delivered the opinion of the Court.
Piior to an act of Massachusetts regulating damages on inland bills of exchange, which has been reenacted in this State, Stat. 1821, ch. 88, an allowance of this kind was by law limited to foreign bills, which had been dishonored. But by this act, it is extended to inland bills drawn or indorsed within the State, but payable without, or payable in the State, beyond certain limits prescribed. In order to determine under what circumstances it may be claimed, it may be useful to advert to its origin, and the principles by which it is regulated, in relation to foreign bills. By the law merchant, the holder of a foreign bill is entitled to recover the face of the bill, and the charges of the protest, with interest from the time when the bill ought to have been paid, and also the price of reexchange ; so that he may purchase another 'good bill for the remittance of the money. Reexchange is the expense incurred by the bill being dishonored in a foreign country in which it was payable, and returned to the country in which it was made or indorsed, and there taken up. The amount of it depends on the course of the exchange between the countries, through which the bill has been negotiated. Chitty on bills, 544.
When the bill in question was dishonored, and the legal steps had been taken, by which to charge the defendant as indorser, the right of the plaintiffs to receive, and the liability of the defendant to pay, the damages given by the statute, accrued, and might have been enforced. The plaintiffs were under no obligation afterwards, either to sue the acceptor, or to receive from him the contents of the bill, without the damages to which they were entitled as against the drawer or indorsers. But when they did receive from the acceptor at Boston, the place where the bill was payable, the greater part of the bill, they may be considered, nothing appearing to the contrary, as having, pro tanto, waived and lost their right to the reexchange, or which is the same thing, the damages, which are a substitute therefor. We are, for those reasons, of opinion, that the three per cent. damages can in this case be allowed only upon the balance of the bill remaing unpaid, after deducting what was received in Boston. -
As to the commissions paid by the plaintiffs to their attorney, we are not aware of any legal principle, by which they can be recovered against the defendant. The plaintiffs were not obliged to incur this expense. Their remedy was perfect against the defendant after the dishonor of the bill, without again resorting to the acceptor. If they thought proper to do so, they must themselves pay the agents they employ, for the reimbursement of which they can have no legal claim against the ■ defendant, unless by express stipulation. The opinion of the court is, that the sum paid into court, by the defendant, was sufficient to cover the amount which the plaintiffs could .sustain against him.
