Trezevant v. Bank of Tennessee
Trezevant v. Bank of Tennessee
Opinion of the Court
The Bank of Tennessee, a corporation existing- in the state of Tennessee, is sued on a number of her notes, of various amounts, forming together the sum of $2078, and for interest thereon, and costs of protest. These notes, which the defendants had made payable at their branch at Somerville, were there presented, and payment having been duly demanded and refused, were each of them protested for non-payment. The answer avers, that the notes sued on purport to be due by the branch of the Bank of Tennessee, established at Somerville, and that, by the charter, the principal bank at Nashville is not liable to pay and take up said notes. It further pleads in compensation and reconvention, a sum of fifteen hundred dollars, with interest from the 12th of November, 1840, which is alleged to be due to the Bank by the plaintiffs, as endorsers on a note of that amount held by the Bank, they having been duly notified of the protest of the same for non-payment by the drawer, Durant Hatch. Thei'e was a judgment below in favor of the plaintiffs for $589 24, with interest of six per cent on $383 24, from the 12th of November, 1840, and like interest on $206, from the 21st of November, 1840, till paid, with three hundred and six dollars costs of protest, and the costs of suit.
We have attentively examined the charter of the Bank of Ten. nessee, which is in evidence, and cannot find in it any sanction of the defence set up in this case. It is true that for certain purposes, and to a certain extent, the branches act independently of the Bank of Tennessee, but nothing that we can see in the powers conferred on them, give them the right of issuing separate notes of their own, or of suing or being sued. They are expressly placed under the control of the principal bank, to whom they are to render monthly statements of their condition, and to whom they are to pay Over any dividends they may semi-annually declare, so that the Bank of Tennessee may provide for the payment of the interest on the state bonds, &c. The charter provides further, section 7 of the supplemental bill, ‘ that the notes to be issued by the Bank of Tennessee for circulation, shall be signed by the President and countersigned by the Cashier of the principal bank, and the same may be made payable at such place or places as shall be deeméd
The counsel for the defendants has next contended, that In as much as by the laws of Tennessee,, interest was. due from demand of payment, and as it is not required that such demand should be made by a notary, the protests were unnecessary, and the costs of them should not b.e allowed;. and that at all events, it was not necessary to make more than one protest, for all the notes. The object of the protest was not solely to secure interest, but also to procure evidence of the demand made at the pla.ce designated in them for payment. A notarial protest showing such a demand and refusal, while it was the most convenient course, afforded to; the plaintiffs evidence of such a permanent and authentic character that we think they were entitled to it. - As to the making of a separate protest for each note, the notary might well and probably would have refused to include all the notes in a single protest, as he had a separate demand to make on each note; and as the fees for protesting a note are proved to be two dollars, he would perhaps have been entitled to a separate charge on each note, even had they been all included in the same instrument of protest. Although these costs are considerable, the plaintiffs, who have paid
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.