Spann v. Baltzell

1 Fla. 301
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 1 Fla. 301 (Spann v. Baltzell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spann v. Baltzell, 1 Fla. 301 (Fla. 1847).

Opinion

Hawkins, Justice:

Error from Frankiin Superior Court. Action was brought in the Court below, by Baltzell against Spann? under an attachment for •$1400, and the declaration was in assumpsit, on the following promissory note against Spann, as endorser :—

Apalachicola, Dec’r 3d, 1840.
By the 22d of May, 1842, I promise to pay to the order of L. M. Stone, at the Agency of the Southern Life Insurance and Trust Company Bank, Apalachicola, fourteen hundred dollars, for value received.
JAMES H. CAMPBELL.
Endorsed — L. M. Stone,
JoSIAH S. PATTERSON,
S. Scarborough,
Rich’d C. Spann.

Baltzell sued as the immediate endorsee of Spann. The declaration avers, that at the time the note became due and payable, accord[302]*302ing to its tenor and effect, it was duly presented for payment at the Agency of the Southern Life Insurance and Trust Company at Apalachicola, but that payment was refused; of all which the defendant . had due notice.

To this declaration the defendant pleaded, first, that the plaintiff ought not to maintain his action to recover any more, or any other kind of money, or a verdict for damages against him, than the sum of fourteen hundred dollars in banlc notes, or bills of the Southern Life Insurance and Trust Company, because that after the making of the note sued on, and before the commencement of this action,-tp wit, on the 3d day of March, 1842, Baltzell, in consideration that Spann promised to pay the note sued on at maturity, punctually and without fail, out of his own funds, promised and agreed to and with said Spann, to receive payment of the said note in the bills or notes of the Southern Life Insurance and Trust,Company. . The plea further avers, that on the day the note became payable, Spann offered and tendered to pay Baltzell the sum of fourteen hundred dollars, in the said Southern Life Insurance and Trust Company bills, but that Baltzell refused to receive the same; that he had always been ready, and still was ready to pay in such bills.

The second plea is substantially the same as the first, as well as the third,, each setting forth a tender, with uncore prist and tout temps prist.

Besides these pleas the general issue is pleaded.

'To the special pleas ther^ was a special demurrer on the following grounds: that the plea was not one of tender, but of accord, but of accord without satisfaction; that it aims to .discharge a note by payment of bills of a bank known to be insolvent, and worth only sixty cents in the dollar at the time of tender; that the proffer of payment, if good as tender, was good without the agreement set forth, and if good as a tender, the bills should have been filed in Court; that the tender should have been made in money, brought into Court and filed with his plea; that the agreement, as stated by defendant, was wholly without consideration moving from defendant to plaintiff. The demurrers to the special pleas were sustained by the Court, and the pleas overruled and the case sent to the jury on the general issue and joinder, and verdict found for plaintiff.

By an inspection of the bill of exceptions in the case, it appears [303]*303that, after the note sued on was read in evidence, M. P. Ellis was called by the plaintiff, who testified that he presented said note in the manner and at the time stated in the following protest:

TeeeitoRX op Florida, Franklin County.

By this public instrument of protest be it known, that on the 25th day of May, 1842, at the request of Geo. F. Baltzell, the holder of the original note, of which a true copy is hereon endorsed, I, Marshal P, Ellis, a Notary Public, residing in the city of Apalachicola, qualified according to law, went to the office of the Southern Life Insurance and Trust Company, and presenting said note demanded payment thereof from the Cashier, who refused to pay the same — that no funds were deposited for that purpose. Whereupon I, the said Notary, at the request aforesaid, do hereby solemnly and publicly protest the said note, as well against the drawer or maker thereof, as against the endorsers, and all persons who are, or may be concerned therein, for all exchange, re-exchange, damages, costs, charges and interest suffered, or to be suffered for the non-payment of said note. This solemnly done and protested.

Given under my hand and seal at Apalachicola, the day and year first above written.

M. P. ELLIS, Notary Public.
I certify that on the 25th of May, 1842, due notice of the foregoing protest was given to the maker and endorsers of said note, by depositing the notice in the Post Office at Apalachicola, addressed as follows:
L. M. Stone, St. Joseph — ,Josiah S. Patterson, Fort Gaines — S. Scarborough, Fort Gaines — R. C. Spann, Franklin, Alaba., — such being the reputed places of their respective residences.
M. P. ELLIS, Notary Public.
(Endorsed) — Copy. .
Apala., Dec’r 3d, 1840.
By the 22dday of May, 1842,1 promise to pay to the order of L.
M. Stone, at the Agency of the Southern Life Insurance and Trust
Company Bank, at Apalachicola, fourteen hundred dollars, for value received. JAMES H. CAMPBELL.
Endorsed — L. M. Stowe,
Josiah S. Patterson,
S. ScARBOROURH,
Rich’d C. Spann.

[304]*304The contents of which protest he testified to as being true, — and said witness further said, that he sent notice of non-payment. of said note to said defendant and his co-endorsers, as stated in the certificate attached to said protest. Cross examined. Witness said he had no recollection of any of the facts stated, in said protest, independent of the same. He swears to the presentment for payment, notice to endorsers, refusal to pay, <$zc., because he presumes the acts stated must have occurred, else he would not have certified to their occurrence as a Notary. He recollects no facts beyond the protest. Did not recollect at what hour he made the presentment and demand stated to have been made. It was his custom to present notes at the bank, when they were payable at a bank, between noon and sundown — seldom presented any such before noon — has no recollection of having presented said note more than once. His usual habit, in case of a refusal to pay a note, the payment of which he demanded at the bank, was, to leave the bank immediately on such refusal. — • Had the said note in his possession from the timó it w,as handed him to make demand of payment in the beginning of the day, until he protested it; which he usually did about dark. The notice which he gave to the endorsers, was in the form required by law. Sent the notices by mail, deposited in the Post Office on same day that demand and refusal took place, as stated in said protest.

For the defence, Nathaniel C. Rabbins was sworn, who testified as follows, to wit; He was Agent, or assistant Cashier of the

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Bluebook (online)
1 Fla. 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spann-v-baltzell-fla-1847.