Rushworth v. Moore

36 N.H. 188
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 15, 1858
StatusPublished

This text of 36 N.H. 188 (Rushworth v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rushworth v. Moore, 36 N.H. 188 (N.H. 1858).

Opinion

FowleR, J.

By a provision of the Revised Statutes of this State, the protest of any bill of exchange, note, or order, duly certified by any notary public, under his hand and official seal, is made competent evidence of the facts stated in such protest, and of the notice given to the drawer or indorsers. Rev. Stat., chap. 14, sec. 3; Comp. Laws 70 ; Williams v. Putnam, 14 N. H. 543.

The language of tlxe statute is general, and alike applicable to foreign and domestic bills and notes, and to the protests of notaries resident in other States as well as our own. The evident intention of the Legislature in its enactment would seem to have been to obviate the difficulties and inconveniences to which the collection of notes and domestic bills was subject at common law, under the decisions of the courts; and we are of opinion that, by the provisions of the statute, the protest of any bill of exchange, n.ote or order, foreign or domestic, whether made and certified by a notary resident in this State or elsewhere, is competent y>rimé fade evidence of all the facts stated in it, including notice to the drawer or maker, and the indorsers.

There is no doubt that in order to recover, on a count for money paid, against a prior indorser, the plaintiff was bound to offer competent primé fade evidence to prove -the prior indorsement by the defendant, the subsequent indorsement by himself, demand upon the maker, and non-payment by him, notice to the indorsers, and subsequent payment by himself. The possession and production of the note, an inspection of the indorsements thereon, with the admission of the defendant’s signature, and the protest of the notary, seem to have furnished such primé fade evidence. The possession of the note by the plaintiff, shown by inspection to have been a subsequent indorsee to the defendant, in connection with the fact stated in the protest, that, at maturity, the note was holden by the Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank, is competent primé fade evidence that it had been paid by the plaintiff to the holders at protest, or to some subsequent indorser. The defendant’s indorsement was admitted, the subsequent in-dorsement of the plaintiff was apparent from the note itself, and [191]*191the protest proved demand on the maker at maturity, and nonpayment by him, and notice to all the indorsers.

No objection has been taken in the argument to the statement of demand and non-payment, as set' forth in the protest, but it has been argued that the protest is defective and insufficient as evidence of notice to the indorsers, inasmuch as it states a conclusion of law where it should recite facts in detail. The notary certifies that he duly notified the indorsers ; whereas, it has been contended that he should have set forth how, when and where the notices were given.” We do not understand that such is the usual course in notarial protests, or that the statute requires any such recital to make the protest primd facie evidence of notice to indorsers. Indeed, it would seem quite doubtful, from the language of the statute, whether it contemplated any recital in the protest of the fact that notice had been given to the indors-ers, in order to make it primd facie evidence of such notice. The language is, “ the protest of any bill of exchange, note or order, duly certified,” &c., “ shall be evidence of the facts stated in such protest, and of the notice given to the drawer or indorsers.” It is quite certain that, under the ordinary practice in England and this country, it was not necessary or usual that the notice should be given by the notary, or be certified in the protest. Chitty on Bills 497 ; Edwards on Bills and Notes 461. It is not, however, necessary to decide this point. Admitting the custom of the holders of bills or notes to make the notary an agent, for the purpose of .giving notice to the indorsers, to have become so general that the statute contemplated that the protest should not only recite the facts legitimately within the scope of such an instrument, but should also contain a recital of the fact of notice to the indorsers, we think the statement in the protest now under consideration is sufficient.

It has been asserted, in the argument for the plaintiff, and not controverted, that at the date and maturity of the note in suit all the parties thereto were residents of Philadelphia. The well settled general rule in such cases is, that notice of the dishonor must be served personally on the indorsers, by delivery thereof [192]*192to them severally, or leaving the same at their respective dwelling houses or places of business. Manchester Bank v. Fellows, 8 Foster (28 N. H.) 310; Green v. Darling, 3 Shep. 141; Bowling v. Harrison, 6 How. U. S. 248 ; Smedes v. Utica Bank, 20 Johns. 372 ; Shepherd v. Hall, 1 Conn. 429 ; Story on Promissory Notes, secs. 322, 323, and authorities ; Edwards on Bills and Notes 601, and authorities. Now it seems to us the fair and natural presumption would be, and, so far as our inquiries have extended, such appears to be the general custom of notaries, that, if the notary gave personal notice, he would simply certify the fact that he gave notice ; but if the residences of the indorsers were unknown, or at a distance, or if, from any other cause, personal notice were not given, the notarial certificate would recite what was done to give notice, so as to enable the court to judge of its sufficiency. Where, as in the present case, the notary certifies that he gave notice to the indorsers, the notice must be understood, primd fade, to have been personal and actually given, and the notary is officially responsible for the correctness of his certificate.

Neither does the insertion of the word duly vitiate the notary’s certificate, nor is it on that account to be regarded as stating a conclusion of law instead of a matter of fact. Duly may well be interpreted properly, and the certificate be understood as a simple averment by the notary that he had properly, in the usual and ordinary mode of giving personal notice, notified the indors-ers. All that need have been stated was that notice had been given to the indorsers; all else is surplusage, and might well be rejected as such. The fact that notice was given is none the less stated because it is averred to have been given properly, in the usual and customary mode ; which we must regard as equivalent to saying, under the circumstances of the case, that it had been done by delivering to or leaving at the place of business or residence of each indorser a written or printed notice of the protest. The statute making the protest itself primd facie evidence of the notice, as well as of the other facts stated in it, we can [193]*193discover nothing in the form of the present protest to exclude it from the operation of the statute rule.

Nor have we any doubt that assumpsit for money paid is a proper form of action by a subsequent indorser, who has paid a hill or note- after protest, to recover the amount paid of a previous indorser. Every indorser of a promissory note, by his in-dorsement contracts with the indorsee and every subsequent holder, among other things, that if, when duly presented at maturity, it shall not be paid by the maker, he will, upon due and reasonable notice given him of the dishonor, pay the same to the indorsee or other holder, and, if the note shall have been again transferred, that he will indemnify and save the subsequent in-dorsers harmless therefrom. Story on Prom. Notes, sec.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.H. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rushworth-v-moore-nh-1858.