No precise form of notice to the endorser of a promissory note
is necessary, and it is not necessary to state in the notice who is
the holder, nor will a mistake as to the date of the note vitiate
the notice if it conveys to the party a sufficient knowledge of the
particular note which has been dishonored.
It is not necessary that the notice should contain a formal
allegation that it was demanded at the place where payable. It is
sufficient that it states the fact of nonpayment of the note, and
that the holder looks to the endorser for indemnity.
By the general law, demand of payment of a bill or note must be
made on the third day of grace, but where a note is made for the
purpose of being negotiated at a bank, whose custom is to demand
payment and give notice on the fourth day, that custom forms a part
of the law of the contract, and it is not necessary that a personal
knowledge of the usage should be brought home to the endorser for
that purpose.
The general rule of law requiring proof of the title of the
holders of a note may be modified by a rule of court dispensing
with proof of the execution of the note unless the party shall
annex to his plea an affidavit that the note was not executed by
him.
MR. JUSTICE STORY delivered the opinion of the Court.
Page 24 U. S. 432
This is a suit originally brought in the Circuit Court of Ohio
by the Bank of the United States against A. G. Wood and George
Ebert, doing business under the firm of Wood & Ebert, Alexander
Adair, Horace Reed, and the plaintiff in error, Peter Mills. The
declaration was for $3,600, money lent and advanced. During the
pendency of the suit, Reed and Adair died. Mills filed a separate
plea of
nonassumpsit, upon which issue was joined, and
upon the trial, the jury returned a verdict for the Bank of the
United States for $4,641, upon which judgment was rendered in their
favor. At the trial a bill of exceptions was taken by Mills for the
consideration of the matter of which the present writ of error has
been brought to this Court.
By the bill of exceptions it appears that the evidence offered
by the plaintiffs in support of the action
"was by consent of counsel permitted to go to the jury, saving
all exceptions to its competence and admissibility, which the
counsel for the defendant reserved the right to insist in claiming
the instructions of the court to the jury on the whole case."
The plaintiffs offered in evidence a promissory note signed Wood
& Ebert, and purporting to be endorsed in blank by Peter Mills,
Alexander Adair, and Horace Reed, as successive endorsers, which
note, with the endorsements thereon, is as follows, to-wit:
"$3,600 Chilicothe, 20 July, 1819"
"Sixty days after date I promise to pay to Peter Mills or order,
at the office
Page 24 U. S. 433
of discount and deposit of the Bank of the United States at
Chilicothe, three thousand six hundred dollars for value
received."
"Wood & Ebert"
"Endorsed, 'Pay to A. Adair or order, Peter Mills. Pay to Horace
Reed or order. A. Adair. Pay to the P. Directors and Company of the
Bank of the U. States or order. Horace Reed.'"
On the upper right hand corner of the note is also endorsed,
"3185. Wood & Ebert, $3,600, Sep. 18-21." It was proven that
this note had been sent to the office at Chilicothe to renew a note
which had been five or six times previously renewed by the same
parties. It was proven by the deposition of Levin Belt, Esq., Mayor
of the Town of Chilicothe, that on 22 September, 1819, immediately
after the commencement of the hours of business, he duly presented
the said note at the said office of discount and deposit and there
demanded payment of the said note, but there was no person there
ready or willing to pay the same, and the said note was not paid,
in consequence of which the said deponent immediately protested the
said note for the nonpayment and dishonor thereof, and immediately
thereafter prepared a notice for each of the endorsers
respectively, and immediately on the same day deposited one of said
notices in the post office, directed to Peter Mills, at Zanesville
(his place of residence), of which notice the following is a
copy:
"Chilicothe, 22 September, 1819"
"Sir, you will hereby take
Page 24 U. S. 434
notice that a note drawn by Wood & Ebert, dated 20
September, 1819, for $3,600, payable to you or order in sixty days
at the office of discount and deposit of the Bank of the United
States at Chilicothe, and on which you are endorser, has been
protested for nonpayment, and the holders thereof look to you."
"Yours respectfully,"
"Levin Belt,
Mayor of Chilicothe"
"(Peter Mills, Esq.)"
