Marsoudet v. Jacobs

6 Rob. 276
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Rob. 276 (Marsoudet v. Jacobs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marsoudet v. Jacobs, 6 Rob. 276 (La. 1843).

Opinion

Garland, J.

The defendant is sued as the endorser of a promissory note, .drawn by one Bernard Hart, given, as it is alleged and proved, to secure part of the price of a lot of ground in the city of New Orleans, sold by the plaintiff to Hart, on which the former retained a mortgage as additional security. It is al[278]*278leged that payment of the note was demanded, and notice of nonpayment given to the defendant. The petition concludes with a prayer for judgment against the defendant for $625, with interest and costs, with a mortgage and vendor’s privilege on the house and lot described. The answer admits the endorsement of the note, but denies all the other allegations, and all liability on account of said endorsement. '

The plaintiff offered in evidence a copy of the act of sale from himself to Hart, the drawer of the note, to establish his claim to a mortgage, we suppose ; also the note, and a protest in the ordinary form. The formal and usual words used in a protest are printed, and a blank was left for the date which was filled with the words “ seventh day of August.” The word seventh was erased, and an asterisk placed at the end of it, referring to the vrord fifth written at the foot of the instrument, over the notary’s and witnesses’ names, to which is added : “ This refoe, appod ; one word erased, null.” In the body of the protest the notary states, that he is duly commissioned and sworn, and that he “ proceeded to the late domicil of Mr. Bernard Hart, and there presenting said note to Mrs. Widow Hart, I demanded payment thereof, and was by her answered, that she had rio funds to pay the said note, but that Mr. Greiner would settle the matter. I then proceeded to the office of Mr. Greiner, and there presenting him the same, I demanded payment thereof, and was by him answered, that said note was to be protested.” The certificate of notice is in the usual form. The object of offering the original protest in evidence, it is stated, was to show the erasure and interlineations in it. The defendant then had the notary who made the protest, sworn as a witness, and asked him, whether he had ever demanded payment of the note sued on, as stated in his protest. He refused to answer the question. Armand Durel, who signs the protest as a witness, and is understood to be a clerk of the notary, states, that it was he who demanded payment of the note of Mrs. Hart, who referred him to Greiner. He then called on that gentleman with it, and demanded payment of him, who, after some conversation not necessary to be recapitulated, told him that the note might be protested. He says, that he knows that the notary did not in person make any demand of said note. Demoruelle, the other witness to [279]*279the protest, and a clerk of the notary, says, that he was in his office on the 5th of August, 1843, and that Durel demanded payment of the note. He knows that Boudousquie did not demand payment of it. Greiner says, that on the 5th of August, 1843, Armand Durel, one of the witnesses, demanded of him payment of the note. That the notary never did demand it of him at any time.

The inferior Judge in his judgment says, that it being shown that payment of the note was demanded at maturity, and notice of its protest given to the defendant, he, therefore, gives judgment for the plaintiff, from which judgment the defendant lias appealed.

Our attention is first called to several bills of exceptions taken by both parties. The plaintiff first offered as evidence, a document purporting to be a copy of the protest of the note sued on, to establish a demand of payment of the drawer, and notice to the defendant. The defendant, by her counsel, objected to its reception, on the ground that it contained erasures and interlineations ; that no day was mentioned therein, when demand of payment was made of the drawer ; that it was illegal, informal, and not made according to law. The Judge said, that the interlineations appeared to be merely the usual memoranda made by the notary, of his corrections of the body of the act or copy, and that the erasures, being noted at the bottom over the signature of the notary, supplied and corrected the omission of the date, and that, therefore, he would admit the act as evidence. The defendant excepted. We do not think the Judge erred. The objections all go to the effect of the evidence, and not to its admissibility. The law makes the protests and certificates of notaries, at least prima facie evidence of demand and notice ; if they are informal, illegal, or false, it is not a cause for excluding them from -the court or jury, but a reason for declining to give them effect, when the illegality or incorrectness of the act is established by proper testimony.

The defendant then offered as evidence the original of the notarial protest, for the purpose of showing that it contained erasures, and interlineations, and that the copy was not conformable to said original, in relation to these matters. He also moved the court to disregard the copy, and all that part of the original which goes to establish a demand of payment, because of the erasures and inter[280]*280lineations, and the informality and illegality of the act. The Judge admitted the document in evidence, for nearly or exactly the reasons before stated, and refused to disregard what was erased or interlined, because it was explained at the foot of the protest, before signature. In this decision, the Judge did not err. The defendant cannot complain, that the Judge admitted the document offered by her counsel, for the purpose mentioned; and she had no right to call upon the court to reject and disregard all that related to demand and notice. The sufficiency of those is the question to be decided, and if the Judge had said the protest was a nullity, there would have been an end of the controversy. The legal consequences of a want of demand and notice, is a question entirely different from the reception of the evidence, by which they are expected to be supported or defeated.

The defendant then offered parol proof to contradict the copy of the act offered by the plaintiff. To this .the latter objected, as it would contradict the original act offered by the said defendant in evidence ; and further, because the law, having made the copy of protest and certificate of notice evidence of both demand and notice, the protest could not be contradicted by párol evidence ; more particularly, as the statements made in the body of the protest and certificate are not specially denied in the answer. The court overruled the objections, and the plaintiff excepted. We think the Judge did not err. The statements made by the notary in the body of his protest as to the demand, arid the certificate of notice, may, in our opinion, be contradicted and shown to be untrue. The law makes his statement and certificate legal evidence of what is stated, but it is not conclusive and final. Like all other evidence, it may be contradicted and shown to be erroneous, upon proper allegations in the answer, which seem in this case to be sufficient to authorize the reception of the evidence.

On the merits of this case, the defendant relies upon two grounds to defeat the plaintiff’s action.

1st. That the erasures and interlineations in the act of protest make it a nullity, and that the latter were made sometime subsequent to the daté of the instrument.

2d. That the statement in the body of the protest, that the demand made of the drawer of the note, or, at his legal domicil, of [281]*281another person, by the notary,

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Related

Franklin v. Verbois
6 La. 727 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1834)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Rob. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsoudet-v-jacobs-la-1843.