18 Ala. 256 | Ala. | 1850
This was an action by the defendant against the plaintiff in error, as drawer of a bill of exchange. The only evidence introduced to prove notice of the non-payment of the bill was the certificate of the notary, contained in his notarial protest, which is in the following language: “Notice of protest left at the boarding house of P. R. Rives, and at the office of .L. Parmley, each the same day.” It is contended: first, that this certificate is inadmissible as evidence; secondly, if it be admissible under our statute, it does not show such diligence as entitles the plaintiff to recover,
• At common law, it is very clear that the protest of a notary is not evidence of notice of the dishonor of a hill, although it might contain an averment that notice was given. It is by our statute alone that such evidence is admissible, the language of which is as follows — “ that the protest of a notary public, which shall set forth a demand, refusal, non-acceptance,, or non-payment of any inland bill of exchange, or other protestable security, for money or other thing, and that legal notice, expressing in said notice the time when given, of such fact or facts, was personally or through the post office given to any of the parties entitled by law to notice, shall be evidence of the facts it purports to contain-” The construction we feel bound to give this statute is this, that the notice in all cases is tobe deemed personal, unless it be given through the post office, and although it be not handed to the party himself by the notary, but is left with some one at his place of business, or at his residence, with whom it would be proper to leave notice, (the party himself not being present to receive it,) still it would be personal notice within the meaning of the act. This is the construction that has been, practically at least, put upon the statute; for ever since the passage of the act it has been the custom of notaries in this State, to certify in their protests that notice had been given to the parties entitled by law to notice, and these protests have been invariably received by our courts as evidence, although the facts certified showed that the notice was not handed to the party himself, sought to be charged; and although objections have been made to the sufficiency of such proof, it has never been objected, so far as we
Admitting that the protest is admissible evidence, does it show such diligence as the law requires to charge a drawer or
Testing the language of this certificate by these rules, I am compelled to say that it does not afford evidence of such diligence as the law requires to charge a drawer or endorser. The circumstances under which the notice was left are not shown. It does not appear whether the drawer was at home when the notary called, nor whether any inquiry was made for him, nor whether the notice was handed to any person to be delivered to him, nor whether any person was at the house or not. This evidence is too uncertain to charge the defendant, for consistently with the language of this protest, the notice might have been left at the boarding house of the defendant in a manner