Tunstall v. Walker

10 Miss. 638
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Miss. 638 (Tunstall v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tunstall v. Walker, 10 Miss. 638 (Mich. 1844).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Shakkey

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question in this case is, whether notice to the indorser of a promissory note, who was, at the time of protest, a member of the United States senate, from Mississippi, is sufficient to fix his liability, under the circumstances of the case, if it were sent to Washington city, where the defendant then was, attending the session of congress.

This case was before this court in 1839, on an appeal taken by the defendant below, and the judgment was reversed. On [648]*648the second trial, the defendant succeeded, and the plaintiff having moved for a new trial, now brings up the case by appeal. Previous to the second trial, the plaintiff amended his declaration by adding a count, in which he states as an excuse for not giving notice, that the defendant had no residence or place of business. The questions then are, first, does the present record so vary the aspect of the case, as to make the notice which was sent to Washington city sufficient? and second, does the proof entitle the plaintiff to recover under his amended declaration, although no notice was sent?

1. I have carefully compared the present record' with that on which the case was previously decided; that comparison leaves the conclusion that there is a material difference in the aspect of the two cases. Whether that difference is sufficient to justify us in sustaining the notice in the present case, will* be shown in the sequel.

/ The question as to Walker’s residence, is the disputed point, and the one on which the case must turn. Notice must be served personally, or it must be left at, or sent to the party’s residence or place of business. If the residence of the indorser be unknown, then due diligence must be used to ascertain it, and if after such diligence it cannot be found out, the want of notice will be excused. Chitty on bills, (Barbour’s Ed.) 486. 7 Bailey on Bills, 280. The law requires that the indorser should have notice in order that he may protect himself against loss. His undertaking is that he will pay if the maker does not, provided he is duly informed of the non-payment. But whilst the holder is bound to give notice if he can, he is not to lose his remedy if he cannot do so, provided he uses reasonable diligence to discover the residence of the indorser, tie must not remain in a state of contented ignorance. Notice to the indorser, or due diligence to give it, being conditions precedent to the holder’s right of recovery; he must come prepared to prove that he has given or sent notice to the proper place through a proper conveyance. Or if such notice has not been given, then he must prove circumstances which will in law amount to a good excuse for his having failed to do so, and then he will have a [649]*649right to recover. When the holder does not know the residence of the indorser, why is it that he is required to use proper diligence to find it out ? Because the law presumes that every man has a residence or place of business, and that it may be ascertained by diligent inquiry, and that the indorser may be thus protected by notice, which protection the holder is bound to afford him if he can. It is for the benefit of the indorser, and not an unmeaning, useless requisition. When the holder proves that he endeavored to find out the indorser’s residence, but could not, he is entitled to recover, even without any no-A" tice. But suppose the indorser has no residence or place of business, and the plaintiff proves that fact, is he then also required to prove diligence in trying to find out that which he proves did not exist? and therefore could not be found with ever so great a diligence. The law surely requires no such idle ceremony. (Then I conclude that if a holder proves diligence in trying to ascertain where the residence of the indorser was, and fails, that he is excused for not having given notice •) and if he proves that the party had no residence or place of business, then he will be excused for not having used diligence to find out such residence. The reason for requiring diligence then fails, and in such case notice sent to the place where the party is known to be, is the best and only notice which can be given. This accords with the doctrine laid down by Judged Story, who says, “In cases where the residence of the parties who are to receive notice, is unknown, it is incumbent upon the holder, and all other parties who are required to give notice, to make due inquiries with reasonable diligence as to the true domicil and place of business of the party; and unless they do so, those parties will be discharged, if, upon the exercise of due diligence, their places of domicil and business could have been ascertained.” Story on Bills, 334, sec. 299. But what if their places of domicil could not have been ascertained ? In such cases, the author leaves the conclusion or inference that diligence will be dispensed with. This is the necessary consequence, and indeedit is implied in the text. \We have also\ asserted the same principle in the- former decision of this case, [650]*6503 Howard, 264. Indeed this must be the rule of law, for it is impossible to send notice to the domicil of a party who has none, and it would be absurd to require a party to prove that he diligently tried to find that which he proves had no existence. This being the law then, let us see what the facts are to which it is to be applied. The evidence is lengthy, and I shall endeavor to extract the substance without giving it in detail.

The record of the notary was first read, which shows that the note was protested on the 4th of February, 1837, and that notice was put in the post-office in time to go out by the first mail of the day next succeeding the protest, addressed to R. J. Walker, at Washington City, District of Columbia.

The deposition of John Black was then read, which states that on the 1st February, 1837, Robert J. Walker was a member of the Senate of the United States, and was then, and up to and after the 4th of March, boarding in Washington City, his family being also there. That Mr. Walker, during the winter, and up to the 4th of March, was in the habit of receiving his letters through the post-office at Washington, which were delivered to him by the proper officer of the house of which he was a member, as is the custom. Mr. Walker had once resided in Natchez, but a year or more before his election, in 1835 or ’36, he moved to Madison county, the precise time not known. He did not know where Mr. Walker resided in Mississippi at the time mentioned, but thought he had sold out, and left Madison county; and the witness did not know that he had any fixed residence in Mississippi, but that his last place of residence was Madison county.

Haliday was then introduced as a witness who stated that defendant told him in 1835, that he had removed to Madison county, and caused an advertisement to be inserted in a newspaper, by which letters, &c. addressed to R. J. Walker, were directed to be forwarded to him, at Pearl Dale, near Madison-ville, in Madison county, Mississippi, which advertisement was published six weeks in a paper having an extensive circulation, for which Cook, the notary, was a subscriber. The witness had conferred frequently with the defendant at Pearl Dale, from [651]*651Natchez, in 1835, and knew of no change of residence by said defendant in 1837.

J. F. H. Clairborne was then introduced. He states that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Miss. 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tunstall-v-walker-miss-1844.