It was further proven by the plaintiffs that it had been the
custom of the banks in Chilicothe for a long time previously to the
establishment of a branch in that place to make demand of
promissory notes and bills of exchange on the day after the last
day of grace (that is, on the 64th day), that the Branch Bank, on
its establishment at Chilicothe, adopted that custom, and that such
had been the uniform usage in the several banks in that place ever
since. No evidence was given of the handwriting of either of the
endorsers. The court charged the jury first that the notice, being
sufficient to put the defendant upon inquiry, was good in point of
form to charge him, although it did not name the person who was
holder of the said note nor state that a demand had been made at
the bank when the note was due. 2. That if the jury find that there
was no other note payable in the office at Chilicothe drawn by Wood
& Ebert and endorsed by defendant except the note in
controversy, the mistake in the date of the note made by the notary
in the notice given to that defendant does not impair the liability
of the said defendant, and the plaintiffs
Page 24 U. S. 435
have a right to recover. 3. That should the jury find that the
usage of banks and of the office of discount and deposit in
Chilicothe was to make demand of payment and to protest and give
notice on the 64th day, such demand and notice are sufficient.
The counsel on the part of the defendant prayed the court to
instruct the jury
"that before the common principles of the law relating to the
demand and notice necessary to charge the endorser can be varied by
a usage and custom of the plaintiffs, the jury must be satisfied
that the defendant had personal knowledge of the usage or custom at
the time he endorsed the note, and also that before the plaintiffs
can recover as the holder and endorser of a promissory note, they
must prove their title to the proceeds by evidence of the
endorsements on the note,"
which instructions were refused by the court.
Upon this posture of the case, no questions arise for
determination here except such as grow out of the charge of the
court or the instructions refused on the prayer of the defendant's
(Mills') counsel. Whether the evidence was in other respects
sufficient to establish the joint promise stated in the declaration
or the joint consideration of money lent are matters not submitted
to us upon the record, and were proper for argument to the
jury.
The first point is whether the notice sent to the defendant at
Chilicothe was sufficient to charge him as endorser. The court was
of opinion that it was sufficient if there was no other
Page 24 U. S. 436
note payable in the office at Chilicothe, drawn by Wood &
Ebert, and endorsed by the defendant.
It is contended that this opinion is erroneous because the
notice was fatally defective by reason of its not stating who was
the holder, by reason of its misdescription of the date of the note
and by reason of its not stating that a demand had been made at the
bank when the note was due. The first objection proceeds upon a
doctrine which is not admitted to be correct, and no authority is
produced to support it. No form of notice to an endorser has been
prescribed by law. The whole object of it is to inform the party to
whom it is sent that payment has been refused by the maker, that he
is considered liable, and that payment is expected of him. It is of
no consequence to the endorser who is the holder, as he is equally
bound by the notice, whomsoever he may be, and it is time enough
for him to ascertain the true title of the holder when he is called
upon for payment.
The objection of misdescription may be disposed of in a few
words. It cannot be for a moment maintained that every variance,
however immaterial, is fatal to the notice. It must be such a
variance as conveys no sufficient knowledge to the party of the
particular note which has been dishonored. If it does not mislead
him, if it conveys to him the real fact without any doubt, the
variance cannot be material either to guard his rights or avoid his
responsibility. In the present case, the misdescription was merely
in the date. The sum, the
Page 24 U. S. 437
parties, the time and place of payment, and the endorsement were
truly and accurately described. The error, too, was apparent on the
face of the notice. The party was informed that on 22 September, a
note endorsed by him, payable in sixty days, was protested for
nonpayment, and yet the note itself was stated to be dated on the
20th of the same month, and, of course only two days before. Under
these circumstances, the court laid down a rule most favorable to
the defendant. It directed the jury to find the notice good if
there was no other note payable in the office at Chilicothe drawn
by Wood & Ebert and endorsed by the defendant. If there was no
other note, how could the mistake of date possibly mislead the
defendant? If he had endorsed but one note for Wood & Ebert,
how could the notice fail to be full and unexceptionable in
fact?
The last objection to the notice is that it does not state that
payment was demanded at the bank when the note became due. It is
certainly not necessary that the notice should contain such a
formal allegation. It is sufficient that it states the fact of
nonpayment of the note and that the holder looks to the endorser
for indemnity. Whether the demand was duly and regularly made is
matter of evidence to be established at the trial. If it be not
legally made, no averment, however accurate, will help the case,
and a statement of nonpayment and notice is by necessary
implication an assertion of right by the holder founded upon his
having complied
Page 24 U. S. 438
with the requisitions of law against the endorser. In point of
fact, in commercial cities, the general if not universal practice
is not to state in the notice the mode or place of demand, but the
mere naked nonpayment.
