21 Ind. 4 | Ind. | 1863
On the 25th day of October, 1857, Dunlevy, Haire & Co., of Indianapolis, Indiana, owned and possessed a bill of exchange, drawn by R. A. Douglass, endorsed by Blake and Vanblaricum, and accepted by P. A. Douglass, 309 Broadivay, New York, for 5,000 dollars. The last day of grace for payment of the bill was November 6th, 1857.
On the 25th day of October, 1857, the American Express Company received the above described bill of Dunlevy, Haire & Co., at Indianapolis, in the capacity of agents, to collect it for a reasonable compensation, and return the proceeds to the holders of the bill at Indianapolis. The company took the bill to New York, and, on the 5th of November, placed it in the hands of a respectable notary for demand and protest. The notai’y demanded payment, and protested the bill on that day, and no other demand was ever made. The demand and protest should have been made on the 6th of November, instead of the 5th, when they were made. The company never collected the bill; the endorsers, then solvent, were discharged by the carelessness of the notai’y, and the drawer and acceptor are insolvent.
Dunlevy, Haire & Co. sued the express company for the amount of the bill, and they recovered below.
The main question in the cause is: Did the express company become liable to the holders for the amount of the bill on account of the failure to demand its payment on the proper day? We say this is the real question; because, if the express company became liable by that failure, we do not see that the de
Taking it for granted, then, for the purposes of this case, that the bill before us is a foreign one, and required a notarial protest, and a notary having, in fact, been employed, is the express company liable for his negligence? Or did the liability of that company cease when it delivered the bill, at the proper time, &c., to a competent notary, supposing the delivery was thus made in this case?
Upon this question the authorities are in conflict. One division of the authorities holds that a notary is a public officer, who all may or must employ, and who is alone answerable for his own negligence to the injured party. But the New York authorities, and those in some other States, are different. Says Mr. Parsons, in his late work on Notes and Bills, vol. 1, p. 480: “ The authorities are not uniform on this question; some hold the bank [or other agent] liable for the proper conduct of the notary employed; and those which hold the bank discharged by due care in selection, [of the notary] seem to apply the same rule to any person selected with due care as a competent agent.”
Ohio follows the line of these decisions. Reeves, Stevens & Co. v. The State Bank of Ohio, 8 Ohio St. Rep. 465.
Indiana has followed the same line of decision, as applicable to banks; Tyson v. The State Bank of Indiana, 6 Blackf.
On this point we adopt the language of Judge Hay, who decided the case in the Common Pleas:
“ It was clearly the duty of the express company to convey the bill to New York, and, at the proper time and place, to present the same and demand payment thereof. It was their duty to retain the custody of the bill and the control of the same. If payment was refused, they should cause the same to be duly protested and notice given. It can not be insisted that because the acceptor might not pay the bill, therefore the express company were not required to present it and demand its payment. The acceptor might, and the presumption in such case is, that he will pay upon demand; and if without any demand the bill be given to a notary and he collects and retains the proceeds, the express company could not evade responsibility for the default of the officer. It would have been a case in which the employment of a sub-agent is not required. The notary is not, by virtue of his office, a collector; and if he were, the defendants are the collecting agents selected by the plaintiffs. If the notary,,*9 having possession of the bill the day before it was due, had negotiated the same, it is clear the defendants would have been liable. The bill was entrusted to their custody, and, unless there be a necessity for the transfer of that custody, it can not be lawfully changed. Bid that necessity exist? Certainly it did not at the time it was made, and it is not clear but that such delivery of the bill to the notary, the day before it became payable, followed as it was by a protest upon the same day, was the immediate cause of the default. But a review of the duties of a notary may furnish a still more satisfactory answer to the inquiry. The peculiar province of this officer is to furnish evidence. His certificate and seal are received as proof of the fact of the presentment of bills of exchange for acceptance or payment. He is not, either at common law or by statute, made the custodian of the paper, but simply the witness to attest and prove the act performed in his presence or under his eye. The bond he gives is but nominal and the law does not require that papers of such value shall be placed in his absolute, uncontrolled charge. He is not like a sheriff, who is the custodian of the writ he executes, and who makes his return upon that writ. The one is; an officer of the law having charge of the thing itself, with power to enter thereon his doings and retain the possession thereof and return the same into court. The other is but a witness to attest what is done, perhaps by another, in his presence, having no power over the paper presented and no legal right to its custody or control. It is convenient, doubtless, to transfer the possession of the paper to the notary, to hunt up the acceptor and make demand, but this convenience is accompanied by its risk, and the risk not being absolutely necessary, must be assumed by the party who voluntarily incurs it on account of its convenience.”
It is said the recovery below was too large, interest having been allowed on the bill from maturity. Less than that sum
Per Curiam. — The judgment below is affirmed, with 1 per
cent. damages and costs.