Wiseman v. Chiappella

64 U.S. 368, 16 L. Ed. 466, 23 How. 368, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 779
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 12, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 64 U.S. 368 (Wiseman v. Chiappella) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiseman v. Chiappella, 64 U.S. 368, 16 L. Ed. 466, 23 How. 368, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 779 (1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in this action alleges that he is the holder and owhier of a certain bill of exchange for two thousand and forty-five dollars forty-five cents, dated at Vicksburg, in the State of Mississippi, May 13th, 1855, and payable on the 23d November, 1855, which‘had been drawn by John A. Durden.and A. Durden on William Langton & Co., of New Orleans, and accepted by them, payable to the order of Langton, Sears, & *374 Co., and by that firm endorsed in blank. He further declares that the bill, when it.became due, was intrusted to the defendant, Achille Chiappella, a commissioned notary' public for the city of New Orleans, to demand payment of it from the acceptors, and to protest the same for non-payment, should the acceptors dishonor it; \nd that, from his carelessness in not making a legal demand of the acceptors, add from not having expressed it in the protest, that the endorsers of the bill had been discharged from their obligation to pay it, by a judgment of the Circuit Court of the United States for the southern district of Mississippi. He further alleges that the acceptors, payees, and endorsers, were insolvent, and that, from the. insufficiency of the demand for payment to bind the drawers of the bill,, the defendant had become indebted to him for its amount, with interest at the rate of five, per cent, from the day that it became due, the 23d November, 1855.

The defendant certifies in his notarial protest that the bill had been "handed to him on the day it was dué; that he went several times to.- the'office of the acceptors of it, in G-ravier street,, in order to demand payment for the same, and he found the doors, clpsed, and “no person thereto answer my demand.” It also appeared-that one of the firm by which the bill had been accepted had a residence in New Orleans; that no.demand, for. payment had been made individually upon him ; and that -no further inquiry, had been- made, for the acceptors ■than the repeated calls which the notary states he had made at their office.

"We think, under the circumstances, that such repeated calls at. the office.of the acceptors was a sufficient demand; that, further inquiry for them was not required by the custom of merchants; and that the protest, extended as it had been, is in conformity with what is now generally considered to be the established practice in such matters in England and the United States. We say, under the circumstances, for, as there is no fixed inode for making such a demand in all cases, each case as it oecürs must be . decided on its own facts.

We have not been able to find, a case, either in our own or in the English reports, in which it has been expressly rilled. *375 that a merchant, acceptor of-á foreign bill of exchange, having a' notorious place of business, has been permitted to close it up during the business hours of the day, thus avoiding the obligation of his acceptance on the day of its maturity, and then that he was allowed to claim that the bill ought to have been presented to him for payment elsewhere than,at his place of business. Though such, conduct is not absconding, .in the legal sense of that word,.to avoid the payment of creditors, it must appear, when unexplained, to be an' artifice inconsistent with the obligations of an acceptor, from which the law will presume that he does not intend to pay the bill on the day when it has become due.

The plaintiff in this case does not deny that the office of the acceptors was closed, as the notary states it to have been. The only fact- upon which he relies to charge the'defendant with neglect is, that one of the firm of Langton, Sears, & Co. resided in New Orleans, and that it .was the duty of the notary to have made inquiry for him at his residence. No presumption, under such circumstances, can be made, that the acceptors had removed, to another place of business, or that they were not intentionally absent from it on the day that they knew the bill was payable. This case, then, must be determined on the faet of the designed absence of the acceptors on that day; and that inference is strengthened by no one having been, left there to represent them.

All merchants register their acceptances, in a bill book. It cannot be presumed that they will be unmindful of the days when they are 'matured. ' Should their counting-rooms be closed on such days, the la\V will presume that it,has,been done intentionally, to avoid payment, and, on that account, that further inquiries need not be made for them before a protest can be made for non-payment.

Cases can be found, and many, of them, in which further inquiries than a call at the place of business of a merchant acceptor has been deemed proper, and.in which such inquiries not having been made, has been declared.to be a want of due diligence in making a demand for payment; bilt the rulings in such casés .will be found to have been made on account of *376 some peculiar facts'in. them which do not exist in this case. And in the same class of cases it has been ruled that the protest should contain a declaration by the notary that his call to present a bill for payment had been made in the business hours of the day; but in no case has the latter ever been presumed in favor of an acceptor, whose place of business has been so closed that a demand’for payment could not-be made there upon himself or upon some, one left there to attend to his business.-

Lord Ellenborough said, in the case of Cross v. Smith, 1 M. and S., 545: “'The counting-house is a place where all appointments respecting business.and all notices.should be addressed ; and it is the duty of the merchant to take care that proper• persons shall be in attendance.” It was also ruled in ■that case, that a verbal message, imparting the dishonor of a bill, sent to the counting-house of the drawer during the hours of business, on two successive days, the messenger knocking there, and making a noise sufficient to be heard within, and no one eoming, was sufficient notice. .

In-thiscase the facts were, that Pea & Co. had a counting-house at Hull, where they w^re merchants, and one lived within one mile and the other yvithin ten miles of Hull. The Monday "after Smith •& Co. received the bill, their.clerk went to give notice, and called at the .counting-house of- Pea & Co. about 4alf after ten o’clock. - He found the outer door open ; the inner .one locked. .He knocked so. that he must have been heard, •had any one' been there, waited two Or thrée minutes, and went away; -ánd on his return from the counting-room he saw Pea & Co.’s attorney,-and told, him! The next Monday -he jwent again at the. same-hour, but with no better success. • No .written notice was-left, nor-was any notice sent to the residence of’either of -the parties. The court took time to . consider, and then held,-without any reference to the clerk "having called at the counting-house two successive .days, that going to the counting-house at a time it'should have been open Was sufficient, and that it was' not necessary to leave a written notice, or to send to the residence of either .of-the parties.'

In Bancroft and Hall, Holt, 476, the plaintiff received" notice *377 of. the hill’s dishonor at Manchester, 24th May.

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Bluebook (online)
64 U.S. 368, 16 L. Ed. 466, 23 How. 368, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiseman-v-chiappella-scotus-1860.