Upon the point, then, of notice we think there is no error in
the opinion of the circuit court.
Another question is whether the usage and custom of the bank not
to make demand of payment until the fourth day of grace bound the
defendant unless he had personal knowledge of that usage and
custom. There is no doubt that according to the general rules of
law, demand of payment ought to be made on the third day, and that
it is too late if made on the fourth day of grace. But it has been
decided by this Court upon full consideration and argument in the
case of
Renner v. Bank of
Columbia, 9 Wheat. 582, that where a note is made
for the purpose of being negotiated at a bank whose custom, known
to the parties, it is to demand payment and give notice on the
fourth day of grace, that custom forms a part of the law of such
contract, at least so far as to bind their rights. In the present
case, the Court is called upon to take one step further, and upon
the principles and reasoning of the former case it has come to the
conclusion that when a note is made payable or negotiable at a bank
whose invariable usage it is to demand payment and give notice on
the fourth day of grace, the parties are bound by that usage,
whether they have a personal
Page 24 U. S. 439
knowledge of it or not. In the case of such a note, the parties
are presumed by implication to agree to be governed by the usage of
the bank at which they have chosen to make the security itself
negotiable.
Another question propounded by the defendant is whether the
plaintiffs were entitled to recover without establishing their
title to the note as holders by proof of the endorsements. There is
no doubt that by the general rule of law, such proof is
indispensable on the part of the plaintiffs unless it is waived by
the other side. But in all such cases, the defendant may waive a
rule introduced for his benefit, and such waiver may be implied
from circumstances, as well as expressly given. It is in this view
that the rule of the circuit court of Ohio of 1819, which has been
referred to at the bar, deserves consideration. That rule
declares
"That hereafter, in any actions brought upon bond, bill, or
note, it shall not be necessary for the plaintiffs on trial to
prove the execution of the bond, bill, or note unless the defendant
shall have filed with his plea an affidavit that such bond, bill,
or note was not executed by him."
We think the present case falls completely within the purview of
this rule. Its object was to prevent unnecessary expense and
useless delays upon objections at trials which were frivolous and
unconnected with the merits. If the rule attempted to interfere
with or control the rules of evidence, it certainly could not be
supported. But it attempts no such thing. It does not deny to the
party
Page 24 U. S. 440
the right to demand proof of the execution or endorsement of the
note at the trial, but it requires him in effect to give notice by
affidavit, accompanying the plea, that he means to contest that
fact under the issue. If the party gives no such notice and files
no such affidavit, it is on his own part a waiver of the right to
contest the fact, or rather an admission that he does not mean to
contest it. We see no hardship in such a rule. It subserves the
purposes of justice and prevents the accumulation of costs. It
follows out in an exemplary manner that injunction of the Judiciary
Act of 2 March, 1793, ch. 22., which requires the courts of the
United States "to regulate the practice thereof as shall be fit and
necessary for the advancement of justice, and especially to that
end to prevent delays in proceedings." As no affidavit accompanied
the plea of the defendant in the present case, he had no right to
insist upon the proof of the endorsements.
Another objection now urged against the judgment is that the
count demands $3,600 only, and the jury gave damages amounting to
$4,641. But there is no error in this proceeding, since the
ad
damnum is for a larger sum. In all cases where interest not
stipulated for by the terms of the contract is given by way of
damages, the sum demanded in the declaration is less than the sum
for which judgment is rendered. The plaintiffs may not recover
more, as principal, than the sum demanded as such in
Page 24 U. S. 441
the declaration, but the jury has a right to add interest, by
way of damages, for the delay.
Some other objections have been suggested at the bar, such as,
that the jury had no right, without evidence, to presume that there
was no other note of Wood & Ebert in order to help the
misdescription, and that the case proved was of several liabilities
of the defendants, which would not support a declaration on a joint
contract. These questions have been fully argued by counsel, but
are not presented by the record in such a shape as to enable the
court to take cognizance of them.
Upon the whole, it is the opinion of the Court that the judgment
ought to be
Affirmed with costs.