1 Rob. 572 | La. | 1842
This is an action against the endorser of a promissory note. The defendant pleads the want of notice of demand and refusal to pay on the part of the drawer, and the failure of consideration between the original parties, under the peculiar jurisprudence of Mississippi. The evidence shows, that the notice was presented and protested for non-payment, at the proper time and place. The defendant lives four and a half miles from Natchez, where the note was payable; and on the morning after the protest, a notice was put into the post office at that place, addressed to him. It was proved, that the defendant was in the habit of receiving all his letters at that post office. Whether this was a sufficient notice to bind the endorser, according to the laws of Mississippi, is the principal question in the case.
We are furnished in the record with an opinion of the Supreme Court of the state of Mississippi, in the case of Patrick v. Beazely, which was strongly analogous to this. The endorser resided about one mile and a half from the town where the protest was made, and the notiee was lodged in the post office, as in the case now under consideration'. The notice was held bad. The court cites numerous cases in support of their opinion, and, among others, that of Clay v. Oakley, 5 Martin N. S. 139, in which this court held that notice to an endorser, put into the post office at Alexandria, addressed to him at the same place, he residing there, was not good. This was previous to the statute of this state in relation to notice
Judgment affirmed.
Act of 13th March, 1827.