Wynen v. Schappert

6 Daly 558, 55 How. Pr. 156
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 7, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Daly 558 (Wynen v. Schappert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wynen v. Schappert, 6 Daly 558, 55 How. Pr. 156 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1878).

Opinion

Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice.

Where the indorser resides in a different place from that in which presentment or demand of the note is to be made, personal service of the notice of the dishonor of the note is not required, but notice may be served by mail (Ransom v. Mack, 2 Hill, 590). Such was the case here. The notice was served by giving it to a United States letter carrier in this city, this city being the place where the indorser resides. This was a service by mail. It is provided by the laws of the United States (U. S. Rev. Stat. p. 159, sec. 3980), that every route agent, postal clerk, or other carrier of the mail, shall receive any mail matter presented to him and properly prepaid by postage stamps, and deliver the same for mailing at the next post office at which he arrives, and it is further provided that letter carriers shall be employed for the free delivery of mail matter in every place containing a population of fifty thousand inhabitants (sec. 3865). It is claimed that a letter carrier under this section, is not embraced by the term used in the other section, route agent, postal clerk or other carrier of the mail.” The letter carriers are to be employed by the express terms of the 3865th section, for the free delivery of mail matter, and if a letter carrier is under this section to carry mail matter, he is clearly embraced by the words in the preceding section, “ or other carrier of the mail.” The word mail, which, with some changes in the orthography is found in many languages, means, in its original signification, a wallet, sack, budget, trunk or bag, and in connection with the post office, means the carriage of letters, whether applied to the bag into which they are put, the coach or vehicle by means of which they are transported, or any other means employed for their carriage and delivery by public authority. It came originally into use as referring to the valise which postillions or couriers had behind them and in which they carried letters, at an early period, when that was the mode in which letters were carried and delivered; and after the establishment of post offices, post routes and post coaches, it became, as it is now, a general word to express the carriage and delivery of letters by public authority. The carrier in this case carried a bag having two compartments, in one of which letters to be [561]*561delivered were put, and in the other letters to be sent by mail— the kind of bag such officials were accustomed to carry—and the delivery to such a carrier of the notice of protest, inclosed in an envelope properly addressed to the defendant, with the postage prepaid, was a service of the notice by mail. The remaining question is whether there was due diligence in mailing the notice of protest to the defendant. The note was made payable at the Peabody Bank, Kutztown, Pennsylvania. The plaintiff placed it in the German Exchange Bank in this city for collection, and they forwarded it to the Second National Bank of Allentown, Pa., which latter bank forwarded it to the National Bank of the Republic, in Philadelphia, Pa., by which bank it was forwarded to the Farmers’ National Bank of Reading, Pa., and the latter bank forwarded it to the National Bank of Kutztown, Pa., being indorsed first by the cashier of the German Exchange Bank and by the cashiers of each of the banks through which it was successively transmitted to Kutztown for collection. It was presented by the National Bank of Kutztown to the Peabody Bank, at that place, where it was made payable, and payment demanded, which was refused, the answer being “no funds.” It was then regularly protested by the notary of the bank, and notices of protest were sent back in the same order in which the note had been transmitted, being regularly sent from bank to bank on the day of its receipt, or by the next mail, until it reached the German Exchange Bank, the clerk of which inclosed the notices of protest to the indorsers, to the plaintiff, by mail, who as soon as he received the letter containing them, went to the indorser’s (the defendant Schappert’s) house to deliver the notice to him, and discovered that he had moved, but could not learn where; and the plaintiff then went to Schappert’s last place of business. Schappert had closed up his business on the 15th of July preceding, but the plaintiff learned that he was in the habit of stopping there to receive his letters every morning. The plaintiff then went to the German Exchange Bank, upon the afternoon of the day he received the notice, or the next morning, but as he said to the best of his knowledge, he believed it was the same afternoon, and left directions to send the notice to the defendant’s last [562]*562place of business, and the notice was then immediately placed in an envelope, properly directed, the postage paid, and was delivered in time for the next mail, to the United States letter carrier, who was in the habit of coming to the German Exchange Bank, which was on his route, to deliver and receive letters. The carrier had no recollection in respect to this particular letter, but testified that all letters so received by him were deposited by him -at the United States station, where he received letters to carry, and where he deposited those that were sent by mail. The note was presented and protested on the 4th of September, 1876, and what time elapsed before the-notices of protest were received by the German Exchange Bank in this city does not distinctly appear, but it was some time between four and seven days from the day the note was payable, and certainly within a week. The German Exchange Bank, when they received the note for collection, having no correspondent at Kutztown, nor any person there to whom they could send it, sent it, as they generally did, with all their collections in Pennsylvania, to the bank at Allentown. As the discount clerk expressed it, they did so in accordance with their “usual custom of collection.” Why the Bank of Allentown sent the note to the Bank of Philadelphia, that being a circuitous route to Kutztown, which was but eighteen miles from Allentown, and which involved the transmission of the note through two additional banks, does not appear, but probably for the same reason as the German Exchange Bank, because they had no correspondent then at Kutztown, nor any person there to whom they could send it. The appellant claims that this was unnecessary and unreasonable, as it delayed the service of notices of protest on the defendant, in consequence of the transmission of the notices consecutively to each preceding indorser, involving an incidental delay in the case of each indorser ; but the presentation for payment and the transmission of the proceeds of a note for the large amount of $10,000 was a very important business matter, and the Bank of Allentown would naturally send it to their own correspondent, a bank in which they could confide; and as nothing appears in the case but the fact that they sent it to the National Bank of [563]*563the Republic, at Philadelphia, I do not see that we must infer, in respect to a note of that large amount, that that was not proper, because it was not the most direct route. Security and safety in the collection of so large an amount of money may, for all we know, have made it, as a matter of business experience and judgment, the most judicious course to send it to the bank at Philadelphia for collection at Kutztown. We cannot say judicially the bank at Allentown was bound to send it directly to Kutztown, because it was only eighteen miles distant, and there was daily communication with it by mail and by railroad, whether the bank had any correspondent there, or knew any one there or not.

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Related

Townsend v. Auld
31 N.Y.S. 29 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1894)
Riggs v. Hatch
16 F. 838 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1883)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Daly 558, 55 How. Pr. 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wynen-v-schappert-nyctcompl-1878.