
    Albert Tunstall vs. Robert J. Walker.
    Where the indorser of a promissory note has not, at the date of the maturity and protest of the note, any known place of residence or business, no notice is necessary to fix his liability upon the note.
    In sucli a case it is not necessary to prove tile exercise of due diligence, to ascertain the residence of the indorser, lie, in point of fact, having no residence:
    W. was indorser of a promissory note, protested on the 4th of February, 1837. At the time of the protest, W. was a member of the senate of the United States, in the city of washington, engaged in the discharge of his official duties, where he remained, at least, as late as the 4th of March, ensuing. At the period of the protest of the note, and during his stay in Washington, W. was in the daily habit of receiving his letters through the post-office, in the city. At his last place of abode in this state, W. had left no agent to receive or forward his letters : Hold, upon this state of facts, that notice sent by the notary, in proper time, by mail, to W. at Washington city, was sufficient to fix his liability, as indorser.
    If the jury, upon questions of fact submitted to them, give a verdict which is contrary to the law and evidence, this court will interpose, and grant a new trial.
    In error, from the Adams circuit court.
    This cause was, at a former term, before this court, and the decision of the court is reported in 3 Howard, 259.
    The defendant in error was the indorser of a note, made by Benjamin Williams, dated Madisonville, May 1, 1836, and made payable nine months after date, for $5350x9aV It was protested for nonpayment on the 4th of February, 1837. After the decision above referred to, and the return of the cause from this court to the court below, for new proceedings, the plaintiff in error, by leave of the circuit court, filed an amended declaration, charging the making the note and its protest, and averring that “ he, the said plaintiff, would have given notice of all which premises ” to said defendant, but the said defendant had not at that time, any place, of residence, or place of business, except that said defendant was, at the time, a member of the senate of the United-States, and was then at Washington city, to which place the said plaintiff forwarded notice of the premises aforesaid, by mail directed to said defendant;” and also averring diligence, in placing the notice in the post-office.
    To this amendment the defendant pleaded, traversing the ■ allegation, and averring, that at the date of the protest he had a place of residence, viz., in the county of Madison, State of Mississippi. Issue was joined to the country, and a trial was had at the November term, 1841, of that court, and a verdict and i judgment rendered for the defendant. A motion for a new trial was made, and overruled by the court, and the evidence all embodied in a bill of exceptions, and this writ of error prosecuted.
    The evidence in the cause, on the part of the plaintiff, as exhibited by the bill of exceptions, was the note sued on and its indorsement; the certificate of the notary public, James K. , Cook, that he protested the note on the 4th of February, 1837, and put a notice of the protest thereof in the post-office of the city of Natchez, in time to go out by the mail of the day succeeding the protest, directed to the defendant, at Washington city, district of Columbia.
    The deposition of John Black was then read, who proved that he was a member of the senate of the United States, on the 1st of February, 1837, and remained at the city of Washington during that winter, and that Robert J. Walker, the ■ defendant, was at the same place during the same period of time, boarding at that place, and remained until after the 4th of March of that year; that he was in the habit of receiving letters ánd papers through the post-office, at that place; that such was the defendant’s habit, ever since he had been a member of the senate, and still was his habit.
    In answer to cross-interrogatories, he proved that he knew the defendant, Walker, had once a residence at Natchez, before he moved to Madison county; that he never understood that he claimed it as such, after his election to the senate, which was in 1835, or 1836; he did not know the exact time that Walker moved to Madison ; it was sometime about a year or more before his election ; he did not know where Walker resided on the 1st of February, 1837, but thought he had sold out, and had left Madison county, at that time, and did not know that he had any fixed residence at that time, anywhere in Mississippi; the last place of his residence known to witness, was in Madison county. He further stated, that it was the invariable custom of members of congress to register their names and places of their residence; that Mr. Walker's name and residence was stated in the senate register,' he had no doubt, but he did not recollect the place stated in the register.
    T. J. Halliday, a witness for’ the defendant, testified, that sometime in the year 1835, the defendant informed him he had removed to Madison county, and caused the following notice to be printed in the Natchez Free Trader, published at Natchez:
    “ NOTICE.
    “Letters or papers intended for R. J. Walker, must be forwarded to his residence, at Pearl Dale, near Madisonville, Madison county, Mississippi. Pearl Dale, September 2, 1835.”
    That this paper had an extensive circulation, and that the advertisement was published for six weeks; that James K. Cook, the notary, was a subscriber, and resided in the city of Natchez. He also proved that he conferred frequently, from Natchez, with said Walker, at said Pearl Dale Place, in 1835, and knew of no change of residence by Walker from that place, in February, 1837.
    J. F. H. Claiborne testified, that Mr. Walker told him, in 1833, that he was delighted with Madison county, and intended to settle in it, and turn his attention to farming; that in 1834, or ,1835, Mr. Walker bought a plantation near Madisonville, in Madison county, and called it Pearl Dale. He removed there in 1835, during the summer, and his family remained there until January, 1836,.when Mr. Walker was elected to the senate of the United States, and left the state to attend to the duties of his station. He left an overseer in charge of his plantation, who remained until the place was sold to George R. Fall; the witness .was present at the sale of the plantation to Fall, and knew that Mr. Walker reserved the residence, and some land ; witness had settled within one mile of Walker’s, and complained to Walker of his having sold, when Walker assured him, that ■he had no thought whatever of changing his residence, but intended to retain part of the land, and improve and remain there permanently. He also proved, that when Mr. Walker arrived at Washington city, he gave his residence to the publisher of the Congressional Register, or directory and almanac, as from Madisonville, Mississippi; that in two books of that title, published in 1836, 1837, and 1838, are the following entries : “ Robert J. Walker, senator from Mississippi, post-office and county, Madisonville;” that Walker requested witness, who was a member of congress, to send him documents, designed for his use, to Madisonville, and he did send to that place, large parcels of documents to him; that the defendant also gave him permission, to take his papers and documents from the post-office, at that place, of which permission he availed himself, and at one time took out nearly a cart-load; that Walker was in the state but a short time, in 1836; thinks Walker remained in Natchez, during the summer of 1837; that in 1836 he had a great deal of .business to transact, in different parts of the State of Louisiana, and visited Pearl Dale but once, . and did not reside there; that said Fall, in 1836, took possession, under his purchase, but did not reside at Pearl Dale until the fall of 1837. In the fall of 1838, Fall sold the said place to Dr. Puckett, and, at the instance of Fall, Mr. Walker relinquished his reservation in Pearl Dale, as it was required by the purchaser, from whom Mr. Walker was to receive the purchase-money, in payment of the debt'due him by Fall; that he did net know whether Mr. Walker visited Pearl Dale in 1837, or not; that he did not live therewith his family, Mrs. Walker having remained in Natchez, during that summer; that Madi-sonville was the nearest post-office to Pearl Dale, being situate about one mile from it; witness knew of no change of Mr. Walker’s residence from Madison county, in 1837.
