Assuming that all three of these defendants were members both of the New-York firm which drew in favor of the plaintiff, and the Charleston firm which accepted, the action is completely sustained against the defendants as acceptors. No presentment and notice were necessary. It is true, there is no count against them specifically as such ; and this was made an objection on the trial; but the claim in the latter form is admissible under the common counts—a proposition so plain, that an objection for variance at the trial, and which has found its way into the bill of exceptions, is not now persisted in.
If the members of the New-York firm were not also members of the firm at Charleston, the defendants must be charged, if at all, as drawers ; and this view raises the question of presentment and notice. In the latter view, we think the case "presents no difficulty. This being a draft, the drawers and drawees of which resided in different states of the union, is a foreign bill of exchange. Bucknor v. Finley, 2 Pet. R. 586, 590. Lonsdale v. Brown, 4 Wash. C. C. R. 148, per Washington, J. ; 2 Pet. R. 688, app. S. C.; Townsley v. Sumrall, 2 Pet. R. 170. Cape Fear Bank v. Stinemetz, 1 Hill, 44. Brown v. Ferguson, 4 Leigh, 37. And per Nelson, J. in Wells v. Whitehead, 15 Wendell, 530. The protest of the foreign notary, therefore, proved itself, and its contents are to be received as true. Chitty on Bills, ed. of 1836, p. *85642, a. and cases there cited. Townsley v. Sumrall, 2 Pet. R. 170. Cape Fear Bank v. Stinemetz, 1 Hill, 44. Per Story, J. in Nicholls v. Webb, 8 Wheat. 331. Clearly, this is so as to the presentment and refusal. Id. It is said, however, that notice is not the official business of the notary, and therefore, though that be stated in the body of. the protest, the statement cannot be taken as evidence per se. This may be so, though certainly it is his usual course to give the notice, and is in practice esteemed his duty ; so much so that I question whether he would not be accountable for the omission, on simple proof of the note coming to his hands as notary. The protest generally states, I presume, that notice was given. Such was the form in Cape Fear Bank v. Stinemetz, and I see no other evidence in that case of notice. It seems to have been assumed by the counsel that if the protest were available for the presentment and refusal, it was equally so for the notice j and Johnson, J. said expressly, c< the protest is evidence of demand and notice to the drawer or endorser,” 1 Hill, 45. Such too is the form in Nicholls v. Webb.
But suppose this to be otherwisé, the notary was dead j and the protests here each contained a memorandum of notice as well as presentment. It appears both in the notary’s record book and in the original. The book was, I think, sufficiently proved, and the memorandum of notice was sufficiently specific j as much so as that in Nicholls v. Webb, 8 Wheat. 326. It is said the record' was not an original. This is of course so. A memorandum is not the original notice. But it is original as a memorandum, and receivable, whether made by the notary himself or his clerk. In McNeill v. Elam, Peck, 268, the notary’s daughter was his clerk, and made the entries on his representation, and proved her father’s habits of business. The entries were received to show notice. The clerk who made the entries testified to them, and so does the clerk here. Wilber v. Selden, 6 Cowen, 164.
But the original protest was well enough proved. That, in the view we are now taking, contained another memorandum of notice. Both were a kind of attestation made doubtless about *86the same time, to keep the transaction alive. The original protest comes in the notary’s own handwriting, provided Alley’s testimony was competent evidence. He had long been a clerk in the bank, and received and acted as agent of the bank on a great many such protests. This is, at least, equivalent to an ordinary correspondence by letters acted upon, Johnson v. Daverne, 19 Johns. R. 134, which it is not denied qualifies the receiver of the letters to give an opinion in court as to the handwriting of his correspondent. Vide State v. Allen, 1 Hawks, 6; Greaves v. Hunter, 2 Carr. & Payne, 477. Vide also 2 R. S. 212; also 8 Price, 653. Beside all this we have the promises of two of the alleged members of the firm, made after presentment, to pay the plaintiff’s claim. This may be taken as aiding the presumption, at least, that due notice had been given. The general weight of authority is, as remarked by Chancellor Kent, that a promise to pay is alone sufficient evidence of notice, 3 Kent’s Comm. 113, and the cases there cited; though in this state the balance is the other way. See the cases summed up by Savage, Ch. J. in Jones v. Savage, 6 Wendell, 660, 661. In the case at bar, however, if the original protest as such were entirely out of the way : and .taking this to have been an inland bill, we have the strongest possible circumstantial proof of every thing necessary to charge the drawers. Vide Doe, ex dem. Patteshall, v. Turford, 3 Barn. & Adolph. 890. Thus far we have gone on the assumption that all three of the defendants were actually or constructively, for the purposes of this paper, identified either with one or both firms ; and it is not denied that this fact is essential to the plaintiff’s claim. He must establish it against all three jointly, the same as if they were all on tíre record and had pleaded the general issue. That plea by McDougall alone is equivalent to the same plea by each. Was the case sustained according to this requisition of the law?
