Caruthers v. Harbert

45 Tenn. 362
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 45 Tenn. 362 (Caruthers v. Harbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caruthers v. Harbert, 45 Tenn. 362 (Tenn. 1868).

Opinion

Harrisok, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court.

There are two questions presented for our determination in this cause.

First, Was notice given to tbe indorser, Caruthers, sufficient to charge him?

Second, Was tbe defendant in error, the bolder of tbe note, barred from maintaining bis action on one of [364]*364the notes .which matured on the 4th day of February, 1859, six years haying expired before the adoption of the. amendments to the Constitution,. on the 22d of February, 1865?

Payment was demanded of the maker of the notes, on the day they respectively fell due, and was refused; and on the same day, as it appears from the certificate of the Notary Public, he “directed a written notice of the above instrument of protest to each, John P. Caruthers and Marcus J. Wright, and left the same at their respective offices.”

The certificate on the protest on each note, is in precisely the same words, except the date stated as the date on which the notices were directed and left, the 4th of February, 1859 and the 3d of September, 1859: that being the . date at which the notes respectively fell due.

At the several dates when the notes fell due, and when the Notary’s certificates stated that the notices were given the indorser, John P. Caruthers was Judge and Chancellor of the Common Law and Chancery Court of the City of Memphis. The discharge of his duties as Judge and Chancellor, required nearly all his time. He was usually to be found at the court-house. He had no residence, no family, no office at which he performed any publicly known business. He had two rooms on the third story, of a building known as the Blythe Building, in the City of Memphis, in which he had his library, or a portion of it, and in which he lodged. He boarded a part of the time during his judgeship; at the G-ayoso House, a public hotel, and perhaps a part [365]*365of the time at other hotels of the city. Before he went upon' the bench, in 1854, he had an office in the city in which he transacted his business, which was that of a Lawyer; but after he went upon the bench, he discontinued his said office,. and had only the rooms mentioned. In these rooms he was usually to be found when not employed in the court-house or elsewhere. The witnesses state, that, if they had occasion to find him on business, and had no knowledge that he was elsewhere, that they should have gone to the rooms mentioned, to find him; and that they had been in these rooms for the purpose of having him transact official business, granting fiats on bills for , injunctions, etc.; and that there had never beeú any offices in the third story of the building mentioned, at which any one had transacted his ordinary business.

The Court, (the late Hon. Thomas G. Smith, presiding,) instructed the jury: “That, if they believed from the evidence, that the defendant had an office at which he had transacted his ordinary business, and that the notices of the non-payment of the notes were left at his office on the day of the protests respectively, they would find for the plaintiff; and in determining whether the defendant, Caruthers, had such an office at which he so transacted his ordinary business, the jury would exclude from their consideration, the fact that he was usually discharging his official duties in the court-house, and confine themselves to the enquiry as to whether he had a known place at which he transacted his ordinary business.”

[366]*366The Court refused to charge the jury, at the request of defendants, that tbe notice, in order to charge the defendants, should have been left with some one at the defendant’s office, or it should be shown that no one was found there, upon the proper enquiry, to receive it. To these instructions, and the refusal to give those asked to be given, the plaintiff in error excepted at the time.

We think there was error in the charge of the Court, but none in his refusal to charge the law as asked for by plaintiff in error.

He charged the jury, as we have seen, that, “if they believed from the evidence, that defendant had an office at which he had transacted his ordinary business, etc.” *

We think, in view of the particular question raised by the proof, as to whether the office at which he had at one time transacted his business, was or was not his place of business at the time the notice was given, the charge that if defendant had an office at which he has transacted his business, etc., was erroneous and calculated to mislead.

The usual way of showing that notice was delivered or sent to the indorser, is by the certificate of the Notary, and the defendant in error in this cause, relies exclusively upon the Notarial certificate, to show that the notice was duly given.

Our Act of 1820, ch. 25, sec. 4, continued in secs. 1800 and 1801 of the Code of Tennessee, is, that, “In an action against the drawer or indorser of a bill of exchange, or any negotiable paper protested for non-acceptance, or non-payment, the Notary’s cer[367]*367tificate, either in or on the protest, that he gave notice of the dishonor of the paper, to the drawer or indorser, shall be prima facie evidence of the fact of such notice.”

This, as was said in Golladay, Cheatham & Co. vs. The Bank of the Union, was done to save the parties from the expense of taking a deposition, and the loss •of rights 'by the accident of death. In that case, reported in 2 Head, 57, the effect of the Notary’s certificate in or on the protest, was considered. The only proof of notice in that case, was the certificate of the Notary in the body of the protest, to-wit: “I then notified the drawers and indorsers.”

In that case, it was held, that it was not necessary for the Notary to state all the particulars necessary to make out a good legal notice, under the law merchant, as the Act of Assembly did not expressly require it. That the Notary is a public officer, and when he certifies that he has done an official act, it must be presumed that he has done it correctly, unless some statute or rule requires a particular mode, until the contrary appears. That it is .only made prima facie evidence. The presumption might be rebutted, and the burden of proving the contrary was upon the defendant, (the indorser.)

Now, as we have seen, the only proof of notice to Caruthers, is the certificate of the Notary, that he had delivered a written notice of the protest, “to each, John P. Caruthers and Marcus J. Wright, and left the same at their respective offices.”

This was prima facie evidence of the fact that the [368]*368Notary did deliver the notice to the plaintiff in error, and left the same at his office, for so it is stated; and although the Notary, under the ruling in Golladay, Cheatham & Co. vs. Bank of the Union, (which we do not feel inclined to disturb,) was not bound to state all the particulars necessary to make out a good legal notice, under the law merchant, yet, this prima facie evidence, this presumption in favor of the correctness of the statement made by the Notary, may be rebutted by the plaintiff in error, who might show, either that the statements therein were in point of fact, untrue, or that such facts did in reality exist, as would make the notice insufficient.

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45 Tenn. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caruthers-v-harbert-tenn-1868.