1. The case of Crawford v. The State Bank at this term, decided that where one draws a bill in Ala-, bama, addressed to a drawee in the District of Columbia, requesting him to pay it there, if the drawer is sued either upon the nonacceptance or non-payment of the drawee, he will be liable to pay interest according to the laws of this State; for as to him, this is the lex loci contractus. That case is directly in point, and shows that the defendant was chargeable with the rate of interest prescribed in this State; to ascertain the aggregate amount of which, the clerk of the county court was competent. [See Clay’s Dig. 325, § 70.]
2. To sustain the second objection made by the plaintiff in error to the judgment of the county court, the case of Logwood and others v. The Huntsville Bank, [Minor’s Rep. 23,] has been cited. There, the judgment entry recited, that the defendants had “been duly noticed of this motion,” &c., while the charter of the Bank required that ten days notice should be given: Further, it did not state that the certificate of the President of the Bank was' produced in court as required by law. The court held that, “in proceedings, according to the course of the common law, many defects in the record, will after judgment, be cured by the doctrine of intendment. But wherever a summary remedy is given by statute, those who wish to avail themselves of it, must be confined strictly to its provisions, and shall take nothing by intendment. The supervising court cannot infer that notice as required bylaw, has been given, unless it so appears in the record. Not to require this, would be to surrender to the court below, the power of judging without appeal, of all the proceedings had before it.” In Bates v. The Planters’ and Merchants’ Bank, [8 Porter’s Rep. 99,] this court recognizes the case cited as authoritative, for the reason that the ten days notice, and the production of the certificate as required by the charter, are indispensable to the exercise of the summary jurisdiction which it confers. But it never has been considered necessary in such cases, that in respect to other recitals or statements, the judgment entry *577should be drawn with greater certainty and particularity than a declaration founded on the same cause of action. It cannot be pretended that the objection we are considering, in any manner affects the summary jurisdiction of the county court, and we will therefore inquire, if an allegation in a declaration, that the bill was presented at maturity, without stating' the precise day, would be good.
In Bynner v. Russell, [1 Bing. Rep. 28,] the declaration, after-alleging a delivery of the bill to the plaintiff, proceeded thus, “af-terwards, and when the said bill of exchange became due and payable, according to the tenor and effect, to wit, on the 31st day of March, in the year 1822, to wit, at London, &c. the said bill of exchange was in due maimer, and according to the usage and custom of merchants, presented and shown” for payment. The defendant demurred specially, because the’31st of March, mentioned in the declaration,-was‘a Sunday, and. the bill should have been-presented ón the preceding day. But the court held, that ■the day-was immaterial, being specified under a scilicet, and in an averment that the bill was presented when it became due and payable. [See, also, Chitty on Bills, 590, 9 Am. ed. and note h; 1 Saund. on P: & Ev. 264.]
In Brown & Son v. Hall, [2 A. K. Marsh. Rep. 599,] the declaration alleged, that the bill was duly presented to the drawees for payment, “to wit, on the 15th of December, 1817, at, &c. A judgment by default was rendered, and the cause removed to the court of appeals, where it was said, that after such a judgment, the material and traversable allegations of the declarations must be taken to be true, but the days alleged, when the bill was presented, and the notice of protest given, are not of the latter character. Further., had the defendants pleaded, under the averment, that the bill was duly presented, it would have been competent for the plaintiffs to show that notice of the protest was given in due time, although this might be on a day different from that alleged. So, where the declaration alleged, that “when the bill became due and paya ble, according to the tenor and effect thereof, to wit, on the 27th December,” &c. “it was presented for payment, &c.” The court held, that as it was averred that the bill was presented when it became due and payable, according to its tenor and effect, and the date of the presentment was stated under a scilicet, it was allowable to show a presentation on the 26th *578-of March, which Was the third day of grace. [Jackson’s Adm’x v. Henderson, &c. 3 Leigh’s R. 196.] This latter case cites with approbation, B.ynner v. Russell, ut supra. In fact, all the citations made on this 'point, consider it quite sufficient to allege á ■due presentment in general terms, without particularizing a day. The statement in the present case, that the bill was presented at ■maturity, is’quite as precise, and in fact equivalent to the terms ■duly presented, oráccording to its tenor and effect. [See, also, Crawford v. Camfield at this term; Taylor v. Branch, 1 Stewart & P. Rep. 249.] This being the case, it follows that the .generality of the recital in the .judgment does not affect its regularity.
3. That the notarial fees attending the protest of a bill of ex‘change, are a just charge upon the drawer, is indisputable. [Chitty on Bills, 666, a. and note (1) 9th Am. ted.] The objection in the present case is not, that the defendant below was not chargeable with this expense, but that it was assumed to be a specific •sum without proof. To have authorized the judgment in this respect,there should have been evidence to show what fees were ■allowable for such service, by the laW of Louisiana; this being •shown, the presumption would arise upon the production of the protest, that the holder of the bill had paid the expence. But the inclusion t>f this fee in the judgment, is not an error which •authorises its reversal-. The act of 1824, declares that “no cause shall be reversed by the supreme court or any circuit court, for any miscalculation of interest, or other clerical misprision in entering judgment, so as to give costs to the plaintiff in error; but in all such cases, the supreme court may order the judgment to be amended at the costs of the plaintiff in error.” [Clay’s Dig. 322, § 54.] This objection is nothing more than a clerical misprision in entering a judgment which the court had ordered to be rendered upon the bill — it was amendable on motion, by the county court; and must consequently be here corrected at the costs of the plaintiff in error. In other respects, the judgment is unobjectionable.