Van Brunt & Sons v. Vaughn
This text of 47 Iowa 145 (Van Brunt & Sons v. Vaughn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The notary was authorized to transmit the notices to the indorsers by mail, and if they were so directed and sent that, in the usual course of the mail, defendant would have received them, it is sufficient. The notary may employ proper means' and instrumentalities to secure the deposit of the notices in the post-office. So he can use proper instrumentality, if any be necessary, to secure their transmission by the mail. If it be necessary in thus transmitting them to re-deposit them in.the post-office with new directions, so that they may reach the indorser in due time and by due course of the mail, this may be done. The mail is used in this manner as the medium of the transmission of the notices, and the instrumentalities used for the re-deposit and re-direction of the notices are but means necessary to secure the transportation of the notices by mail from the notary to the indorser.
The transmission of notices of the protest of commercial paper through a party thereto, who re-deposited them in the post-office of the persons to whom they were directed, has been held sufficient in more than one well considered case. See Hartford Bank v. Stedman, 3 Conn , 489; Eagle Bank v. Hathaway, 5 Met., 212; Manchester Bank v. Fellows, 8 Foster, 302; Warren v. Gilman, 17 Me., 360. But a different rule was recognized in Sheldon v. Benham, 4 Hill, 129. The weight of authority, as well as reason, seems to support the rule we adopt. The judgment of the District Court is
Affirmed.
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