    Isaac M’Farren testified that Walker purchased Pearl Dale in 1835, and moved them with his family, and remained theré until after his election in 1836, when he left for Washington; that he had not seen or heard of his or his family being there, since. Was very intimate with the defendant, and thinks if he had changed his residence he would have known it. Was present when he sold Pearl Dale to Mr. Fall, and knows he reserved the residence. Was a subscribing witness to the contract of reservation, which contract, dated May 5th, was read to the jury, by which he reserved his residence, and privilege of occupying Pearl Dale during the recess of congress to the fall of 1838. Reserves also thirty acres, to be afterwards selected to include the spring for the purpose of erecting a dwelling house, for the use and residence of himself and family, and to be the proprietor thereof in fee simple. Saw Mr. Walker frequently in L837, after his return from congress, and knew that he with his family remained in Natchez a short time. He left his family and went to Texas, where he remained a short time, returned' to Natchez, where he remained a short time, and left, with his family, for congress, a special session having been called. Mr. Walker did not visit Pearl Dale in 1837; neither did his family. He then had no family but his wife and servants. In 1836 Mr. Walker spent considerable time in Louisiana, attending to matters of business there; he returned to Natchez in the fall, staid a few weeks, and returned to Washington. That Mr. Walker spent the summer of that year with his family, in Philadelphia.
    E. G. Howell’s statement was read in evidence, in which he testified that he saw the publication before mentioned in 1835; stating that Walker had removed to Madison county, Miss. That he rented of Walker, in January, 1836, the house which had been his residence, and purchased of him part of his furniture. Subsequent to which, Mr. Walker had been a guest of his at various times, and he was not aware that Walker had a residence in the state other than the one claimed by him in Madison county. He believed a notice sent to Madisonville, Madison county, in 1837, would have fixed Mr. Walker’s liability; and had the notary called upon him he would, according to his best judgment, so have advised him. That he did not believe that he actually occupied a house, with his family, in Madison county, after February, 1837. That Madison county was his last known place of residence to him. Since that time, when in the state, Walker and his family had generally been guests to witness; they were with him .part of the summer of that year; a portion of the spring he spent in Texas. In 1838, Mr. Walker spent part of the summer at the springs, in Virginia, in pursuance of medical advice, he being then in delicate health. He knows of no fact indicating an abandonment of his residence in Madison county, in February, 1837.
    The statement of G. R. Fall was also read as evidence, which proved the execution of the agreement before referred to, containing the reservation of the residence, and that Walker insisted on such reservation before the sale to him.
    The defendant also read a deed, dated December 20, 1836, and acknowledged December, 1836, recorded in Adams county, from William M. Gwin to said. Walker, describing him as a resident of Madison county.
    Benjamin Williams, the drawer of the note sued on, after having first received a release of his interest, was introduced as a witness for the defendant, and stated that he resided at Madi-sonville, and kept a tavern there prior to 1834, until the spring of 1837, excepting a short period in the fall of 1836. That he was present when the defendant contracted for Pearl Dale in 1834", and saw him pay several thousand dollars of the purchase money ; that Walker then declared his intention of removing his family, and residing on said place, and did remove with his family upon it'in the summer of 1835, and remained there, with the exception of a short time in the fall, until his election to the senate, in January, 1836, when he went, with his family, to Washington, leaving his slaves on said place hi charge of witness, as his agent, to see how the same was going on, and to sell the crops, &c., and furnish the plantation supplies, and make purchases, when necessary. Mrs. Walker was pleased with the place, and gave various directions for improvements thereon, particularly in regard to the comfort and supplies for the slaves, and their humane treatment, and to remove the overseer if they were otherwise treated, and procure a humane one. The residence was handsome and healthy; that the defendant gave him directions for weatherboarding and improving the house, and fixing a room for his mother, which was done. The carpenter’s bill was paid by Walker, amounting to over $1100, beside various bills for nails, glass, timber, &c. amounting to between 2 and $3000. The witness knew that up to February 4, 1837, said Walker directed his letters and papers to be sent to Madisonville, and that they caiine there, from the summer of 1S35, until after February, 1837. The post-office was kept in witness’s house where he saw them, and knows of no change of his residence up to that time, nor until some time after. That when the note was protested, he himself had in his possession a very large property, to wit, two plantations, thirty slaves, a tavern stand and large real estate, for which real estate he had been offered $27,000 and which had nearly all been paid for; that judgments against him up to that date amounted to only $8000; that afterwards large judgments were obtained against him, and his property all sold out by the sheriff of Madison county, who absconded, and deponent does not know what he did with the money. Witness was very sure that if suit had been brought against him in this case to the spring term of the circuit court of Madison county, the money could have been made out of the property of witness ; that the defendant, Walker, was merely the accommodation indorser of the note sued on, and never derived any benefit from it. That he knew that Walker had paid many thousand dollars as accommodation indorser for witness, after witness became entirely insolvent, when the notices were sent to Walker at Washington city, and entirely illegal, but they were in cases that he had sustained no actual prejudice from the want of notice, or from a failure to proceed against witness; that he paid the money in 1836. That he was called upon to deliver possession, as the agent of Walker, of the place purchased by Fall to him in fall of 1836, and that Fall then took possession of the place and slaves, but not of the house. Saw Walker in Texas, in 1837. That he, the witness, was' married in November, 1836, in Adams county, and lived there till April, 1837. That he was three times in Madisonville, in the interval, and did not know that Walker had been there in 1837. That letters and papers frequently came to the post-office, directed to Walker, but there was nobody to take them out. • That Walker, the last time he saw him, complained that he had delivered the house to Fall, instead of the plantation and slaves only.
    Thomas Barnard proved Walker’s residence in Madison, in 1835, and knew of no change of his residence until some time after February, 1837; that "he had been the partner in land speculations of Walker, was intimate and friendly with him, and yet held lands jointly; that Walker had paid many debts where he stood discharged by the illegality of the notice; that witness was well acquainted with the notary, Cook, who knew of his intimacy with Walker. Witness lived in Natchez where Cook was in the daily habit of seeing him. ThatE. G. Howell, who was the brother in law of defendant, resided in Natchez, was well known to Cook, who knew his relation to Walker. That defendant was m bad health from the fall of 1837 to 1839, and submitted to several operations on the palate of his mouth during that time.
    W. Withers, deputy sheriff of Adams county, testified, that in the spring of 1837, several executions against witness, Williams, amounting to about $1200, came to his hands from Madison county ; that he levied and sold all the property he could find of his in Adams county, but did not make the whole of the money; witness was unacquainted with the situation of Williams’s property in Madison county, which was all the evidence in the case. • ,
    
