The Supreme Court of this State, in the case of Wild y. Van Valltenburg, decided at the last January tern, adopted the English rule that in an action against the maker of a promissory note, it is necessary for the plaintiff to aver and prove a demand at the place of payment specified in the note. In order to avoid the application of this rule to the present case, the plaintiffs have averred that by the laws of Massachusetts, where the notes were made and are payable, such a demand is not necessary. The defendant demurs, and the question presented is whether the case is to be governed by the law of the place where the contract was made and was to be performed, or by the law of the place where the action is tried.
The English Courts base their rule upon the ground that it is the legal effect of the contract that a demand shall be made at the place specified, and that such demand is a condition precedent to the liability of the promissor. The Massachusetts Courts, on the contrary, *78hold that although the party to such a contract is not bound to pay anywhere else, yet the contract to pay at such place is unqualified and does not depend upon the condition of a demand being made. Whichever may have the better reason, they both consider the question as depending upon the nature and legal effect of the contract. This being so, it seems clear that the laws of Massachusetts, where the contract was made and was to be performed, and in reference to which the parties must be presumed to have contracted, must govern instead of the laws of the State where the action is tried.
Judge William Kent in a note [3d Kent’s Com. 7th ed., p. 122,] referring to the case of Sands v. Clark, [65 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 751,] where the English rule was applied to a note made and payable in New York, expresses this opinion to the same effect in the following emphatic terms: “ It seems hot to have occurred to the counsel or the court, in this case, to inquire what was the lex loci contractus, which was certainly the controlling law.”
The note on which the action' of Wild v. Van Yalkenburg was brought was made and payable in New York, and the Supreme Court were aware that laws of New York are like those of Massachusetts in this respect, but the point now in question was not presented or considered, nor was the fact of the law of New York presented by the pleading so that it could properly have been made the ground of any decision in that case, and hence the present case is not affected on this point by that decision.
The demurrer to the complaint must therefore be overruled.
The defendant has also filed an answer, in which he avers, as to three of the notes, that he had the money at the time and place, ready to pay if a demand had been made. The plaintiffs demur to this answer, and I think the answer insufficient. If the effect of the contract, construed by the laws of Massachusetts, is merely that the maker will pay at a particular time and place, then his readiness at the time and place is, at most, but a tender, and requires to be pleaded with a proferí in curia. Such a readiness cannot be more effectual tfian an offer of the money directly to the payee would be, in the case of a note payable generally. If the English rule should be held applicable to this case, and a demand should hereafter bo made at the place specified, and an action brought in default of payment, it will *79become necessary to decide what was the effect of the defendant having been ready at the time and place specified. Was the debt absolutely discharged, or was it only a tender ? A supposition that the former result would ensue from a failure to demand, at the time and place, appears to have influenced in some degree, the American Judges in adopting a rule the opposite of that adopted by English Judges (Wallace v. McConnell, 13 Pet., 136—Carley v. Vance, 17 Mass., 389); but the.latter will probably be held, in this State, to be the only effect of a readiness to pay, in default of a demand, at the time and place, and the defendant will be obliged to plead such a fact with a proferí in curia, or, at least, with an averment that the money was left at the place specified, subject to any future demand of the payee. The demurrer to the answer must be sustained.