{
  "id": 11276641,
  "name": "BENJAMIN RUNYON, CASHIER, vs. EDWARD W. MONTFORT",
  "name_abbreviation": "Runyon v. Montfort",
  "decision_date": "1853-06",
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  "first_page": "371",
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    "name": "Supreme Court of North Carolina"
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  "last_updated": "2023-07-14T19:23:02.564304+00:00",
  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
    "source": "Harvard",
    "batch": "2018"
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  "casebody": {
    "judges": [],
    "parties": [
      "BENJAMIN RUNYON, CASHIER, vs. EDWARD W. MONTFORT."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "Battle, J.\nIt was admitted on the trial, by the counsel of both parties, that the liability of the defendant was a question of law, arising upon the facts established by the proof. Upon these facts two questions are presented. First, Whether the defendant had such a residence in Newbern, as made that town a proper place at which to send him a notice of the dishonor of the bill. Secondly, If it were not, whether the plaintiff, being ignorant of the defendant\u2019s actual place of residence, used due diligence in endeavoring to ascertain it, before he sent the notice to Newbern. Another question has been raised and argued by the plaintiff\u2019s counsel before us: whether, as the bill was drawn and bears date at Newbern, that is not the proper place to which notice should be sent to the indorser? But without deciding whether that question is open to the plaintiff upon the bill of exceptions, we hold that it is settled to the contrary, by the opinion of this Court in the case of Denny v. Palmer, 5 Ire. Rep., 610.\nUpon the first question, the proof fails to show that Newbern was the place of the defendant\u2019s residence or business, at which he usually received his letters and papers. He was born and raised in the county of Onslow ; and at the time when the bill was dishonored, and the notice thereof sent, he was a planter residing within two miles of Jacksonville, the count}'- seat of Ons-low, where was kept a post-office, through which his correspondence passed. It does not appear that the plaintiff knew that he owned a house and lot in Newbern, or that he occupied it any portion of the year, and that for that reason he sent the notice to that town. Indeed tire contrary is to be inferred from the case. But if he did know these facts, he must have known also, that the defendant was not residing there in the month of April, when the notice was sent.\nThe remaining question must also be decided against the plaintiff. It was his duty, if he was ignorant of the defendant\u2019s place of residence, to use due diligence to find it out. The necessity of doing this is so strong, that some delay in giving the notice will be excused on account of it. Bateman v. Joseph, 2 Camp. N. P. Rep., 461. S. C. in Banco, 12 East. Rep., 432. Baldwin v. Richardson, 1 Barn. & Cres., 245, (8 Eng. C. L. Rep., 66.)\nThese cases will show further, that the only inquiry made in the case before us, as to the defendant\u2019s residence, was entirely insufficient. (See Byles on Bills, 222, and Beveridge v. Burgis, 3 Camp. Rep., 262.) There was a tri-weekly line of stages between the town of Washington, where the plaintiff resided, and Newbern, to which the notice was sent. There were also several persons residing in Washington, who had formerly resided in Newbern. The plaintiff or his agent, Mr. Hardenburg, might have written to the drawer or some other person at Newbern, or might have made inquiries of the persons who had formerly resided there, and who therefore might have been presumed to have been able to give him the desired information. He did neither of these things, but contented himself with making inquiries of a gentleman, who is not stated to have known anything about the inhabitants of Newbern, except from what he may be supposed to have derived from marrying a lady of that town. This was altogether insufficient, and the cases cited by the plaintiff\u2019s counsel, from Wendell\u2019s (N. Y.) Reports, and Howard\u2019s Reports of the Supreme Court of the United States, do not conflict with this conclusion. In The Bank of Utica v. Davidson, 5 Wend. Rep., 587, the Court, say, \u201c If the holder of a note is ignorant of the place where the endorser resides, and cannot ascertain it after diligent inquiry, notice sent to the place where the note bears date, will be sufficient. If no place appear on the face of the note, notice must be sent to the place where, according to the best information to be obtained, the endorser will most probably be found.\u201d Hence it was held in that case, that notice sent to a town where the note bore date, where the officers of the bank were told by the person who presented it for discount, the endorser resided, and where in fact he did reside until a few weeks previous to the date of the notes, was sufficient. This is certainly no authority for \u2022 the very slight inquiry made in this case. The case of Lowery v. Scott, 24 Wend. Rep., 358, relates to a notice to the drawer, and has no application to the present. In Harris v. Robinson, 4 Howard\u2019s Rep., 336, it was decided, that where a note was handed to a notary for protest by a bank, and it did not appear whether the bank or the last endorser was the real holder of the note, and the notary made inquiries of the cashier and others not unlikely to know, respecting the residence of the prior endorsers, and then sent notice according to the information thus received, it was sufficient to bind such prior endorsers. And the decision in Lambert v. Ghiselin, 9 How. Rep. 552, was, that it was sufficient proof of due diligence to ascertain the residence of the indorser, before sending him notice of the dishonor of the bill, that the holder inquired from those persons who were most likely to know where the residence of the endorser was. Surely these authorities cannot be called into the aid of the case, where the inquiry was made of one person only, and he having no other means of information than that he had married a lady of the town to which the notice was directed. Why not inquire of the lady herself, or of some one or more of the other persons who had formerly resided in Newbem? Why not write to the drawer or some other person then living in Newbem ? Either would have been a much surer mode of obtaining the desired information, than the one adopted. There is no error in the judgment given below, and it must be affirmed.