49 Ala. 406 | Ala. | 1873
— The record shows that one of the bills of exchange, which was dated May 4, 1860, and payable in thirteen months after date, fell due on the 5th day of June, 1861; and the other, which was dated May 29, 1861, and payable in twelve months after date, fell due on the 30th day of May, 1862. They were each made in this State, and payable in New Orleans, in the State of Louisiana. They were, therefore, foreign bills of exchange. Todd v. NeaVs Adm’r, at the last term. And Turner was only liable as indorser on the same. A party so situated is discharged, unless the bills are duly presented to the drawees, at maturity, for payment, and upon a demand for payment, when payment is refused, the bills
The facts disclosed by the record, and which the court could infer from the condition of the country, did not justify the long delay after the suppression of tbe Rebellion, as shown by President Johnson’s communication to Congress on the 18th day of December, 1865, to make the demand of payment of the bills of exchange claimed by Mrs. Patton, their protest and notice of protest to Turner, the indorser. His estate was discharged' by the delay, which was without sufficient excuse. The proclamation of the 2d of April, 1866, by which the President made known that the Rebellion was ended, did not, and could not, alter his previous declaration to Congress, in his official communications to that body, that the Rebellion was suppressed and the mails restored. These communications were official, and they were required by the Constitution. Const. U. S. Art. II. § 3. The President’s proclamation, of the 2d April, 1866, above referred to, cannot be permitted to govern the rights of the parties in such a case as this, and probably many others of like character, and to keep the country under the disabilities and penalties of a state of war long after all belligerent operations have ceased, and the public enemy is utterly routed and driven from the field. The opinion in the case of The Protector was not intended to reach this phase of this question, or to contradict and ignore the well-known history of the country, civil and commercial, and it must be confined to its legitimate limits. 12 Wall. 700.
Doubtless, the records of the Post-office Department will show the exact stage at which the mails were restored in the states engaged in the late insurrection against the Union. And it will be much safer to rely on these records, than to resort to criteria which lead to a wide departure from the true circumstances of the case, and the true history of the nation.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause is remanded.