99 Cal. 143 | Cal. | 1893
This is an action against the defendants as executors of the last will and testament of James M. Donahue, deceased, upon a promissory note indorsed by their testator September 10, 1889.
The note became due March 10, 1890. Donahue died on the third day of March, 1890, leaving a will in which the defendants were named as executors, and which was filed in the superior court on the eleventh day of March, 1890.
It is claimed that the estate is not liable because no proper notice of protest was given, but we think the point is not well taken. The notice was addressed to “Messrs. Peter J. Mc-Glynn and J. F. Burgin, Jr., administrators of the estate of J. M. Donahue, deceased,” and it was deposited in the post-office on the day the note became due. The Civil Code provides that a notice of dishonor may be given, in case of the death of the party otherwise entitled to notice, to one of his personal representatives, or if there are none, then to any member of his family, and if there be no family, it must be mailed to his last place of residence. (Sec. 3145.) Appellants contend that, inasmuch as the defendants had not been appointed by the court at the time the notice was given, they were not personal representatives within the meaning of this statute, and cases are cited holding that notice sent to a person afterwards appointed administrator of an intestate is insufficient. These authorities are not in point. While it is true that the appointment of an executor is only provisional, and requires the approval of the court for the purpose of administration upon the estate of the testator, it is also true that the law allows a man to appoint his executors subject to this approval, and treats them as entitled to the office until they renounce it, and unless for some reason they are incompetent the appointment makes them representatives of the estate “so far as relates to acts in which they are merely passive, such as receiving notice of the dishonor of a note.” (Shoenberger’s Executors v. Lancaster Sav. Inst, 28 Pa. St. 466.) It matters not that the person named in the will may never be actually appointed executor by the court— he may renounce the trust—but as he is the person to whom the testator has confided the administration of his estate, it is regarded as safe to entrust him with the notice. “It is not to
It is claimed, also, that the note was not presented for payment by the holder; that the evidence shows that the note was transferred to the Anglo Californian Bank, which was the holder of the note at the time demand was made.
The certificate of the notary, it is true, states that the note was presented and payment was demanded “at the request of the Anglo Californian Bank, Ld., holder of the original note,” but the plaintiff testified that he had been the owner of the note from the time it was made until the day of the trial, and the fair import of the evidence is that the note was given to the bank simply for collection. The notice may properly be given by an agent, and the agent may give the notice in his own name. (3 Randolph on Commercial Paper, secs. 1236, 1237; 2 Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sec. 991.)
There is nothing in the point that the notice' was invalid because it was addressed to the defendants as. administrator. The notice need not have been addressed to- them in their representative character at all. The actual receipt of the notice is the material thing. (Beals v. Peck, 12 Barb., 245.) If the defendants actually received the notice, and such is- the presumption from the fact of mailing, properly addressed,, and postage prepaid, the object of the law has been attained.
We think the court properly overruled, the demurrer. The allegation as to protest might have been more specific in its statement of facts, but, as against a.general demurrer,, it is-goods.
Judgment and order affirmed.,
Harrison, J., and Garoutte,. J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied,