45 S.C. 519 | S.C. | 1896
Lead Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is an action on a promissory note made by Abbeville Manufacturing Company to Wilson & McNeill, the defendants above named, and endorsed by them to the plaintiff. George S. Wilson and John McNeill were partners, trading under said firm name of Wilson & McNeill. George S. Wilson was alone served with the summons and complaint herein.
The cause was heard by his Honor, Judge Buchanan, and a jury, and a general verdict was rendered against the defendants for the amount due upon said note, and judgment has been entered thereon against the said George S. Wilson.
Erotn this judgment he appeals to this Court upon exceptions to his Honor’s charge to the jury, and upon his refusal to charge certain requests submitted by appellant, which will not be set forth in this opinion; but the exceptions, and also the report and charge of his Honor, the Circuit Judge, will appear in the report of this case.
The seventh exception is overruled for the reasons stated as to the first and second exceptions.
As to the sixth exception, it does not appear in the “Case” that any “demurrer and motion to dismiss the complaint” was made by the appellant, and, under the well established rule, it is not incumbent upon this Court to consider matters which appear only in the exceptions. But as it has been earnestly requested by counsel that we intimate an opinion as to whether or not it is necessary to protest a promissory note, in order to bind an endorser, we will not decline to do so, especially as this may be a matter of some public interest.
Mr. Chitty, in his work on Bills, p. 500, says: “The Act only gives an additional remedy, and does not take away the common law one; and, therefore, it is not necessary to protest, it being in all cases of inland bills sufficient to give notice of non-payment; and the holder can claim interest from the drawer, although there is no protest.” And the same author says, at pages 364, 365: “At common law, no inland bill could be protested for non-acceptance, but by Statute 3 and 4 Anne, c. 9, s. 4, a protest was given, in case of refusing to accept in writing any inland bill amounting to the sum five pounds, expressed to be given for value
Upon this subject Chan. Kent, in his Commentaries, 3 vol., p. 93, says: “On inland bills no protest was required by the common law, and it was made necessary in England in certain cases by the Statutes 9 and 10 Wm. III. and 3 and 4 Anne; and yet, notwithstanding the language of the statutes, it had long been the settled rule and practice not to consider the protest of an inland bill as necessary or material.” To the same effect is Dan. on Negotiable Instruments, vol. 2, pp. 1 and 2. The statute of Mississippi is similar to ours, and concerning that statute the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Bailey v. Dozier, 6 How., 29, said: “The statute of Mississippi is taken, substantially, from 9 and 10 Wm. III., c. 17, amended by the 3 and 4 Anne, ch. 9, under which it has always been held by the courts of England, that the action at common law was not thereby taken away, but that an additional remedy was given, by which the holder could recover interest and damages on an inland bill, in cases where he was not entitled to them at common law; and if he chose to waive the benefit of the statute, he might still recover the amount due on the bill, by giving the customary proof of default and notice (2 Ed. Ryam., 992; s. c., 1 Salk., 131, 6 Mod., 80; 2 Bar. and Aid., 696; Chitty on Bills, 466).” In Fleming v. McClure, 1 Brev., 433, the Court said: “The custom among merchants with us, in regard to bills of exchange, is the same which exists in England, as to protests and notices of non-acceptance and non-payment, and must
In the case of Payne, endorsee of a promissory note, v. Joseph Winn, endorser, 2 Bay, 374, it was held that “the want of a formal protest by a notary, in this case, was no bar to the plaintiff’s recovery against the endorser. A protest does not raise any new debt or create any further responsibility on the parties to a bill or note, but only serves to give formal notice that a bill or note is not accepted or paid. This protest, by common law, is absolutely necessary on every foreign bill of exchange, but it is not necessary on any inland bill of exchange, either by the common law or by any statute of force in this country, except to entitle a party to interest and damages.” In Thompson v. Bank, Riley’s Raw Cases, 81, the Court said: “The question here arises on a promissory note; protest for non-payment is not necessary; it is altogether superfluous. A demand of payment was necessary, and to enable it to be proved it is necessary to employ some one to make it, but a notary was not requisite; any other individual would have sufficed to make the demand, or to make the inquiries necessary to giving notice.”
We, therefore, hold that it is not necessary to protest a promissory note in order to make the endorsers liable, unless the note is made by a person residing in one State and payable to a person residing in another State. In that case, it is considered in the light of a foreign bill of exchange, requiring protest. (Cape Fear Bank v. Stinemets, 1 Hill, 44.)
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
I prefer to concur in the result. I do not think the question of the necessity of a protest of the note here considered necessarily arises in this appeal, and upon that question I do not express any opinion.