      Montgomery and Boyd, for plaintiff in error.
    The action Avas on the indorsement of a promissory note; the declaration was in the common form.
    On the last trial, a verdict was rendered in favor of the defendant; the plaintiff moved fora new trial which was overruled ; a bill of exceptions was taken whiph must be examined, as no abstract can do it justice.
    It will appear, on examination, that payment of the note was properly demanded, and notice of protest, &c. addressed to R. J. Walker, at Washington city, D. C. was mailed at Natchez, the day after the maturity of the note ; and that at that time, Walker was in Washington, as senator from Mississippi, and was in the habit of receiving his letters, &c. from the post-office at that place daily. On the part of defendant, it was proved that prior to the maturity of the note, he had a residence in Madison county; had sold his plantation there, reserving his residence; but had never since the sale resided at that place. That he gave notice in the newspapers that letters, &c. intended for him, must be sent to Madisonville; that letters and papers- were sent to him in Madisonville in great quantities, but there was no 'person authorized to take them from the post-office. Mr. Claiborne once removed a cart load of the papers, under authority from Walker, for his own use, and not as agent. . -
    It is not denied that from the evidence, notice sent to Mad-isonville, would have bound Mr. Walker, but we apprehend .the notice which was sent to Washington city, was equally efficacious.
    If the real object of forwarding notice, was to inform»the in-dorser of the protest of the note, from the testimony it must appear evident to any person, that notice sent to Washington, was greatly more likely to reach'him, than one sent to Mad-isonville. Mr. Walker was in the habit of getting letters sent to him at Washington, on the day of their arrival there; he had no agent at Madisonville to take his letters, nor had he left any direction to forward the letters which arrived at Madison-ville to Washington.
    But the doctrine of law on this subject, is settled by numerous decisions.
    When an indorser resided two and a half miles from one post-office, and four miles from another, and carried on business at the latter, it was held that notice sent to either post-office was sufficient. 4 Wend. Rep. 328, 398.
    The rule as to the nearest post-office, is not of universal application ; for if the party is in the habit of receiving his letters at a more distant post-office, and the party sending notice, knows it, notice sent to the latter will be sufficient. And when a party is in the habit of receiving his letters at various post-offices, to suit his convenience or business, it may be sufficient to send it to either. 2 Peters’s Rep. 551.
    We deem it unnecessary to multiply authorities on so plain a point. The immense mass of evidence admitted on behalf of the defendant, does not vary the case in any particular. The case is essentially different from the case 'before the court at a 'former term, when it was decided the notice should have been sent to Madisonville. In fact, a careful perusal of the evidence must satisfy any intelligent mind, that Walker-had no place of residence anywhere, at the time notice was given, and the law excused notice altogether. Tbe idea of a residence without household furniture,, to which the owner never transiently resorted, although in the neighborhood, and to which his family never returned, although frequently in the state for four or five years, is altogether too ideal for the recognition of a court of justice. It was but a newspaper and directory residence. He could not claim a support of that parish if he became a pauper. It was altogether too long since he had actually inhabited the place he called his residence without giving evidence of the animo revertendi.
    
