Smith v. . Poillon

87 N.Y. 590, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 45
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 31, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 N.Y. 590 (Smith v. . Poillon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. . Poillon, 87 N.Y. 590, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 45 (N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Earl, J.

This action was brought to recover of the defendants as indorsers upon a promissory note, made in the city of Hew York by the McHeal Coal and Iron Company February 28, 1870, payable to their order three years after date, at the office of the company.

It was alleged in the complaint that the company, a Pennsylvania corporation, had an office in the city of New York at the date of the .note, and that the note was payable at such office, and these allegations were expressly admitted in the answer.

The defendants defended the action upon two grounds: (1) That the note was not properly presented for payment and payment demanded; and (2) that notice of protest was not in due time served upon the defendants. The trial judge held, that upon the undisputed evidence it appeared that notice of protest was duly served in proper time upon the defendants, and refused to submit the evidence in relation thereto to the jury, but he submitted the evidence as to the demand of payment to the jury, and they found in reference thereto in favor of plaintiff. The judgment entered upon the verdict of the jury having been affirmed at the General Term, the defendants appealed to this court.

We are of opinion that there was no material question of fact to be submitted to the jury, and that upon the undisputed evidence the plaintiff, as a matter of law, was entitled to a verdict. It is undisputed that the note on the last day of grace was placed in the hands of Mr. Baker, a notary, for demand and protest; that he took the note and went to an office, 111 Broadway, Hew York, in the Trinity building, where the company either then had or shortly before had had its office, and that he there presented the note and demanded payment thereof of the person in charge of the office, and *594 that there was then a sign at the door of the office, indicating that it was the office of the company.

The only dispute at the trial was whether the place at which the demand was thus made was at the time the office of the company, and there was evidence on the part of the plaintiff tending to show that it was. The evidence on the part of the defendant tended to show, and, if undisputed, did show, that that place had been the office of the company, its last office in this State, but that it had then ceased to be such office. If it was then the office of the company, it is undisputed that presentment and demand there was properly made ; if it was not then the office of the company, it was the last office of the company within this State, and the company being a foreign corporation had removed its office and left' the State. In such case it is well settled that no presentment and demand at any place are necessary, in order to charge the indorser. (Foster v. Julien, 24 N. Y. 28.) It matters not that, the plaintiff alleged due presentment and demand in his complaint; that did not preclude him from proof upon the trial that presentment and demand had been waived or rendered useless and unnecessary. So it has been held' that under an allegation in a complaint of a tender the plaintiff could, upon the trial prove that a tender had been waived, and thus rendered unnecessary. (Holmes v. Holmes, 9 N. Y. 525.) Therefore, even if the defendants were right in their contention that the place where the demand was made was not then the office of the company, the result, upon their own evidence, so far as that branch of the case was concerned, should have been the same.

We have now only to consider whether upon'the undisputed evidence the defendants were in due time notified of the nonpayment of the note. This suit was commenced nearly six years after the note fell due, and the evidence therein was given more than seven years thereafter. After such a lapse of time the memory of witnesses cannot be expected to be full and minutely accurate, and some force should be given to the presumption that official duty was discharged. The last day of grace upon this note was the 3d of March, 1873; on that day *595 the notary presented the note for payment as above-mentioned and' protested the same for non-payment. On the following morning he caused notices of protest to be drawn up, one to the defendants, the first indorsers, one to Smith, the second indorser, and another to O. Robinson, cashier, the last indorser, the cashier of a bank at Thomaston, Maine. He signed them all and inclosed them in an envelope and addressed the envelope to Robinson, at Thomaston, and gave the notices so addressed and inclosed to his clerk before two o’clock p. m., on that day, March 4, to mail in the Hew York post-office. It was the duty of the, clerk to whom the letter was thus delivered to mail it, and he had been in the habit for years of attending to that branch of the notary’s business. The clerk was then called who testified that he had no particular memory of that letter, but that he knew that he mailed notices of protest that day, and that he mailed all the letters that were given him to mail that day between the hours of one and two.

This was all the evidence it was practicable for the plaintiff to give that the notices were mailed at New York. If mailed as testified to by the clerk between one and two on the 4th of March, I do not understand it is disputed that they were mailed in time. It was further shown that a notice mailed in Hew York at the time named would reach Thomaston in the State of Maine, the residence of Robinson, to whom the letter was addressed, if the train from Hew York made its connection with the early train north from Boston, in the evening of March 5, but that if the New York train failed to make the connection at Boston, then the letter would reach Thomaston at noon on the 6Íh of March. It was also shown that this letter reached its address at Thomaston on the 5th or 6th of March, and that the notices for Smith, the next prior indorser, and for the defendants were mailed to Smith at his place of residence, Warren, in the State of Maine, by the next mail after they were received at Thomaston, and that they were received by Smith in the evening of March 6. As there were two mails daily from Thomaston to Warren, a distance of only about four miles, one leaving at 10:10 a. m., and the other at *596 1:40 p. m., the claim is made that the letter did not reach Thomaston until the 6th of March, after the first mail for Warren had been sent, and thus the appellants claim there was some evidence which would authorize the inference that the letter was not mailed in New York, as claimed by the plaintiff, on the 4th of March. But we think, under all the circumstances, such an inference was unwarranted and could not properly have been drawn by the jury i'f the case had been submitted to them. The presumption is very strong that Baker, an experienced notary, caused the notices to be mailed to Robinson, as his duty required, on the 4th, and that presumption is fortified by the evidence of himself and his clerk, and that presumption and evidence are not overcome by the fact that the letter did not reach Thomaston until the 6th of March. It may have been delayed in the mails or by failure of connection at Boston. The fact that the letter did not reach its destination until the 6th of March does not, under the circumstances of this case, furnish any evidence that it was not mailed between one and two o’clock on the 4th of March.

Smith was an aged man, upward of eighty years old.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.Y. 590, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-poillon-ny-1882.