Bank of the United States v. Davis

2 Hill & Den. 451
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1842
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Hill & Den. 451 (Bank of the United States v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of the United States v. Davis, 2 Hill & Den. 451 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1842).

Opinion

By the Court,

Nelson, Ch. J.

The certificates of the notary were properly received as evidence of demand and protest of the first two bills; and, under our statute, (Sess. Laws of 1833, p. 395, § 8, see also 2 R. S. 212, § 46, 2c? ed.,) I am inclined to think they were also evidence of notice to the cashier of the bank at Erie, the last endorser upon the paper.

The act referred to allows such proof of the sendee of notice upon any or all of the parties to the bill or note, the [457]*457certificate specifying the mode of giving it. The only doubt upon the point is, whether the cashier of the bank at Erie, having endorsed the paper simply for the purpose of collection, should be regarded as a party, within the meaning of the statute. The case is directly within its terms, as the endorsement is in the usual way, and, it may fairly be presumed, was made in behalf of the bank for the purpose of indicating to its correspondent in New-York the expectation that notice should be sent, to it in that character. I think the face of the paper should be allowed to govern the question, rather than the particular character that may be given to it, as between the parties, by extrinsic evidence. Every exception made to a general commercial rule concerning negotiable paper, which enters so extensively into the business transactions of the country, is calculated to embarrass its circulation, and endanger its security and usefulness. This construction will in no respect operate to the prejudice of any party liable upon the paper, whether drawer or endorser, as will be seen upon a further examination of the law.

It is perfectly clear, where a bill or note is sent by the holder to his agent for him to receive payment, and he gives due notice to the principal of its dishonor, that prompt notice from the latter will be in time to charge the prior parties; though if it had been sent directly by the agent, the notice would have reached them much sooner. (Chitty on Bills, 520, 1, 9th Am. from 8th Lond. ed. Bayley on Bills, 174.) The case of Mead v. Engs, (5 Cowen, 303,) is a clear authority for this doctrine, and comes fully up to the case under consideration, and to the view we have taken of the statute. There, the holder in New-York sent the bill to a bank at Providence for collection, whence it was sent to another bank at Bristol, (K. I.) where the acceptor resided. The notary there, after making demand and protest, returned the bill to the cashier of the Bristol bank, who sent it by the next mail to the cashier of the Providence bank, and the latter sent it by the next mail to his immediate' endorser in New-[458]*458York. The objection was taken, that the notary should have given notice of non-payment directly to all the prior parties; but the court held it to have been given according to established commercial • usage. It was also decided in that case, that one to whom a bill or note is endorsed merely as agent to collect, is a holder for the purpose of giving and receiving notice of non-payment; and is not bound to give notice directly to all the prior parties, but may content himself by notifying his immediate endorser,- who is bound to give notice to his endorser, &c. in the same manner as if the bill or note had been negotiated to the agent for a valuable consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Hill & Den. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-the-united-states-v-davis-nysupct-1842.