    Mr. Walker argued the case in person, and furnished a lengthy brief which was withdrawn from the papers.
    
      Hoxoard and Sanders, on the' same side, for the defendant in error.
   Mr. Chief Justice Shakkey

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question in this case is, whether notice to the indorser of a promissory note, who was, at the time of protest, a member of the United States senate, from Mississippi, is sufficient to fix his liability, under the circumstances of the case, if it were sent to Washington city, where the defendant then was, attending the session of congress.

This case was before this court in 1839, on an appeal taken by the defendant below, and the judgment was reversed. On the second trial, the defendant succeeded, and the plaintiff having moved for a new trial, now brings up the case by appeal. Previous to the second trial, the plaintiff amended his declaration by adding a count, in which he states as an excuse for not giving notice, that the defendant had no residence or place of business. The questions then are, first, does the present record so vary the aspect of the case, as to make the notice which was sent to Washington city sufficient? and second, does the proof entitle the plaintiff to recover under his amended declaration, although no notice was sent?

1. I have carefully compared the present record' with that on which the case was previously decided; that comparison leaves the conclusion that there is a material difference in the aspect of the two cases. Whether that difference is sufficient to justify us in sustaining the notice in the present case, will* be shown in the sequel.

/ The question as to Walker’s residence, is the disputed point, and the one on which the case must turn. Notice must be served personally, or it must be left at, or sent to the party’s residence or place of business. If the residence of the indorser be unknown, then due diligence must be used to ascertain it, and if after such diligence it cannot be found out, the want of notice will be excused. Chitty on bills, (Barbour’s Ed.) 486. 7 Bailey on Bills, 280. The law requires that the indorser should have notice in order that he may protect himself against loss. His undertaking is that he will pay if the maker does not, provided he is duly informed of the non-payment. But whilst the holder is bound to give notice if he can, he is not to lose his remedy if he cannot do so, provided he uses reasonable diligence to discover the residence of the indorser, tie must not remain in a state of contented ignorance. Notice to the indorser, or due diligence to give it, being conditions precedent to the holder’s right of recovery; he must come prepared to prove that he has given or sent notice to the proper place through a proper conveyance. Or if such notice has not been given, then he must prove circumstances which will in law amount to a good excuse for his having failed to do so, and then he will have a right to recover. When the holder does not know the residence of the indorser, why is it that he is required to use proper diligence to find it out ? Because the law presumes that every man has a residence or place of business, and that it may be ascertained by diligent inquiry, and that the indorser may be thus protected by notice, which protection the holder is bound to afford him if he can. It is for the benefit of the indorser, and not an unmeaning, useless requisition. When the holder proves that he endeavored to find out the indorser’s residence, but could not, he is entitled to recover, even without any no-A" tice. But suppose the indorser has no residence or place of business, and the plaintiff proves that fact, is he then also required to prove diligence in trying to find out that which he proves did not exist? and therefore could not be found with ever so great a diligence. The law surely requires no such idle ceremony. (Then I conclude that if a holder proves diligence in trying to ascertain where the residence of the indorser was, and fails, that he is excused for not having given notice •) and if he proves that the party had no residence or place of business, then he will be excused for not having used diligence to find out such residence. The reason for requiring diligence then fails, and in such case notice sent to the place where the party is known to be, is the best and only notice which can be given. This accords with the doctrine laid down by Judged Story, who says, “In cases where the residence of the parties who are to receive notice, is unknown, it is incumbent upon the holder, and all other parties who are required to give notice, to make due inquiries with reasonable diligence as to the true domicil and place of business of the party; and unless they do so, those parties will be discharged, if, upon the exercise of due diligence, their places of domicil and business could have been ascertained.” Story on Bills, 334, sec. 299. But what if their places of domicil could not have been ascertained ? In such cases, the author leaves the conclusion or inference that diligence will be dispensed with. This is the necessary consequence, and indeedit is implied in the text. \We have also\ asserted the same principle in the- former decision of this case, 3 Howard, 264. Indeed this must be the rule of law, for it is impossible to send notice to the domicil of a party who has none, and it would be absurd to require a party to prove that he diligently tried to find that which he proves had no existence. This being the law then, let us see what the facts are to which it is to be applied. The evidence is lengthy, and I shall endeavor to extract the substance without giving it in detail.

The record of the notary was first read, which shows that the note was protested on the 4th of February, 1837, and that notice was put in the post-office in time to go out by the first mail of the day next succeeding the protest, addressed to R. J. Walker, at Washington City, District of Columbia.

The deposition of John Black was then read, which states that on the 1st February, 1837, Robert J. Walker was a member of the Senate of the United States, and was then, and up to and after the 4th of March, boarding in Washington City, his family being also there. That Mr. Walker, during the winter, and up to the 4th of March, was in the habit of receiving his letters through the post-office at Washington, which were delivered to him by the proper officer of the house of which he was a member, as is the custom. Mr. Walker had once resided in Natchez, but a year or more before his election, in 1835 or ’36, he moved to Madison county, the precise time not known. He did not know where Mr. Walker resided in Mississippi at the time mentioned, but thought he had sold out, and left Madison county; and the witness did not know that he had any fixed residence in Mississippi, but that his last place of residence was Madison county.

Haliday was then introduced as a witness who stated that defendant told him in 1835, that he had removed to Madison county, and caused an advertisement to be inserted in a newspaper, by which letters, &c. addressed to R. J. Walker, were directed to be forwarded to him, at Pearl Dale, near Madison-ville, in Madison county, Mississippi, which advertisement was published six weeks in a paper having an extensive circulation, for which Cook, the notary, was a subscriber. The witness had conferred frequently with the defendant at Pearl Dale, from Natchez, in 1835, and knew of no change of residence by said defendant in 1837.

J. F. H. Clairborne was then introduced. He states that Mr. Walker, in 1833, declared his intention of selling in Madison county, and in 1834 or ’35, he bought a plantation near Madison-ville, and called it Pearl Dale, to which he removed in. 1835, and his family remained there until 1836, when defendant was elected to the Senate, and left the state to attend to his duties, leaving an overseer on the place, who remained until G. R. Fall purchased it of defendant; in the sale defendant reserved the residence and some land, and on being upbraided by the witness for selling, Mr. Walker assured him that he had no thought of changing his residence, but that he intended to retain some of the land and improve it, and remain permanent. That when Mr. Walker arrived at Washington City, he gave his residence to a publisher of a congressional register as from Madisonville, and witness testified to two such books published in 1836, 1837 and 1838, in which Madisonville is given as the place of Mr. Walker’s residence. Mr. Walker requested the witness to send him public documents at Madisonville, and he also gave'the witness permission to take his papers and public documents out of the post-office at that place, which he sometimes did, taking at one time nearly a cart-load. Mr. Walker did not stay at Pearl Dale during the summer of 1836, but once visited there, having returned to the state after the recess of Congress of that year. He was in the state but a short time during that summer. George R. Fall took possession of Pearl Dale, under his, purchase, in 1836, but did not reside there until the fall of 1837. The witness does not know that Mr. Walker visited Pearl Dale in 1837, but knows that he did not live there with his family, Mrs. Walker having remained in Natchez during that summer. In 1838, Dr. Pucket purchased Pearl Dale of Mr. Fall, and required that Mr. Walker should relinquish his reservation, which he consented to. Madisonville is the nearest post-office to Pearl Dale. The witness knew of no change of Mr. Walker’s residence from Madison county in February, 1837.

Isaac McFarren stated that defendant purchased Pearl Dale in 1835, and removed there with his family, and remained there until after he was elected, but that he has not heard of either defendant or his family being there since January, 1836. He thought if defendant had changed his residence he would have known it. Defendant claimed Pearl Dale as his residence until 1838, but he did not spend any part of the summer of 1836 there. That in the sale to Fall, the defendant reserved the residence. He knew of no change in defendant’s residence in February, 1837. Neither the defendant nor his family visited Pearl Dale during the summer of 1837, Mr. Walker having been part of that summer in Natchez, and part of it absent from the state.

