Lord v. Appleton

The case was continued for advisement, and the opinion of the Court subsequently drawn up by

Sjhepley J.

This bill of exceptions states, that the action was upon a bill of exchange, dated June 23, 1836, payable in ninety days, at the Suffolk Bank, Boston, drawn by J. B. Hill, upon C. Hayes, and by him accepted, in favor of the defendant and by him *272indorsed. It was afterward indorsed by Lord & Veazie, and by the cashier of the Bangor Bank, and transmitted to the Suffolk Bank.

Upon the last day of grace, being the 24th of September, a demand was made by a notary at the Suffolk Bank, and notices were by him made and directed to the respective parties and enclosed in a letter to the cashier of the Bangor Bank, which was directed to him, and put into the post-office in Boston on the same day. The cashier of the Bangor Bank testified, that the letter did not arrive in Bangor until the 29th, although by due course of mail, it should have arrived sooner. On that day the letter and notices were received, and the notice directed to the defendant was left by the messenger of the bank at the defendant’s office and place of business, with a person then in the office, supposed by the messenger to be a partner ; but in this supposition, the messenger seems to have been in an error; and it does not appear, who the person was. It appears, that Lord & Veazie took the bill out of the Bangor Bank ; the name of the cashier was erased, and on the 30th day of January, 1837, this suit was commenced by the plaintiff. Complaint is made, that the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, instructed the jury, that the bill produced, being in the possession of the plaintiff, in the form in which it appears, was prima fade evidence of ownership in him.” The law is correctly stated by the Judge, and is consistent with the cases cited for the defendant. Nor is there any reason to complain, that the instructions withdrew the evidence of property from the consideration of the jury. It is a necessary inference from them, that the jury were at liberty to find the property out of the plaintiff, if the evidence would authorize them to do so.

The Judge also instructed the jury, “ that the evidence produced, if believed by them, would be sufficient to prove demand on the maker and notice to the indorser, such as would charge him in this action.”

It is objected that the notice was left with a stranger, and therefore not good. If the notice had been left in the office instead of being handed to the person found in it, no question could have arisen. So if notice had been sent to the dwellinghouse, or place of business, although closed, so that no notice could be deposited *273there, it would have been good, being sent at the proper time to expect admittance. The office being open, the person found in it must be presumed to be lawfully there until the contrary is proved, and the defendant cannot object, that a notice left with a person, lawfully in charge of the office, is not as effectual, as it would have been, if left in the office, no person being present; or if not left at all, the office being closed.

It is also insisted, that the notice was not legal on account of the delay beyond the usual course of the mail.

When notices are regularly deposited in the post-office, the risk of delay, or of an entire failure rests upon the party to be notified.

The exceptions are overruled.