33 Mo. 421 | Mo. | 1863
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a suit by the endorsees of a foreign bill of exchange against the endorsers. The acceptors resided in the city of Baltimore, and the demand was made by the-clerk of the notary public ; and one of the questions presented by the record is, whether such a*-<Jemand can be made by the clerk of a notary. This bill was drawn in Missouri upon parties residing in Maryland, and is therefore placed upon the footing of a foreign bill, for in this respect the several States of .the Union are considered as foreign to each other. Gilmer, the notary public who protested the bill for-nonpayment, states in his deposition that he did not present the bill for payment, but procured one of his clerks to make the demand; that it was customary in Baltimore for notaries to employ clerks, and the clerks so employed frequently made demands, though he knew of no statute in Maryland which authorized it. The record also contains the deposition of the clerk, showing that the demand was made by him at the request of the notary.
The books furnish several cases in which the right of a clerk to make the demand is contended for. In Nelson v. Fotterall, 7 Leigh, 176, the Court of Appeals of Virginia, after a laborious investigation of the subject, held that the presentment of a bill by the clerk of a notary was regular and legal, more particularly if sanctioned by local usage. The same is implied in Poole v. Dicas, 1 Bing., N. C., 649. In Sutton v. Gregory, Peake, Add. cases, 150, Lord Kenyon admitted evidence of an entry made by a clerk in a notary’s book, to prove presentment of a bill of exchange, and there
In Loftly v. Mills (4 T. R. 170), demand was made by a clerk, and a doubt was expressed as to its propriety, notwithstanding it was an inland bill. J. Busier observed : The demand of a foreign bill must be made by a notary public, to whom credit is given, because he is a public officer.”
In Chitty on Bills it is said that the presentation must be made by the notary public himself, as an accredited public officer, and will not be good if presented by his clerk. The same doctrine is maintained in Sainder v. Brown, 3 McLean, 481; Chenowith v. Chamberlain, 6 B. Mon. 60; Carter v. Union Bank, 7 Humph. 548; Carmichael v. The Bank of Pennsylvania, 4 How. (Miss.) 567; The Onondaga Bank v. Bates, 3 Hill, 53; Ellis v. Commercial Bank of Natchez, 7 How. (Miss.) 294, and many other cases unnecessary to cite. As proof of protest is necessary to recover in a foreign bill, it should appear that the demand was made by a duly authorized officer. A notary public is a commissioned and sworn officer, clothed with certain powers, and in many States required to give bond for the faithful discharge of his duties, and as he is supposed to be appointed with reference to his capacity and integrity, he is entitled to a certain degree o£ public confidence; but not so with his clerk, who is 'in no sense a public officer, and cannot be made amenable to the public for any unfaithful act. The law therefore will not concede to the notary the power to delegate his authority to an irresponsible agent.
In Louisiana, there is a special statute authorizing notaries to appoint deputies, much after the manner of the appointment of the deputies of a sheriff under our law, and the notary is specially empowered to make demands and presentments by and through his deputy, and his certificate of protest must state the fact that the demand was made by depu
We are next to consider whether proof of a local usage to the contrary prevailing in Baltimore, defeats the application of this general rule to the case in bar. The record shows that at the time the presentment was made there were but four notaries in the city of Baltimore, a number wholly inadequate to discharge the business which, in so large a commercial metropolis, would necessarily devolve upon them, and that it was a uniform custom there to employ clerks to make demands and presentments.
It is well settled that contracts made in one place, to be executed in another, must be governed by the law of the place of performance. Some of the text writers say that the demand must be made according to the law of the place, others according to the law of usage. The usages of particular places and of different trades and kinds of business, when uniform, reasonable and just, and not contrary to general law, are legally presumed to enter into the agreement of parties, and to determine the effect to be given to those agreements. (Bateman on Commercial Law, 116.) One of the stipulations of the contract on the part of the defendants in this case is to pay if the acceptors refuse upon a legal and proper demand, and the mode of making the demand must be governed by the law, and, in the absence of any positive legislative enactment, by the uniform and well known usage of the place of presentment, and such law or usage enters into and becomes a part of the contract, whether known to the parties or not; hence it is that on a bill of exchange, on its face payable on a fixed day, three days of grace are allowed, it being an established custom among merchants, and therefore making a part of the contract.
But the judgment in this case must be reversed for error in holding that the notary did not use due diligence to obtain payment of the acceptors. The proof tends to show that the
In the case of Belmont Bank v. Patterson, (17 Ohio, 78,) the notary called at,the hotel in Cincinnati where the acceptor was boarding and was informed that he had gone down the river to be absent some days ; whereupon the notary returned to his office and protested the bill, and this was held by the Supreme Court of Ohio sufficient to'fix the liability of the endorser.
Under all the circumstances of this case, we think the notary exercised all the diligence required by law.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for further trial;