The written contract of reservation was then read, which seems to have been a supplemental agreement entered into by Walker and Fall after the sale of the plantation. It is dated 5th of May, 1836, and recites that defendant was then engaged in repairing the dwelling, which he had that day contracted to sell, and that the repairs were expected to be completed that autumn at his expense, and that as he was still desirous of retaining and continuing his residence at Pearl Dale, therefore, “ it was agreed that said Walker might occupy said house free of rent during the recess of congress, for a period not exceeding the fall of 1838, say 15th of November, 1838, and that said Walker might at any time within that period, select a quantity of land in one body, not exceeding thirty acres, out of said Pearl Dale place, and near said house and residence.” Of the land so selected, Walker was to be the proprietor in fee simple, allowing Fall a deduction of thirty-five dollars per acre, to bé deducted out of the purchase money, and in case of disagreement as to the location, it was to be made by a third person.

E. G. Howell’s statement was then read. He saw the advertisement before alluded to, and in January, 1836, he rented Mr. Walker’s house, in Natchez, and purchased some of his furniture. Subsequent to that time, Mr. Walker had been his guest at various times, and he was not aware that he had a residence in the state other than the one claimed by him in Madison county. He did not believe that Mr. Walker had resided in Madison county at any time since February, 1837, if by “ residing ” was meant the occupation of a house; that Madison county was his last known place of residence to the witness. Since February, 1837, Mr. Walker and family, when in the state, had generally been guests in bis house, and were so a part of the summer of 1837. That he did not know any facts indicating an abandonment of Mr. Walker’s residence in February, 1837.

The statement of G. R. Fall was read, in which he states that he recollected the reservation before alluded to, and the circumstances attending it, that Walker insisted on reserving a residence.

A deed from Dr. Gwin, to Mr. Walker, of certain land therein described, dated in December, 1S36, in which Mr. Walker is described as a citizen of Madison county, was also read.

Benjamin Williams was also examined, and stated the purchase of Pearl Dale, by Mr. Walker,, and his removal there, and that he remained until 1836, very much as stated by the other witnesses. That in 1836 Mr. Walker left the slaves and place in charge of the witness, as agent, for various purposes connected with the,plantation; that he attended to various improvements, and other matters connected with the place. In 183Q, after Mr. Walker’s election, just before his departure, he gave the witness directions to have the house enlarged, which he 'did. The improvements were finished in October, and Mr. Walker paid the bills. That the witness-knew, that up to the 4th of February, 1837, Mr. Walker directed his letters and papers to be sent to Madisonville; that they continued to come there from 1835, until after February, 1837, and that he knew of no change of residence up to February, 1837; that the witness was the maker of the note, and when the note was protested, in 1837, he had a large property in his possession, worth $27,000, nearly all paid for, and then but few judgments against him, but it was all taken by subsequent judgments. If suit had been brought against him, in the spring of 1837, the money could have been made out of his property, and that Mr. Walker is a mere accommodation indorser. In the summer of 1836, Mr. Fall called on the witness, as Mr. Walker’s agent, to deliver up the place, which he did on seeing the contract of sale, and Fall then took possession of the place and slaves, but not the house ; witness married in Adams county, in November, 1836, and resided there until April, 1837, but was in Madison-ville three times during that period. He had no knowledge that Mr. Walker had been at Pearl Dale, any time during 1837. He frequently saw letters and papers in the post-office there, directed to Mr. Walker, but knew of no one who was authorized to take them out; when Mr. Walker first saw witness, after the delivery to FaII, he complained at him, for having delivered the house, saying, “ that it ought not to have been delivered, but the plantation and slaves only.”

Mr. Barnard states, that he was the partner of the defendant in land purchases, and intimate with his business. Knows of his removal to Madison, in 1835, and knows of no change of residence in February, 1837. Witness lived in Natchez, and Cook, the notary, knew his intimacy with the defendant, and Cook also knew, that Howell, defendant’s relative, also lived in Natchez.

Withers, the deputy-sheriff of Adams county, testified, that in the spring of 1837, several executions against Williams, (the witness) amounting to about $12,000, were sent from Madison county, which were levied on all the property of Williams, in Adams county, but it did not bring enough to satisfy them.

From this evidence, it is plain enough, that Mr. Walker had a residence in Madison county, from 1834, or 5, until some time after his election, in 1836. Did he lose or abandon that residence, during that year, by the sale of his plantation to Colonel Fall 1 The witnesses say, they know of no change of residence before February, 1837. This does not prove that there was no change, but only that they did not know of it; and although they may have been uninformed of the change, other facts may prove it conclusively. The sale of the plantation was undoubtedly an abandonment of his residence, unless it is saved by the reservation. The contract of reservation is before us, and explains the nature and extent of the reserve. There was no right of soil reserved. There was, it is true, a right reserved, to select a spot of thirty acres, which Mr. Walker was to have by paying for itj but this selection never was made, and it being a privilege which might be claimed or not, no right of soil vested under it. Mr: Fall had no claim on Mr. Walker, for the purchase-money, until the spot was selected; for he had the privilege of taking any number of acres under thirty. Then was he entitle.d 'to such use of the dwelling-house, as to entitle it to be called his residence ? The language of the agreement is this: “ It -is agreed that said Walker may occupy said house, free of rent, during the recess of congress, for a period not exceeding the fall of 1838.” Now this, at most, is only an agreement for a temporary occupancy, a,t particular times. No right of property is spoken of, but a bare permission to occupy the house, during the recess of congress. At all other times Fall, as the owner of the land, had a right to use and occupy the house. The notice was sent to the defendant during the sitting of congress, a time when, by the contract, he had no right whatever to the possession of the house. In addition to which, Williams testifies, that in 1836, he, as the agent of Walker, delivered to Mr. Fall the plantation and slaves; when Mr. Walker first saw the witness afterwards, he complained, and said, “ that the house ought not to have been delivered, but the land and slaves only.” The house must, then, have been delivered, or Mr. Walker could not have complained. The inference is irresis'tible, that Mr. Fall had taken possession of the whole. His right of property is clear, and he had actual possession.

