Spence v. Crockett
Spence v. Crockett
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action brought in the Circuit Court for Rutherford county by Crockett & Ransom against the plaintiffs in error, upon a bill of exchange for $10,000, drawn by John C. Spence at Murfreesboro,. Tenn., upon, and accepted by, W. J. Spence & Co. at Charleston, South Carolina, payable to Wm. Spence,, and by him and the other defendants endorsed to Crockett & Ransom. At the maturity of the bill it was placed in the hands of a notary public at Charleston, who protested it for non-payment, certifying in the protest that he presented it for payment at the-office of the acceptors, and, finding no one therein, left addressed to them a notice demanding payment, and that he had notified the drawer and endorsers of the protest by letters addressed to them at their respective places of abode, which were deposited in the-postoffice at Charleston.
Under the instructions of the Circuit Judge, the jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs. A motion for a new trial was overruled by the court, and the cause is brought here for error.
The chief ground relied upon for reversal is an instruction given by the Circuit Judge, in the following language: “As to the weight of testimony neces•sary to rebut the certificate of a notary public in case •of protest of a foreign bill of exchange, I will lay down the following rule: It will require • the testimony of one credible witness and corroborating circumstances, or two credible witnesses, to rebut the •certificate of a notary public.”
In the case of a foreign bill protested in a country other than that in which the suit is brought, full
Its recitals are but recitals of matters of' fact, — of the acts done by the officer, and of the judgment he has formed as to matters where there may be room for difference of opinion, as in the case before the court, where the notary certifies that he presented the bill for payment at the office of the acceptors, when it is alleged by those whose rights are to be affected by the act that the acceptors had no office or other place of business.
All the authorities agree that statements made by the notary raise but a presumption, or that they are prima facie true, or that they are open to rebutter.
How, being but prima facie evidence, it may be overturned by any legal testimony that will satisfy the tribunal having cognizance of the question in dispute that the recitations are in fact untrue.
In the determination of the matter of fact, the tribunal trying the case will of course have regard to the considerations which have been so ably and eloquently urged upon us here. It will look to the official and disinterested character of the officer, the relations of the other witnesses to' the matter in con-
Ve do not think proper to do more than dissent from the argument, and will not discuss the question of fact.
We are constrained to reverse the judgment as to-all the defendants except William Spence. Although he stands in the relation of endorser, still he is one of the acceptors of the bill, and, in view of the facts disclosed in the record, cannot complain of the ■ error for which the judgment is reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John C. Spences., in Error v. Crockett and Ransom
- Status
- Published