34 Pa. 54 | Pa. | 1859
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The rule as to the notice of dishonour of a bill or note, in case of death, is thus stated by Justice Byles in the last edition of his treatise on Bills of Exchange, — “ If the party he dead, notice should be given to his personal representatives ;” an'd in the note to this passage, he says, — “I am aware of no actual decision to this effect, but it has been so decided in America, and that, if there be no personal representatives, a notice sent to the residence of the deceased party’s family is sufficient.” “ It has also been held in America, that the administrator of an endorser, appointed before the maturity of the note, who has given due notice of his appointment, is entitled to notice — a notice addressed through mail, in due time, to the ‘legal representative’ of a deceased — the endorser — to the last residence of the deceased is sufficient, though it does not appear that the administrator or executor ever received it Byles on Bills, 7 ed. p. 251. The law is laid down in the same way in the tenth edition of Chitty on Bills, p. 335, with the exception that there is a reference to Caunt v. Thompson, 7 Com. Bench 400 (62 E. C. L. R.), where it was held, that presentment of a bill for payment, at the house of the acceptor, who was dead, to the drawer, who was the executor of the decedent, was sufficient notice of dishonour to the drawer; upon the rule, as expressed by Baron Alderson, that “ knowledge of the dishonour, obtained from a communication by the holder of the bill, amounts to notice.”
We have, therefore, to turn to the American authorities, and particularly to those of New York, where the question was first
In our own state, in Shoenberger’s Executors v. Lancaster Savings Institution, 4 Casey 459, where the death of the endorser was known to the holder, and also that he had left a will, and appointed executors, some of whom had qualified, it was held, that notice of dishonour to one executor who had not joined in the pro
In the present case, the note was duly protested for- non-payment, on the 26th March 1857, by a notary public, who immediately mailed a notice of the dishonour to Frederick Linderman, directed to Douglassville, Berks county, being his nearest post-office; and it was admitted, that John F. Linderman, one of the executors of Frederick, lived within half a mile of Douglassville post-office, and received his letters there.
Frederick Linderman died at his residence, near Douglassville, on the 7th March 1857, and his will was proved at Reading, on the 21st of the same month, and letters testamentary granted to the defendants below on the same day, but they did not give the statutory notice of their appointment.
Neither the holder nor the notary had any notice of the death of the endorser, and of course had not heard of the will nor of the appointment of executors. It is, therefore, the. very case in which no other notice could have been given, or could be required to be given. The notice, therefore, was sufficient, without proving that it actually reached either of the executors; although there can be little doubt from the evidence, that it came to one of the executors, either directly, or through the hands of one of the family of the decedent.
Judgment affirmed.