King v. Crowell

61 Me. 244
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 61 Me. 244 (King v. Crowell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Crowell, 61 Me. 244 (Me. 1873).

Opinion

ViRGiN, J.

When the defendant indorsed and put into circulation the note in suit, he thereby ordered the maker to pay the amount therein specified- to the plaintiff'; and he also thereby promised that if the note were duly demanded of the maker and not paid, then he himself would, upon receiving due notice of the demand and non-payment, pay it to the plaintiff.

And now, in this suit upon his promise, the defendant declines to pay the note on the following alleged grounds:

1. That the demand was not lawful inasmuch as it was made on the street.

[247]*247The general rule of law is that the holder must use diligence to find the maker and demand payment of him ; and the inquiry will be, whether, under the circumstances of the case, due diligence has been used. 3 Kent’s Com. 129.

It is familiar law that when a promissory note payable generally, and not at a specified place, is seasonably demanded at the maker’s known and settled place of business for the transaction of his moneyed concerns, it is sufficient to hold the indorser. And the same may be said of a like demand made at his place of residence. Neither does it make any difference whether the maker be personally present or temporarily absent at the time of the demand. In either case, the law has for many years been constant in declaring that the evidence afforded by such a demand constitutes full proof of due diligence on the part'of the holder.

But in the case at bar the plaintiff went still further than the technical exactions of the law required. Tie was a resident of Monmouth. On the day the note became due he went to Winthrop village, where both the maker and the defendant resided, “ for the purpose of collecting this note, or of taking the necessary steps to hold the indorser.” On going to the store which had been occupied by the maker as his place of business, he found it had been closed and in the possession of an officer more than thirty days ; that the maker had failed in his business, and that all his property was under attachment. Thereupon the plaintiff went to the maker’s place of residence, where he was informed that the maker was not at the house, but had gone out on the street. Had he gone through the ceremony of demanding payment of the note at the house, while the maker was put on the street, the law would pronounce the plaintiff’s diligence ample. But not finding the maker at home the plaintiff trebled his diligence, sought and found him on the street in that country village, and then and there requested payment of the note of the maker personally, which was refused.

It does not appear (as it would be likely to, if true) that any objection to the place of demand was made by maker. If he had [248]*248had funds with which to pay, not with him, but at his house, he would at once have said so. If he had objected to the place and requested the plaintiff to accompany him to his house and receive the money due on the note, and the plaintiff had declined so reasonable a request, the legal aspect of this branch of the case might thereby have been materially changed. But no such facts exist. He simply refused payment, and, in all human probability, for ■ the real, though to him, perhaps, unpleasant, reason that all his property was in the custody of the law, and he had in fact nothing wherewith he could pay.

It would seem that such a demand would be more satisfactory to all concerned than a mere formal ceremony of a demand gone-through. at his place of residence during the maker’s absence. And we have no hesitation in declaring the demand sufficient under the circumstances, so far as the place is concerned, to charge the defendant.i

We are aware that Byles on Bills, 196, declares that a demand made on the street is not sufficient. Such is the doctrine expressed, too, in the authors notes in Leading Cases on Bills, 827, 328. And there are several cases containing the dictum in general terms that a demand must be made either at the maker’s place of business or place of residence. But our attention has been called to no case, neither have we, after considerable research, been able to find any wherein the court having the question before it decided adversely to a demand made on the street, under circumstances similar to those in this case.

On the other hand, Judge Story, in discussing the law applicable to notes like this, uses the following language : “ The general rule is, that the presentment for payment may be made to the maker personally, or at his dwelling-house or other place of abode, or at his counting-house or place of business. It seems a presentment may always be made personally to the maker, wherever he may be found, although he may not be either at his domicil, or at his place of business.” And he cites quite a large number of cases, in a note, as authority. Story on Prom. Notes, § 235.

[249]*249In Edwards on Bills (2 ed.), 150, is found the following: “ Being made payable at large, it is due at any and every place ; but for the purpose of charging the indorser, it must be presented for payment to the maker personally, or at his residence or place of business. If it be made payable at a particular place in the city, it is necessary to present the note there for payment, for the purpose of charging the indorser. But even in this case, if a personal demand is made upon the maker, and no objection is made by him as to the place, it is sufficient.”

So in 3 Kent’s Com. 128. “ Demand of payment must be made by the holder or his agent upon the acceptor at the place appointed for payment, or at his house or residence, or regular known place of his moneyed business, or upon him personally, if po particular place be appointed.” And again, on page 96, “ If demand be made upon the maker elsewhere than the place appointed, and no objection be made at the time, it will be deemed a waiver of any future demand.”

And Prof. Parsons says: “ In general a personal demand would be sufficient, if made at any place where the maker may reasonably be expected to be in condition to pay ; and if made in any other place — -such, for instance, as in the street — it would usually be good, unless objection were made to payment because the place was an improper one, or some similar reason were given for the refusal. 1 Parsons on Notes and Bills, 421. And he uses somewhat similar language on p. 372.

The doctrine as stated above by Judge Story is approved in Taylor v. Snyder, 3 Denio, 145, Sup. Ct. N. Y., published as a leading case in Leading Cases on Bills, 313, 316.

Finally, our own court held, that where a note signed by two, made payable at their dwelling-houses, was demanded of them, together, at the barnyard of one of them, and no objection was made as to the place of the demand, the demand was sufficient. Baldwin v. Farnsworth, 10 Maine, 414.

2. But the defendant further objecting to the sufficiency of the demand says: “ As the payer has a right to require its delivery [250]*250up to him before he pays, and may insist that the holder produce it, the note should have been exhibited.”

It is true that the rule requiring the person making the demand to exhibit the evidence of debt is well settled, and well grounded in reason ; and, although applicable to all written ^contracts on which a demand is necessary, it is, as has been well said, especially applicable to negotiable securities, which may be legally transferred to another at the very time the original payee makes the demand.

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Bluebook (online)
61 Me. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-crowell-me-1873.