Bittenbender Co. v. Bergen

2 Pa. D. & C. 423, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 302
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Schuylkill County
DecidedMay 15, 1922
DocketNo. 127
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Pa. D. & C. 423 (Bittenbender Co. v. Bergen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Schuylkill County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bittenbender Co. v. Bergen, 2 Pa. D. & C. 423, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 302 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Berger, J.,

The Bittenbender Company, the plaintiff, a corporation with its place of business at Scranton, Pa., obtained a verdict against the defendant, Thomas D. Bergen, in an action on a note made by Walter Smalley for $2000, payable to Thomas D. Bergen, at the Com Exchange National Bank of Philadelphia, Aug. 20, 1919. The note came into plaintiff’s hands before maturity by the defendant’s endorsement. He admitted in the pleadings and during the course of. the trial that lawful demand for payment at maturity was made, payment refused, and protest made, as is set forth in a copy of the certificate of protest attached to the plaintiff’s statement of claim, made part thereof and marked Exhibit “B.” The sole defence was the alleged failure of the plaintiff to give notice of dishonor to the defendant. A motion for a new trial and for judgment n. o. v. have been filed by the defendant. The determination of the questions raised by the motion for a new trial will control the disposition of both motions.

To establish notice of dishonor, the plaintiff offered in evidence the notarial certificate of protest. It also introduced the testimony of C. J. Mitzel, its secretary-treasurer, that he had received two certificates of protest by mail, under one cover, a day or two after Aug. 20th, the date of protest, and that he, on the day of the receipt of the letter containing the certificates of protest, deposited in a public mail-box, in the City of Scranton, a letter properly stamped, addressed to Thomas D. Bergen, Pottsville, Pa., containing one of the certificates of protest which he had received. The defendant admittedly had a well-known place of business and residence at the comer of Centre and Union Streets, in the City of Pottsville, where his mail was regularly delivered.

The 2nd section of the Act of Dec. 14, 1854, P. L. (1855) 724, makes the certificate of protest of a notary public, certified according to law, prima facie evidence of the facts therein certified, which in the present case are: presentation of the note when it matured at the Com Exchange National Bank of Philadelphia for payment, non-payment and protest, and that notice of dishonor was given to the' endorsers. In Zollner v. Moffitt, 222 Pa. 644, 652, the question determined was whether the presumption arising from the averment in the certificate of protest that notice of dishonor was given the endorser, the defendant in that case, had been met and overcome by him by the introduction of the testimony of the notary public that she had no present recollection whether she sent or gave such notice to the endorser. In speaking of the evidentiary effect of the notarial certificate, Mestrezat, J. (page 649) said: “If there is nothing in contradiction (of the certificate), it is conclusive of what it contains;” and to overcome that effect, since section 96 of the Negotiable Instruments Law, Act of May 16, 1901, P. L. 194, permits notice of dishonor to be given either orally or by writing, he further said (page 651): “It, therefore, logically follows that to meet the allegation of notice as contained in the certificate of protest, . . . the defendant was compelled to show that he had not received notice which had been served personally or through the mails.” In Zollner v. Moffitt, 222 Pa. 644, 652, the plaintiff had introduced no testimony of the actual deposit in the mail of a letter properly addressed to the endorser containing a certificate of protest. In the instant case, as is hereinabove set forth, C. J. Mitzel, the secretary-treasurer of the plaintiff, gave such testimony.

The defendant filed five reasons in support of his motion for a new trial, which he subsequently supplemented by eleven more. The first and fifth original reasons are that the verdict is: (1) Against the evidence; and (2) [425]*425against the weight of the evidence. These reasons require no discussion. The second original reason is that the verdict is against the law. The disposition of this reason depends upon the disposition to he made of the third original reason, which is that the trial judge erred in his rulings rejecting the defendant’s offers of testimony, and the fourth original reason, that he also erred in his charge to the jury.

The errors alleged to have been made in sustaining the plaintiff’s objections to the defendant’s offers of testimony are specified in the supplemental reasons for a new trial, 1 to 7, inclusive. The witnesses whose testimony was rejected were Thomas D. Bergen, the defendant, and John J. Bergen, his brother, who had charge of his office. It was proposed to prove by Thomas D. Bergen, the defendant, that he had received no copy of the certificate of protest, either by mail or otherwise, from C. J. Mitzel, the secretary-treasurer of the plaintiff, who testified that he had regularly deposited such a certificate of protest in the mail, or from the notary public, or from the Bittenbender Company: this for the purpose (1) of contradicting C. J. Mitzel that he had mailed the letter containing a copy of the certificate of protest; and (2) for the further purpose of contradicting the certificate of the notary public, alleging that due notice of dishonor was given to the endorsers. It was further proposed — supplementary reasons 6 and 7 — to prove by John J. Bergen that he was in the employ of his brother, the defendant, in charge of his office and office correspondence, during the months of August and September, 1919, and that he knew that no certificate of protest was received from the Bittenbender Company by mail: this for the purpose (1) of contradicting C. J. Mitzel, plaintiff’s secretary-treasurer, that he had properly mailed such a certificate; and (2) of contradicting the averment of the certificate of protest that the notary had given the endorsers due notice of dishonor.

The plaintiff, as has already been shown, sought to establish notice of dishonor by two methods: (1) By the introduction of the certificate of protest and its probative force under the Act of 1854; and (2) by the testimony of C. J. Mitzel, plaintiff’s secretary-treasurer, that he had regularly mailed a certificate of protest to the defendant, and the probative force arising from such testimony by virtue of section 105 of the Negotiable Instruments Law, A reference to the record in First National Bank of Hanover v. Delone, 254 Pa. 409, will disclose that in that case both the notarial certificate of protest and the notary’s testimony that he had deposited in the mails a letter properly addressed to the defendant containing a copy of the certificate of protest, were also relied on to establish notice of dishonor; and the defendant’s offer to show that he did not receive notice of dishonor was excluded when made for the purpose of relieving him from his liability as endorser, as well as when made for the colorable purpose of discrediting the notary’s testimony relative to the deposit of the letter in the mail.

The fact that the Bittenbender Company received two certificates of protest is not inconsistent with the certificate of the notary that he duly notified the endorsers of the dishonor of the note directly by a properly addressed letter containing notice of dishonor, deposited in the mail, addressed to defendant, or by actual delivery of a written notice to the defendant, or by giving notice orally. The testimony of Mitzel, that he properly deposited a letter in the mail, addressed to the defendant, containing a certificate of protest, has, in our opinion, precisely the same effect as if the notary issuing the certificate had so testified.

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Related

Zollner v. Moffitt
72 A. 285 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1909)
First National Bank v. Delone
98 A. 1042 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1916)
Mackowski v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co.
108 A. 168 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1919)
Dorety v. Horrocks
65 Pa. Super. 572 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Pa. D. & C. 423, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bittenbender-co-v-bergen-pactcomplschuyl-1922.