Walters v. Brown

15 Md. 285, 1860 Md. LEXIS 27
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 18, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 15 Md. 285 (Walters v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walters v. Brown, 15 Md. 285, 1860 Md. LEXIS 27 (Md. 1860).

Opinion

Eccleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court:

This action of assumpsit was instituted in the Court of Common Pleas for Baltimore city, upon a promissory note for four hundred and thirty-one dollars and eighty-four cents, drawn by John F. McJilton, and indorsed by Edward Sped-den, Samuel Brown and W. T. Walters & Co. The note is dated, “Baito., February 1857,” and all the parties to the same reside in Baltimore.

The defendant pleaded “that he did not promise as alleged:” to which the plaintiffs joined issue.

[289]*289The verdict and judgment being in favor of the defendant the plaintiffs appealed.

A denial of the plaintiffs’ right to recover is based upon the absence of sufficient proof of due notice to the defendant, of the non-payment of the note; there being no dispute in regard to the making, or to the regular indorsement thereof.

It was duly protested; and the notary certified that on the same day he addressed written notices to the indorsers, informing them the note had not been paid, payment thereof having been demanded and refused, and that they would he held responsible for the payment thereof; that notices for the first and third indorsers he left at their places -of business, and notice for Samuel Brown, he enclosed him, and put in the Baltimore Post Office.

The partnership of the plaintiffs was proved; they then examined, as a witness, Wilson M. Carey, a notary public, duly commissioned in and for the city of Baltimore. He testified that after the said note had been handed to him for protest as such notary, he went to inquire, he thought personally and not by one of his clerks, at the places of business of the plaintiffs, and also of the maker of said note, as to the residence or place of business of the defendant; that he did not find the plaintiffs or maker to respond to such inquiry and not knowing himself where the defendant lived or had his place of business, he deposited a notice of the dishonor of said note in the Baltimore Post Office, directed to Samuel Brown, Baltimore. The witness said he knew the place of business of Edward Spedden, which was in North street near Fayette street, and he looked in the directory and found the names of several persons therein named Samuel Brown; and being asked why he did not call upon the persons named Samuel Brown, as therein indicated, said he had no time to call upon them, he had twelve or fifteen notes to protest on that day.

The plaintiffs’ witness, Gehrman, testified That he had been for tire last six years a letter carrier in the Baltimore Post Office, and that all letters which came into the penny-post of the Post Office for distribution by the penny-post of the [290]*290office, and were directed to Samuel Brown, Baltimore, were' delivered, by witness to the defendant as the only Samuel Brown who was served by the penny-post of said office; that said defendant was a well known citizen and lived on Eutaw street in said city; and that letters dropped in the office in the morning, were, in the course of business, delivered to him in the evening; and letters dropped in the evening were delivered the next morning.”

The defendant offered no evidence, but asked the court “to instruct the jury, that there is no sufficient evidence of notice to the defendant of the non-payment of the note for which this suit is brought,” which instruction was granted.

The plaintiffs submitted the two following prayers, which were refused.

1st. The plaintiffs pray the court to instruct the jury, that if they shall find from the evidence that the promissory note offered in evidence was drawn by John F. McJilton, and endorsed by the defendant, and upon the day of the maturity of the said note it was not paid, and it was delivered by the Cashier of the Farmers and Planters Bank of Baltimore, to Wilson M. Carey, notary public, for protest, and that the said notary made, or caused to be made, diligent inquiry as to the residence of the defendant, and was unable to ascertain the same, and that on the same day he addressed a written notice to the defendant informing him of the demand upon the drawer - and the non-payment of the note, and that the said defendant was held responsible for the payment of the same, as set out in the protest offered in evidence; and that he sealed and directed said notice to the defendant at Baltimore, and deposited the same in the Baltimore Post Office; and if the jury shall further find from the evidence in the cause, the defendant was then a resident of the city of Baltimore, and that it was the constant and uniform practice of the penny-postman, attached to the Baltimore Post Office, to deliver at the residence of the defendant on the same day, or on the day succeeding, all letters deposited in said office directed to him, then there is sufficient evidence m the case to establish such notice to the defendant [291]*291of the dishonor of the note as to enable the plaintiffs to recover in this action.

2nd. If tlie jury shall find from the evidence that the said note was drawn by John F. McJilton and indorsed by the defendant, and that upon the day of its maturity it was not paid, and that the same was delivered to the notary for protest, and that the said notary was not able to find, after reasonable inquiry, the residence or place of business of the defendant, and on the same day deposited the said notice, as set out in said protest, in the Baltimore Post Office, directed to the defendant at Baltimore; and if tlie jury shall further find that the defendant received the said notice on the same day, or the day sijcceeding, then the plaintiffs are entitled to recover.

The important inquiry in this case is, whether the notice of non-payment of the note, sent to the defendant through the Baltimore Post Office, was sufficient to render him liable on the note ?

It is a well settled general rule, that where the endorser and the party who is required to give him notice, reside in the same town or city, the notice must be given to him personally, or at his domicil, or place of business. And a letter containing the notice of the dishonor, put into the Post Office of the same town or city, directed to the endorser will not be a sufficient notice. If, however, it should be proved that the notice so put into the Post Office did actually reach the endorser, the notice will be sufficient.

Mr. Justice Story, in his work on Promissory Notes, section 322, states the rule on this subject. Then, in section 323, the learned author advances tlie doctrine that where in large towns or cities there is a letter carrier or penny-post, who carries letters daily from the Post Office, to the houses or places of business of the parties, who are accustomed to receive their letters by him there, if the notice be left at the Post Office early enough to go by such letter carrier or penny-post to the party the same day he is entitled to notice, it will be deemed sufficient.

in a note to section 323, Judge Story quotes the language [292]*292of Chitty on Bills, page

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Bluebook (online)
15 Md. 285, 1860 Md. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walters-v-brown-md-1860.