20 Wend. 192 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1838
In several particulars, checks ‘are governed by the same rules that prevail in relation to inland
As the questions are substantially the same in relation to both checks, I shall only notice that for $2,000, dated July 17,1836. If this check was negotiated to Wood & Bogert on the day of its date, and retained by them ten or eleven days until it was passed to the plaintiff, the defendant would be discharged ; but it does not appear when, or to whom the check was first negotiated. It may have been transferred by the payee to Wood & Bogert, on the same day they sold it to the plaintiff, or if negotiated before that time it may haved passed through several hands before it was taken by Wood & Bogert. This is not a case where we can presume laches. The defendant is the payee of the check, and must know when and to whom it was first transferred; and the burden lies on him of making out a default in some holder of the check, before it came to the hands of the plaintiff.
The course of the mail between New-York and Buffalo, was only three days, and as seven or eight days elapsed between the time the plaintiff took the paper, and the day it was presented© to the bank for payment,- the plaintiff would be chargeable with
The official certificate of a notary is, in certain cases, declared presumptive evidence of the facts which it contains. Laws of 1833, p. 395, § 8. It is not denied that the certificate was properly in evidence, but it is said that the facts stated by the notary
New trial denied..