Most of the questions of fact were, it is not denied, properly left to the jury. Some of these were, whether McDougall was a member of the New-York firm; and if so, whether the bills *87were issued by Ansley for the benefit of Ansley & Co., or of himself alone, with the knowledge of the plaintiff; and if so, whether McDougall assented to their being issued. It is said that the plaintiff having given evidence that they were issued for the benefit of Ansley & Co., and endeavored to show both firms the same, he must prove that McDougall was a member of that firm, and could not otherwise recover. Not so. His being a member of the firm which drew, was enough to bind him if he assented, even though the plaintiff knew that the money was not going to the benefit of McDougalPs firm, but to a stranger. By express assent, he gave the plaintiff the benefit of his name to the paper and cannot gainsay it. The judge accordingly left it to the jury to say whether McDougall was a member of the firm of Ansley & Co., at Charleston ; and also, whether Wightman was a member of the firm of Ansley, McDougall & Co., in New-York. The first fact was essential to charge the defendant Mc-Dougall as acceptor ; the last as drawer. A joint cause of action was to be made out against all three, whether they were to be regarded as drawers or acceptors. There was abundant evidence to connect Ansley and McDougall as members of the New-York firm, and enough to implicate Ansley and Wightman as members of the Charleston firm. But to connect all these defendants in both or either, there is nothing in the evidence, that I can find, except general reputation; and that, for aught that appears, never coming to the ears of either McDougall or Wightman. Let us first look at Ansley & Co., the acceptors at Charleston. It is true McDougall came from Liverpool under an agreement with that firm to serve them as clerk, or act with them as a partner. He finds on his arrival a partnership sign at New-York, "Ansley, McDougall & Co.” and adopts it and goes on in that name. Mon constat, unless by flying reports, that he ever agreed with Wightman that his (W.’s) name should make one of the firm here. Ansley had no power, that we hear of, to take in a partner with Wightman. That he was himself connected as such certainly gave him no power. His signing the name of Ansley & Co., to the proposition of partnership in *88Europe, could therefore have no effect in itself; nor could his agreement on returning to New-York. He and McDougall afterwards discontinued their sign and went to Charleston ; but that could have been for. no other purpose than to close up the business of the old firm there. A few days after their arrival, Ansley and Wightman alone issued a public notice of dissolution.
But if the jury concluded, as I think they must have done, that McDougall had no part in the concern at Charleston, the defendants were not acceptors; and the chief justice then leaves to them the alternative, whether Wightman was not a member of Ansley, McDougall & Co., the drawers. In this point of view, he tells them correctly, that “ before the plaintiff could recover, they must be satisfied that all the defendants were partners in the firm of Ansley, McDougall Co.” The question of Wightman’s connection with that firm was contested at every stage of the trial. At the close of the plaintiff’s case, on his resting, the defendant moved for a non-suit, because there was not sufficient evidence to charge Wightman as a member of Ansley, McDougall & Co.; and there was no evidence to show that he was in fact a partner there, or ever held himself out as such. At the close of the whole testimony, the judge is requested to charge that general reputation is not alone sufficient. These objections are now repeated. I have examined the bill of exceptions, and am unable to perceive that the objections are ill taken in point of fact.
