Wolf v. Union Trust Co.

133 A. 121, 150 Md. 385, 1926 Md. LEXIS 39
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 7, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 A. 121 (Wolf v. Union Trust Co.) 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
Wolf v. Union Trust Co., 133 A. 121, 150 Md. 385, 1926 Md. LEXIS 39 (Md. 1926).

Opinion

*387 Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Baltimore and Eastern Shore Ferry Line, Inc., as maker, with Harry B. Wolf and Charles L. Wolf as the endorsers, gave, for value, to the Union Trust Company of Maryland, its promissory note for the sum of fifteen thousand dollars, payable at the office of the company four months after date. As the note fell due on Saturday, the statute provided that it should be presented for payment on the next succeeding business day, which was Monday, March 12th, 1923, and on that day the note was duly presented for payment and payment was refused. Code, art. 13, secs. 104, 94, 106, 102. The note was protested on the day of its dishonor by a notary public, whose position as vice-president of the banking company did not disqualify him from acting, as he was not a party to the dishonored instrument. Code, art. 68, sec. 12. The obligation was not thereafter paid or otherwise discharged, and suit was brought on July 1st, 1925, by the payee against the appellant, Charles L. Wolf, as endorser, under the Rule Day Act of Baltimore City (Act of 1886, chapter 184). A recovery was had by the payee, and the three bills of exceptions on the record present, substantially, but the single question of the legal sufficiency of the testimony to show that notice of the dishonor of the negotiable instrument had been given the endorser sued. Code, art. 13, secs. 82, 108 ; Lightner v. Roach, 126 Md. 476 ; Bradley v. Ford Products Co., 139 Md. 388 ; Leonard v. Union Trust Co., 140 Md. 201.

A.t the trial the appellee offered the note in evidence and proved that the note was duly presented, its payment demanded and refused; that the note was thereupon protested; and that it had not been since paid. The protest was given in evidence and by it was certified that on the day of the protest the notary “addressed written notices to the makers and endorsers of the said note informing them that it had not been paid,, payment thereof having been demanded and refused, and that they would be held responsible for the payment thereof.”

*388 In. order for the protest to be prima facie evidence under the statute that notice of dishonor had been given, it is necessary that the protest “shall state that notice of such non-payment has been sent or delivered to the party or parties to such note or' bill, and the manner of such notice.” Code, art. 13, secs. 6, 7. The manner of giving the notice may be by delivering it personally or through the mails. Code, art. 13, sec. 115. While the form of the protest used by the notary was sufficient, yet there was no statement that notice of the dishonor had either been sent or’ delivered to the parties to the note, much less any indication of the method adopted. The assertion that the notary had “addressed written notices to the makers and endorsers” of the negotiable paper is plainly not sufficient to fulfill the quoted requirement of the statute. When it is averred that the notary “addressed” the written notices, nothing is disclosed of what became of the written notices after they had been “addressed” by writing upon the notices the direction or superscription, giving the names and residences or places of business of the makers and endorsers of the promissory note. Whether the notices so addressed were delivered in person or through the mails is left to conjecture. Indeed, there is nothing in the certificate of the notary that is not as consistent with the inference that the notices had never been sent as that they had been served personally or had been forwarded by mail. The insertion of the fact and of the manner of the notice to the parties secondarily liable on a negotiable instrument is not essential to the sufficiency of the notary’s certificate of protest, but its insertion is now customary in commercial usage, for the reason that when it is incorporated it becomes prima facie evidence of the facts recited under an express provision of the Negotiable Instruments Act. Code, art. 13, secs. 6, 7. Before the certificate can be given its statutory Value as evidence against a party to the dishonored paper, it must strictly comply with the required precedent condition of a definite statement that notice has been given to the party or parties to *389 the negotiable instrument, together with the manner of such notice. The certificate of the notary in the instant Case was prima facie evidence of the facts of presentment, demand and non-payment at the time and in the manner stated in the certificate of protest, but, for the reason pointed out, it was not prima facie evidence that notice of dishonor had been sent or delivered to the parties secondarily liable. Code, art. 13, secs. 6, 7. Farmers Bank v. Bowie, 4 Md. 290, 294, 295 ; Ricketts v. Pendleton, 14 Md. 320, 322, 329-330 ; Staylor v. Ball, 24 Md. 183, 189, 199 ; Crowley v. Barry, 4 Gill, 194 ; Reier v. Strauss, 54 Md. 278, 287 ; Weems v. Farmers Bank, 15 Md. 231, 240 ; Howard Bank v. Carson, 50 Md. 18, 22, 27 ; Tate v. Sullivan, 30 Md. 464, 465 ; People’s Bank v. Keech, 26 Md. 521, 527, 529, 530 ; Nailor v. Bowie, 3 Md. 251, 253, 256, 258 ; Fulton v. Maccracken, 18 Md. 528, 530, 541 ; Citizen’s Bank v. Howell, 8 Md. 530, 531 ; Graham v. Sangston, 1 Md. 59, 65 ; Hunter v. Van Bomhorst, 1 Md. 504, 507 ; People’s Bank v. Brooke, 31 Md. 7, 10 ; Monroe v. Woodruff, 17 Md. 159, 160, 164 ; Jones on Legal Forms (7th ed.), 1388, 1389.

The last cited cases are concrete illustrations not only of the insufficiency of the certificate of protest on this record to gratify the provision of the statute with respect to the statement of notice of dishonor having been sent or delivered to the parties and the manner of such notice, but also ■of the practice in that connection which has prevailed. It is quite true that the comptroller is required by law to have printed approved blank forms of protest of bills of exchange and promissory notes and stamp- the same, and take receipts therefor, whenever he shall deliver any of them to the notaries public, but this obligation imposed upon the comptroller for record and revenue purposes does not operate to cure defects or to supply omissions or statements in a notary’s certificate. Code, art. 19, sec. 28.

2. The failure of the notary’s certificate to furnish all the elements of proof necessary to entitle a recovery by the payee against the endorser did not preclude the admission *390 of other testimony to supply this deficiency, as the proof required was not in contradiction of the statements of the protest, but was. for the purpose of supplying its material omissions. Hunter v. Van Bomhorst, 1 Md. 511, 512 ; Sasscer v. Farmers’ Bank, 4 Md. 409, 418, 419 ; Tate v. Sullivan, 30 Md. 464, 469-471 ; Wetherall v. Clagett, 28 Md. 465, 474, 475 ; Wetherall v. Garrett, 28 Md. 450, 456.

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Bluebook (online)
133 A. 121, 150 Md. 385, 1926 Md. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-v-union-trust-co-md-1926.