from any further liability on the debt for which it was given as if he had paid the actual money to one authorized by his creditor to collect it.
Judgment affirmed.
All the Justices concur.