The question, therefore, is, whether a partnership can be established by general reputation alone. There are certainly several cases in this court where such evidence has been received without objection at the circuit, as auxiliary to other circumstances properly admissible. Such is Whitney v. Sterling, 14 Johns. R. 215. The court assign as a reason for receiving it, that there was no objection to it on the trial; and when they say the evidence was competent it’must be understood that it was so because no objection had been made. Such testimony was again received and acted upon without objection, in Gowan v. Jackson, 20 Johns. R. 176; and the competency of such evidence, even. *89Independent of other proof, was mentioned as undoubted, by the late Chief Justice Savage, in McPherson v. Rathbone, 11 Wendell, 98. But the question was not before Ihe court 3 and the chief justice most probably had in his mind the cases in Johnson. Tilghman, Ch. J. said, incidentally also, in Allen v. Rostain, 11 Serg. & Rawle, 373, that general reputation was corroborative evidence, but was not sufficient standing alone. Very likely he made the remark on the authority of Whitney v. Sterling. Thus, taking those cases and dicta, which go the farthest, if we except the very general remark of Chief Justice Savage, they disallow reputation, except under qualifications, which do not exist in the case at bar. To what principle the distinction between reputation considered alone, and as incidental proof proper in itself, is to be referred, there is some difficulty in saying. Where a partnership has existed in fact, but has been dissolved, and a third person has yet dealt with one of the partners, and sues them all, insisting that he acted on the credit of the. former concern, the question whether a partner who has retired shall yet be holden on a contract of the others may depend on his having been known as a partner, for the notoriety of the fact may have influenced the conduct of the plaintiff ; and in like manner the notoriety of the dissolution at the time when the plaintiff gave credit, may be evidence against the latter. Carter v. Whalley, 1 Barn. & Adolph. 11. This case was followed in Bernard v. Torrence, 5 Gill & John. 383, 405 ; but such cases relate to the probability of notice of an admitted fact, to be inferred from public notoriety. To establish the fact itself of a partnership, several cases of very high authority deny that such evidence is receivable even in corroboration of independent proof. Such is the case of Bryden v. Taylor, 2 Har. & John. 396, decided by the court of appeals of Maryland. In the recent case of Brown v. Crandall, 11 Conn. R. 92, the supreme court of errors in Connecticut, after a very learned argument decided, in so many words, that££ in an action against two or more persons as partners, general reputation, even in connection with other facts, is inadmissible in evidence to prove á *90partnership.” White, J. after adverting to the cases and vindicating the rule that hearsay is never admissible of a fact which is ordinarily susceptible of other proof, shews very graphically but truly, the danger in practice of making a decision which should form a precedent for receiving such evidence. u A person of doubtful credit,” says the judge, “ might cause a report to be circulated that another was in partnership with him, for the very purpose of maintaining his credit. His creditors also might aid in circulating the report, for the purpose of furnishing evidence to enable them to collect their debts.” It may be added, that independent of sinister misrepresentations, there is scarcely a question upon which common reputation is more fallible. A contract of partnership is, in its- nature, incapable of being defined by laymen; and whether an apparent partnership be really so, or a contract of some other character, is often a most embarrassing legal question with the ablest lawyer. General reputation of the more ordinary contracts, the legal nature and effect of which are understood by men of business in general, would be a much more proper subject of proof by general report. This the law always rejects; and yet I am not aware that there is a necessity for a resort to such proof in the one case more than the other. The researches of counsel, and of the court, in Brown v. Crandall, come short of any English case ; and the latest English writers on the law of evidence and partnership, equally fail to furnish any authority for inferring a partnership from what the world may say. So in respect to the fact of dissolution, common report cannot be received. Goddard v. Pratt, 16 Pick. 412, 433. Surely if England with all her commerce, has never let in this mode of establishing a partnership, we want no more evidence that it is at least unnecessary.
The testimony in the case at bar is not open to the observation made in Whitney v. Sterling, that it was competent because no objection was made. Its introduction was not opposed in limine, it is true; but its utter incompetency to implicate Wightman, standing as was alleged, and as we find it did, alone. *91was repeatedly urged upon the court. The objection was disregarded, and repeated exceptions taken. The proper course would have been to have ordered a non-suit on the motion for that being made, or to have done the same at the close of the testimony, should the judge have thought it a better disposition of the case, than directing a verdict for the defendants.
The court, we think, erred in putting the case to the jury on the question of McDougall's connection with Ansley & Co., and especially on that of Wightman’s connection with Ansley, McDougall & Co. The judgment must, therefore, be reversed j ami a venire de novo issue from the court below.