94 N.J.L. 355 | N.J. | 1920
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The appellant, Allen, was endorser on a promissory note which appears to have been held by the appellee hank in the usual course of business. Before the maturity of the note, the maker, a Dr. DeBaun, died, and the note was protested' for non-payment. Suit was brought against Allen as endorser, and judgment entered against him for the amount of the note less a credit allowed by the bank, which had become administrator of the estate of Dr. DeBaun as well as holder of the note. The principal point raised on this appeal is that plaintiff failed to show notice of dishonor.
Allen testified that he had received no actual notice by mail or otherwise. Of course, if there was legal evidence to support a finding that notice of presentment and non-payment-had bden mailed to him in the manner provided by the statute, it would be immaterial whether he received it or not, because in such case the notice is constructive. Battery Park Bank v. Ramsay, 100 Atl. Rep. 51; Comp. Stat., p. 3747, §
The testimony of mailing does' not even measure up to the test accepted in Claflin v. Wolf, 88 N. J. L. 308. But if accepted, either by itself or in connection with the notarial-record, it cannot possibly show more than that a notice was mailed with postage prepaid, addressed to “Lewis A. Allen." That is not notice at all, for the want of some address at which it should be delivered.
We may add that the notarial record was incompetent as evidence in this case. The notary being alive, he was entitled when, called as a witness to “refer to it for his own satisfaction." Gomp. Stat., p. 3760, pi. 207. In case of his death it would become evidential after deposit in the county clerk’s office. Ibict. It was admitted only on the theory that the objection to its competency came too late.
The- defendant moved to nonsuit and for a directed verdict for failure of proof on the question of notice. These motions