In addition to this, it is in proof, that Mr. Walker was never at Madisonville but once, after the sale, and then on a visit; and that his family were never there afterwards, although both he and they were in the state, in 1836 and 37. So that it seems he never claimed his right to occupy the dwelling, in the recess of congress.

Mr. Howell states, that Mr. Walker, when in the state, generally staid at his house, and that he did not, after February, 1837, occupy a house in Madison county, though that was his last known place of residence to the witness. After the sale, none of the witnesses speak of Mr. Walker’s having any member of his family, or any agent, or servant, at the dwelling, or on the plantation, nor does it appear that he had any species of property whatever there. He had moved there, with a view, no doubt, to a permanent location; and to my mind, this circumstance explains much of the testimony, which seems to tend to establish that as his place of residence at the time of the protest; for instance, the entries in the Congressional Registers, spoken of by Mr. Claiborne, and his direction to that gentleman to- send him public documents there. These entries may have been made, and directions given, at a time when that was really Mr. Walker’s residence. Much of the testimony, indeed, seems to have been intended to establish the fact, that Mr. Walker did once reside in Madisonville ; but we must come down to the date of the protest, and ascertain whether he then lived there, or had a residence there. A careful review of all the evidence has left the conclusion on my mind, that at the time of the protest, Mr. Walker had not a residence in Madison county, to which the holder was bound to send notice. A member of congress, or other public officer, does not lose his residence, by absence in the discharge of his duties; nor does a private citizen, by temporary absence ; and the presumption of law is in favor of the continuance of a residence once established. But the sale of a man’s house is evidence of an intentional abandonment of his domicil.

The sale, in this instance, if it had been entirely unqualified, would have been considered by every one as such an abandonment. This is admitted by the effort to establish the reservation, which, when examined, must fall short of the object which is designed to be accomplished by it. It is a mere permission to occupy, during the recess of congress, but at no other time, which right of occupancy never was asserted. And moreover, the note was protested at a time when that right of occupancy did not exist — when the possession of the place was rightfully in another. If the notice had been sent, even by a special messenger, to Pearl Dale, it must have fallen into the hands of Colonel Fall, who was then the rightful and only occupant of the place. Sending notice to Washington city, then, was the best notice which the party could have given.

At this point I will endeavor to draw the contrast between the case presented by this record, and that reported in 3 How, 259. In that decision, after suming up the substance of the proof, the court said, “This testimony, although not positive, is sufficient to raise a fair presumption that Walker was, at the time of the protest, still a citizen of Madison county. It is certain that he had resided there nine months previous, and it is not certain that he had changed his residence. He had only sold part of his plantation, and whether the part sold included his residence or not, the witness did not know.” This presumption that he was still a citizen of Madison county, was the hinge on which the whole case turned. Now we have accumulated proof which destroys that presumption, and leads to the conclusion that he did not hold a residence there at the time of the protest.

But the record shows additional reasons which operate powerfully in sustaining the notice. It is often the case that notice sent to either one of two places will be sufficient. Bank of Columbia v. Lawrence, 1 Peters, 578. It may be so here. The notice might have been g;ood if sent to Madisonville, as the last place of residence of Mr. Walker. “ It is not indispensable that the notice should be sent to the residence of the party, nor even to the town in which 'he_ resides. It is sufficient if it be sent to the office to which he usually resorts for his letters, and where he would probably receive it as soon as at the office nearer to him.” Bank of Geneva v. Howtell, 4 Wend. 328. 16 J. R. 218. Now although Mr. Walker was but temporarily absent, yet it is in proof that whilst at Washington, he was in the habit of receiving his letters through the post-office thgre, and it is also in proof that he was at Washington at the time of the protest, and at least until the 4th of March afterwards. The force of this rule must apply to him to some extent, and here I would also note a difference between this case and the previous one. The former record contained proof that he was at Washington at the time of protest, but it contained no proof that he was in the habit of receiving his letters there. In Reed v. Payne, 16 Johns. Rep. 218, we find the reason of the rale above laid down, as well as the role itself. It is said that by requiring that notice should be sent to the post-ofiice nearest the party, it was intended that the notice should be useful in conveying information, and it was presumed the nearest post-office would best fulfil that object. With this reason in view, the court said, “If a notice be sent to the post-office to which the party usually resorts for his letters, it would admit of no doubt that such notice would be good, although it was in a different town from that in which he resided.” Now on the presumption that the law designed the notice to be useful to Mr. W alker, at which office was he most likely to receive that benefit, at Madisonville or Washington city? If it had been sent to Madisonville, it is positively certain that he would not have received it. Mr. Williams proves that there was no one there to take his letters out of the office, and so does Col. Claiborne. Judge Black proves that he was at that very period daily in the habit of receiving letters at Washington. Does the law require a notice to be sent to a place where it is positively certain it would not be received, and where the party is not, in preference to a place where the party is known to be, and at which there is every presumption that it will be received ? If it does, it cannot With truth be said that notice was designed for a useful purpose. What is the reason that the law requires a notice to be sent to the residence of an absent person ? It is because the law indulges a presumption that in that way he will be most likely to receive it; that he has left some one at home who will forward it, or an agent .. to attend to it But this presumption is rebutted here by proof, that Mr. Walker had no agent, or any one to take his letters out of the office. And here again I have to remark another difference between this and the case previously decided. In that, there was no proof whatever to remove the presumption that there was some one to attend to communications addressed to Mr. Walker, but in this there is such proof. So that under the circumstances of this case, 1 cannot doubt that notice sent to Washington city was good, although it might have'been good if' it had been addressed to Madisonville.

