12 Mass. 89 | Mass. | 1815
The demand made upon the promissor, on the day when the note was supposed to be due, without reckoning the days of grace, and the notice to the indorser predicated upon that demand, were wholly nugatory ; it having been settled in the case of Jones vs. Fales,
*It is also settled, as part of the law-merchant, that, [*91] when a note or bill is payable with grace, and the third day of grace falls on Sunday, or any other great holyday, when money is not usually paid, it becomes due on the second day of grace, namely, on Saturday.
Parties are always supposed to make their contracts with reference to their legal effects, and are not excused from any duty imposed by law, merely because they may be ignorant of the law. The plaintiff, in this case, holding a negotiable note, was bound, if he would charge the indorser, to demand payment of the maker on the day it became due,
In consequence of the delay in making the demand, there was also
It was urged, in the argument for the plaintiff, that, when the note was made and indorsed, the promissor was notoriously in-[ * 92] solvent ; so that the indorser ought to be considered *as engaging, at all events, to pay, and that notice to him of yon-payment would have answered no valuable purpose.
But we are to decide upon the contract as the parties made it, and n.ot to suppose it to be a different thing from what its terms import. Had they intended an absolute and unconditional engagement on the part of the indorser, a joint and several note, or a guaranty, would have been adopted, instead of a security by indorsement.
Whatever doubts may have existed heretofore of the liability of an indorser upon the note of a person notoriously insolvent, it is now settled by the case of Sandford vs. Dillaway,
It was suggested, in this case, as in 'many others, that it is hard to confine parties to a day, in transactions of this nature ; especially when no change of circumstances appears to have resulted from the delay. But the hardship, if any, arises from a fluctuation of opinions, and an uncertainty as to rules ; and seldom from an inflexible adherence to them ; because, when it is once known that exactness in the performance of duty is to be required, parties will adapt themselves to such a state of things, and be always diligent and punctual to avail themselves of their contracts. To relax one day is, in point of principle, as much a departure from law as if a month or a year were suffered to elapse. The law itself provides for casualties, *nd the distance of parties to be affected with notice ; and any other indulgence would introduce a state of confusion with respec* [*93] to mercantile * contracts, productive of much greater hard
The motion to set aside the nonsuit is overruled.
4 Mass. Rep. 245.
Chitty, 141. — L. Raym. 743. — Bayley, 34
Vide City Bank vs. Cutter, 3 Pick. 414. — Barker vs. Parker, 6 Pick. 80.
Henry vs. Jones, 8 Mass. Rep. 453.
7 Mass. Rep. 483.
10 Mass. Rep. 52.
[Bayley on Bills, 196, 200, note a.— Ed.]
Vide note to Sanford vs. Dillaway, above cited, 10 Mass. Rep. 52, 3d ed.
Bayley on Bills, 5th ed. 251, 252, 302 - 304, 306, 308 - 310.— Thompson on Bills, 470 - 472.