14 Iowa 561 | Iowa | 1863
The only point of controversy is, whether a notice of protest, given under the circumstances stated, is sufficient in law tq hold the indorser. The court below held that it was not. In this opinion we concur. The undertaking of the indorser is, that he will pay the note if' the maker does not, provided the holder (and this conrprehends the agent whom the holder may employ for that purpose), shall give him timely notice of non-payment by the maker. . The question, then, is, did the notary pursue such a mode in giving notice of non-payment to the indorser Smith as the law authorizes and requires.
In examining the various authorities referred to by counsel on both sides, we confess to some confusion in the cases, and in the language of the courts, in stating the rule to be observed as to the manner in which a notice is to be given, when the indorser, or party to be charged, resides in the same place" where the note is payable, and has been dishonored for non-payment
■ Without at this time reviewing and deducing the rule Which we think the current of authorities establishes, as applicable to the case at bar, we shall, for the present, eon-
The statute referred to in § 213, Revision of 1860, entitled “An act regulating the mode of service of notices of protest by notaries public," passed February 25, 1858, reads .as follows:
“ That in ease of a demand of payment of any promissory note, bill of exchange, or other commercial paper, by a notary public, and a refusal by the maker, drawer, or acceptor, as the case may be, the notary making said demand may inform the indorser, or any party to be charged, if ,in the same town or township, by notice deposited in the nearest post office to the party to be charged, on the day of the demand, and no other notice shall be necessary to charge said party.”
Now, whilst one of the purposes of the law was undoubtedly to make a notice of protest through the post office, equivalent to a personal notice, or a notice left at the dwelling or business house of the party to whom it is addressed, if living in the same town or' place where the demand was made, yet it seems to have contemplated still another object, promptness of notification, by requiring not only that the notice may be deposited in the' post office nearest to the party to be charged, but that it also be deposited on the day of the demand. It is a general rule applicable to -all cases, and propounded by many authorities, that notice shall be so given, and at such place that it will be most likely to reach the indorser promptly. When, therefore, the notary, instead of observing the mode of giving the notice prescribed, in this statute (whereby the indorser would, in all probability, have been informed of the protest on the átate day of the demand), carried the same to a neighboring town
Counsel for appellants, however, strongly insists, that inasmuch as tbe holders (meaning Boot, Bro. &- Co., who-were simply indorsers for collection, and were not tbe owners), lived at Lyons, and Smith, tbe indorser to be charged, lived in a different town, to wit, Clinton.; that a notice sent through tbe post at Lyons comes within tbe meaning and spirit of tbe rule, and should have the effect-to charge tbe indorser; and, in further support of this posi-, tion, be draws an argument analogically from the-rule which-obtains in cases of circuitous notices, and tbe question is confidently asked, if Boot, Bro. & Co. bad indorsed tbe note to Green, Dakin & Co., bankers at Clinton, for collection,, and they bad mail notice of protest from Clinton to Boot,
Affirmed.