Second. Does the proof entitle., the plaintiff to recover under his amended declaration, although no notice was sent 1 The preceding remarks leave but little to be said on this point. It^ would seem to follow as a consequence, that, if the indorser had no residence, and the holder is prepared to prove that fact, and the notice sent to the place where he is known to be, should be insufficient, then h^ must be entitled to recover without notice, [for I repeat that it cannot be necessary to prove diligence, when it is shown that such diligence would not have led to any useful result. í It is said the question of diligence does not arise}' except where the party knows or ought to know there is occa-^ sion for it. Bank of Utica v. Phillips, 3 Wend. 408. Now in this instance it seems that diligence would have proved unavailing, and why use it ? The proof of facts supersedes the necessity of proof of diligence. In an elementary writer the rule is clearly laid down, that “ if the house be locked up and no person there, in consequence of the temporary absence of the party, it is not necessary to leave a notice at the house, or to ascertain where he has gone to.”' Bailey on Bills, 273, 2d Am. ed. And this rule was fully recognised in Williams v. Bank of the United States, 2 Peters, 96. It is proven that Mr. Walker, even if he had a residence, was temporarily absent, and that there was no one at home, and according to the above rule notice was not necessary. The case would fall within the very letter of the above rule, but that there is no proof as to whether the house was locked or not. But surely if the holder is not bound to leave notice at a house which was locked, he cannot be bound to leave it at one which is unoccupied. This circumstance can make-no difference. So that if Mr. Walker N even had a residence in Madison county, the facts of the case, according to the authorities, furnish an excuse for a failure to give notice there.

It is insisted in argument that the advertisement of Mr. Walker, in 1835, that thereafter, papers and letters intended for him, should be addressed to Madisonville, is conclusive against the sufficiency of this notice. That notice did not fix Mr. Walker’s residence for all time afterwards. It was a designation of his residence until he should change or abandon that residence. Now suppose that in 1836, Mr. Walker had removed to New Orleans, and that fact had been known to the plaintiff when the note was protested, can any one doubt but what he would have been bound to send notice there 1 Surely not. In the absence of such knowledge the advertisement might have justified the sending the notice to Madisonville. The language of the notice shows its object, and limits its duration. “Letters or papers intended for R. J. Walker, must be for-' warded to his residence at Pearl Dale, near Madisonville, Madison county, Mississippi.” Every one knows that letters are usually addressed to a man’s residence. The effect of this notice, and the object of it no doubt, was to let it be known where that residence was. That notice could only be regarded as a direction, so long as the residence continued. We are also admonished that an accommodation indorser is entitled to strict proof; that the case is a hard one on Mr. Walker, and that the facts were all before the jury, who were competent to pass upon them, and having done so, their verdict should not be disturbed. It is true that an indorser, and especially an accommodation indorser, is.entitled to strict proof; I think it has been made. I am aware that it is a hard case on Mr. Walker, but this cannot furnish an excuse for a departure from the law. It is true also that the facts were proper for a jury, and being so their verdict would not lightly be disturbed. But when it is apparent that the verdict is contrary to law and evidence, it is the duty of the court to interpose; otherwise the statute which authorizes either party to move for a new trial, and to spread the evidence on the record, and take an appeal if it be refused, would become a dead letter. On the whole, I think the verdict was manifestly against the evidence and should be set aside, and a new trial granted.

Mr. Justice Turner : I concur in the above opinion.

Mr. Justice Clayton

delivered the following dissenting opinion :

This is the same case which is reported in 3 Howard, 259, between the same parties. The judgment was then reversed, ‘and the cause reminded, because of error in the charge of the court. ! . !

According to the proof then before the court, the notary who made the protest, directed the notice to the defendant at Washington city, who was then a member of the senate of the United States, and in attendance upon congress, at the time of the protest, and for some time afterwards. The notary did not know the residence of Mr. Walker, nor did he make any inquiry to ascertain it. The defendant proved that he was a citizen of the state of Mississippi, and a senator in congress from that state, and that he had changed his residence in September, 1835, from Natchez to Madison county. It was also in proof that Madison county was his last known place of residence, although after he went to congress, in the month of January, 1836, he had not returned to that county, at any time before the protest and notice in question, which was in February, 1837. The jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, upon which judgment was rendered. Upon this state of facts, this court decided “ that the notice sent to Washington city, was not sufficient to charge Walker as indorser; but if he had no known place of residence in Mississippi, or .if, after diligent inquiry, his place-of Residence could not be ascertained, then the notice might be good, but without such showing it was insufficient.” The cause was remanded foj a new trial, when a verdict. was. rendered for the defendant. No charge was asked of. the court, no exceptions filed in the progress of the trial; but after verdict, and a motion for a new trial had been overruled, a bill of exceptions was filed, in which the testimony is set forth.

The testimony contained in the present record, although more full on both sides than on the first trial, does not materially vary the case. Judge Black, the associate of Mr. Walker in the senate, proves that the defendant, in the winter of 1837, during the session of congress, was in the habit of receiving, many letters. Colonel Claiborne, a member of the house of representatives from this state, proves that in the congregational register or directory, in 1836, 37 and 38, Mr. Walker designated his residence to be Madisonville, Miss. There was no additional evidence of any inquiry to ascertain his residence, at the time of the protest. The question to be determined on the last trial, therefore, must have been, whether Mr. Walker had a residence at the time in this state; for if he had, the court had already determined tfye notice not to be good. The fact of the sale of his plantation in Madison county, has been relied on, to show an abandonment of his residence. In my view of the testimony it cannot have that effect, because the reservation of a portion of the land to erect buildings upon, and the reservation of a right to occupy the original buildings for some eighteen months, to enable him in the mean time to erect new buildings, evince an intention not to abandon. Two witnesses, moreover, who were present at the time of the contract, testify to his declaration that he did not mean to give up his residence in Madison.

This was a question of fact for the jury,, though some rules which have been established, might have aided their investigation. Thus it has been laid down, that a domicil once acquired, remains until a new once has been acquired, and the presumption, in all cases, is against a change of domicil. Story Con. Laws, 2d edition, 46. The case of Somerville v. Somerville, 5 Ves. 756, in some of its features bears a strong resemblance to this. Lord Somerville, as one of the Scotch peers, had a seat in the parliament of Great Britain; he spent most of his time in London, had a house in that city, and showed some intention of making it his permanent domicil. After his death, to determine the succession to his personally, it became necessary to establish his residence. It was decided to be Scotland, because the presumption is against a change of domicil, until an abandonment and substitution of a new one are shown.

