Shed v. Brett

18 Mass. 401
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1823
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Mass. 401 (Shed v. Brett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shed v. Brett, 18 Mass. 401 (Mass. 1823).

Opinion

At the following November term the opinion of the Court was delivered by

Parker C. J.

Several questions have been raised by the counsel for the defendant in this case, which are important in their nature, and which the interest of a mercantile community require should be distinctly settled, if they may be considered now as at all doubtful. It would be strange, if, at this late period of knowledge in commercial law, any new principle should be wanted to regulate the daily concerns of merchants with negotiable securities ; if there be any ambiguity remaining, it can only be in regard to the application of rules and principles which have already been defined and established, to cases varying in some measure from those to which those rules and principles have been heretofore applied.

With respect to the demand upon the maker of the note there is no room for question. Codman testified, that, at the request of the plaintiff, he made a personal demand upon one of the makers, having the note with him at the lime. This is sufficient,.for the demand may be as well made by an agent as by the principal, and there is no need of a power of attorney or any written instrument to constitute an agent for this purpose ; if he derived no peculiar authority from his character as notary public, certainly his power as agent was not diminished thereby ; having the note with him for the purpose of making the demand, he was authorized to receive he money and deliver up the note.

[412]*412The objection which has most attracted our attention relates to the form and manner of notice to the defendant, as indorser of the dishonor of the note.

The same witness testified, that on the afternoon of the same day on which he made the demand of the makers, he put a written notice into the post-office, directed to the defendant in North Bridgewater, which was his place of residence, informing him of the non-payment by the promisors and requesting the defendant to take up the note. In this notice be did not state at whose request he did this, nor did he inform the defendant who was the owner of the note.

On these facts three questions are raised. 1. Whether thp notice was not too soon, it being on the day on which the note became due. 2. Whether it was sufficient in form and substance. 3. Whether the putting the notice into the post-office seasonably was sufficient and conclusive, so that proof that it was never received might not have availed the defendant.

The first point is settled too clearly by authorities to require discussion. The principle adopted in England and in this Commonwealth, in relation to negotiable securities, is, that after refusal to pay on demand made on the day when the money is due according to the contract, the note or bill is dishonored, and notice may be immediately given to the drawer or indorser ; Burbridge v. Manners, 3 Campb. 193 ; Bayley, (4th ed.) 219 ; though it is not necessary it should be given until the day after, or, if the indorser is in another town, by the next mail after the day on which the demand is made. The earliest possible notice of the fact which renders the indorser liable, is the most advantageous to him, as the object of the notice is to enable him to secure himself.1

2. But it is objected, that the notice proved is deficient, in not containing information at whose request it was given, or who was the owner of the note ; so that the indorser could not know, from that source, where to apply to pay the money and take up [413]*413the note. There is some show of reason in this objection, and yet we are satisfied that it is not of sufficient weight to prevent judgment upon the verdict. Knowing, as we do, that the precision demanded has not been generally practised by the banks in which notes are left for collection, or by notaries public by whom it has got to be the custom to transmit the notice, we should require positive authority in support of the objection, before we could, by listening to it, sanction the mischiefs which would be likely to ensue.

It is stated in all the authorities, that no particular form is necessary ; that the great object of the notice is to put the party affected by it on his guard ; and if he is informed of the two principal facts, that the note is dishonored and that the holder looks to him for payment, he may easily acquire all other knowledge necessary for his safety. Bayley, (4th ed.) 207 ; Reedy v. Seixas, 2 Johns. Cas. 337.1 When the notice is received from a bank, he ought to presume that the note is there, and that the bank is the agent of the holder to receive the money and deliver the note. So when a notary public or any other agent transacts the same business. If the indorser should apply to such agent and offer the money and demand the note, and the agent should be unable or unwilling to receive the money and deliver the note, this may be matter of defence on a plea of tender, but until some such matter is shown, it cannot appear that he is injured by not being informed in whom the property of the note rests.

In the case of Bancroft v. Hall, 1 Holt’s N. P. Rep. 476, it was decided, that sending a letter by a private hand to an agent, requesting him to give notice, was sufficient; and indeed, in a great majority of instances, the notice must be given by an agent, and when so given it is in the power of the party by inquiry to ascertain every thing essential to his interests.

3. The most material point of the objection to the notice in this case is, the supposed defect of proof that it was actually given. The evidence on the trial showed only that it was put into the post-office seasonably, and the defendant was ready to prove that it never reached him.

[414]*414To give this objection a fair consideration, we are to take it for granted that it actually miscarried, so that there was no notice in fact of the dishonor of the bill when the suit was com menced. I do not know that this point has been in totidem verbis decided, and yet enough has been decided to lead inevitably to the conclusion, that, in a case where it is proper that the notice should be sent by mail, putting the letter containing it, properly directed, seasonably into the post-office is either notice in itself, or such due diligence as will stand in its stead It has been so considered by the two most approved writers upon bills and notes, and after frequent opportunities to revise their works in repeated editions, and after the position they lay down had been many years before a learned bench and bar, in a country where every point of commercial law is criticized with great severity.

Thus Chitty says, “With respect to the mode of giving the notice, it is sufficient, both in the case of a foreign and an inland bill, to send notice by the post even though the letter should miscarry ; for it would be very unreasonable to make it incumbent on the holder to send a person with the notice, where perhaps the distance may be very great.” Chitty, (5th ed.) 285. And Bayley, whose treatise is one of the best, if not the very best on the subject, and who was himself the editor of the last edition of his work, after being several years one of the justices of the King’s Bench, says, “ Sending notice by the post is sufficient though it is not received.” Bayley, (4th ed.) 227. Both these writers cite the case of Saunderson v. Judge, 2 H. Bl. 509, for the position which they thus lay down in unequivocal terms.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Mass. 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shed-v-brett-mass-1823.