\nPeR Curiam. ' Judgment affirmed. -",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "Battle, J."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Rodman, for the plaintiff, submitted the following brief:",
      "Donnell and J. W. Bryan, for the defendant."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "BENJAMIN RUNYON, CASHIER, vs. EDWARD W. MONTFORT.\nAn officer of the Bank in Washington, (Beaufort county,) under cover to whom the notice of a protested hill of exchange was sent, proved that on the day after he received it, viz-: -on the 10th of April, 1849, he sent it by mail to Newbern, under cover, to the defendant; that he did not know where the defendant resided, and that after learning from a gentleman of Washington, who had married a lady of Newbern, that he did not know, he desisted from further inquiry: It also appeared that in 1845, the defendant purchased a house and lot in Newbern, and that after that time, he spent a portion of each year in that place, going from his home in Onslow about the latter part of June, and returning in October, but that in 1849, he did not leave Onslow until the 6th of July. With this exception, the defendant had lived from his youth up, on a plantation some two miles distant from Jacksonville, the county seat of Onslow, and that was tiie post-office to which his letters and papers were addressed: It further appeared, that during the years the defendant spent the sickly season in Newbern, several letters post-marked<{ New-York \u201d came to him, and were delivered to persons calling for them in his name, and that there tras a tri-weekly mail between Newbern and Washington :\u2014\nHeld, That this proof failed to show that Newbern was the place of the defendant\u2019s residence or business, at which he usually received his letters and papers: \u2014 held further, That there was not sufficient diligence used by the plaintiff, in giving notice of the dishonor of the hill of exchange, to bind the indorser.\n(The case oi Denny v. Palma', 5 Ire., 610, cited and approved.)\nThis was an action of assumpsit, against the defendant, as endorser of a bill of exchange. Pleas \u2014 general issue-, payment and statute of limitations,\nThe bill in suit had been protested for non-acceptance in the city of New-York, and the question before the Court below was as to tbe sufficiency of the notice given to the defendant. Upon this point the facts were as follow: \u2014 The officer of the Bank in Washington, under cover to whom the notice had been sent, proved that on the day after he received it, that is on the 10th of April, 1849, he sent it by mail to Newbern, under cover, to the defendant; that he did not know where the defendant resided, and that after finding from a gentleman of Washington, who had married a lady of Newbern, that he did not know, he desisted from further inquiry. The plaintiff farther shewed by a copy of the deed, that in 1845, the defendant had purchased a house and lot in Newbern. It also appeared that after that time the defendant spent a portion of each year in that place, coming \u00f1vm his home in Onslow about the latter part of June, and returning in October; but that in 1849, he did not leave Onslow until the 6th of July. With this exception, the defendant had lived from his youth up, on a plantation some two miles distant from Jacksonville, the county seat, and this latter was the post-office to which his letters and papers were addressed. It was also shown that during the years that the defendant spent the sickly season in Newbern, several letters, post-marked \u201cNew-York,\u201d came to him, and were delivered to persons calling for them in his name. It appeared that there was a tri-weekly mail between Newbern and Washington.\nIt being admitted on the trial at Beaufort Superior Court, during the last Spring Term, that upon this state of facts, the liability of the defendant was a question for the Court, his Honor, Judge Manly, was of opinion with the defendant,- whereupon, the plaintiff submitted to a nonsuit, and appealed to the Supreme Court.\nRodman, for the plaintiff, submitted the following brief:\n1. Defendant has two places of residence, and two post-offices, to either of which notice would have been sufficient. 1 Am. Lead. Ca., 257.\n2. Plaintiff used due diligence in making inquiry. Harris v. Robinson, 4 How. U. S. Rep., 336. Lowery v. Scott j 24 Wend. 358. Bank of Utica v. Davidson, 5 Wend., 587. Bateman v. Joseph, 12 East., 433. Beveridge v. Burgess, 3 Camp., 262. 5 Wend., 588. 2 Stew. & Port., 428. Robinson v. Hamilton, 4 Stew. & Port., 91. Ransom v. M/cIc, 2 Hill, N. Y., 587.\n3. If after due inquiry, the residence of the indorser cannot be found out, a holder is justified in sending notice to the place where the bill is dated. 6 Srnedes & Marsh, 255. 5 B. Mun-roe, 7. Denny v. Palmer, 5 Ire., 610.\nDonnell and J. W. Bryan, for the defendant."
  },
  "file_name": "0371-01",
  "first_page_order": 383,
  "last_page_order": 387
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