In this case there were no instructions asked for, there was no positive evidence that Mr. Walker had abandoned his residence, and the verdict is in accordance with the principles just asserted. It was a matter of fact, on which the proper triers have passed, and I do not think it is for us to disturb their finding, unless palpably wrong.

With this finding of the jury, upon the only point left open ? by the former decision of this court, the present judgment could / not be reversed, without overturning that decision. I am not , disposed to do this, because my inclination is to adhere to decisions once deliberately made, unless convinced that they are very clearly wrong. A very recent work of an eminent jurist confirms the principle of the former decision. It is thus stated: “ If the party entitled to notice is abroad, at the time of the dishonor, the notice should be left at his regular residence or domi-cil in his own country; if he has changed his residence or domicil, and his new residence is known, notice is there to be given.” Story on Bills, 346. A late case, in the supreme court of Massachusetts, decides, under circumstances almost identical with this, that notice sent to Washington city, was good. Pierre Chateau v. Daniel Webster. Law Reporter, October, 1843. But 1 do not feel willing to recede from the decision of our own court,' upon the authority of a single case from another tribunal. , n

The jury here have decided that there was no change of re si-) dence, or, what is the same thing, that he still had a residence V in this state ; and that, according to my understanding of the former decision, settles this case. But a majority of the court being of a different opinion, the judgment is reversed.

Mr. Walker, after delivery of the opinions in this case, filed the following petition for reargument:

The defendant applies for a rehearing and reargument, and respectfully contends, that the court erred as to the facts and the law. The question of the residence, depends upon Walker’s residence, on the 4th February, 1837,' the date of the protest, and not at any subsequent period. The residence, up to the 5th May, 1836, the date of the contract with Fall, is proved and conceded. But it is said, that, by that contract, and from that date, the residence was abandoned. To sustain this, the court lay great stress on what they call “ the sale to Fall.” Now there never was a sale to Fall, nor was he ever vested with a title to the property. On the contrary, the supplemental agreement proves there was no such sale, nor had he ever any such title. The words are, “supplemental agreement — It is agreed further between George R. Fall, and Robert J. Walker, as follows. Whereas said Walker is now extending, repairing, and improving, the house on said Pearl Dale Place, this day contracted to be sold conditionally by said Walker, to said Fall.” There was then no sale, but only a conditional contract to sell. No deed was made or title passed, the title remained in Walker, and Fall had only a contract for a sale hereafter, on certain conditions. Was this contract ever changed into a deed, or these conditions ever performed ? There is no such proof, because such is not the fact, but were it otherwise, it would avail nothing, unless shown to have been done before the 4th of February, 1837. If the conditions were not performed before the 4th February, 1837, Fall would then have no right to call on Walker for a deud of sale, and all this must be proved by the plaintiff affirmatively, in order to establish the alleged abandonment of residence.

The errors of the court are, 1. They assume an actual sale to Fall. 2. That the conditions were performed by him; and 3. That the performance of the conditions and sale, preceded the 4th of February, 1837.

Important as these errors are, as to the sale, they are still more so on their influence Upon the court, in interpreting the supplemental agreement. The court treat the question, as if Fall was then, as they call him, “ the owner of the land,” and say, as to the agreement, “ there was no right of soil reserved.” But Walker had not parted with the right of soil, but had only agreed to do so hereafter, on certain conditions. When were these conditions performed! Was it on the 5th May, 1836? No, for they were to be performed thereafter. Was it on or before the 4th February, 1837? And yet this conditional contract to sell, is made ipso facto from its date to divest Walker’s title and residence. If then Walker’s title was not divested, and residence abandoned by the mere conditional contract of sale, what produced these results on or before' the 4th February, 1837 ? The court say, “Williams testifies that hi 1836, he as the agent of Walker, delivered to Mr. Fall, the plantation and slaves. When Mr. Walker first saw the witness afterwards, he complained and said that the house ought not to have been delivered, but the land and slaves- only. "The house must then have been delivered, or Mr. Walker would not have complained.” . Here are many material errors. Williams says, “ Mr. Fall called on deponent, as Walker’s agent, to deliver up to him the place, which deponent first - refused,' having no orders from said Walker, but afterwards, when Mr. Fall showed deponent-the contract of sale, he did deliver the' place to said Fall.” “And he took possession then of the place and slaves, but not of the housej until the fall of 1837, and when said Walker first saw deponent thereafter, he complained, and said the house ought not to have been delivered, but the plantation and slaves only.” Now the court say, “Williams testifies, that in 1836, he, as the agent of Walker, delivered to Mr. Fall the plantation and slaves.” Now Williams says, the delivery was without any orders from Mr. Walker, and consequently not as agent, nor does he affix 1836,” or any other date to this delivery of the place and slaves. Nor had Fall, as the court state, possession of the house in 1836, for Williams, to whom they refer, swears he had not possession of “ the house until the fall of 1837,” more than six months after the notice, yet the court lay great stress on the supposed fact, that Fall was in possession of the house on the 4th February, 1837. When these mistakes are shown in the opinión, the court, it is believed, will desire to correct them, by a rehearing.

,The court say “Mr. Walker was never at Madisonville but once after the' sale, and then on a visit, and that his family were never there afterwards, although he and they were in the state in 1836 and 1837.” Now Claiborne says, “during the recess of congress in 1836, Mr. Walker returned to the state, but did not briug his family.” Mr. McFarrcn says, “ Mrs. Walker splint that summer (1836) with her friends in Philadelphia.” Now the recess of 1836, as the senate journals show, was short, but why was it not spent by Mr. and Mrs. Walker at the Pearl Dale house'? Because it is clearly proved, the house was then being extended and repaired, and was not habitable until October, 1836, when it was nearly time to return to Washington. If then, Walker did riot forfeit his residence by the conditional contract of 5th May, 1836, nor by not residing there during the recess of 1836, when the house was uninhabitable, what produced the forfeiture of residence on or before the 4th February, 1837''? The court state the agreement, as “ entered into by Fall and Walker, after the sale of the plantation.” Now the agreement says, “ it is agreed further,” this day contracted to be sold,” and Mr. Fall says, “ said Walker insisted before entering into the contract with the undersigned for the sale of said Madison county place, upon reserving a residence, as.a prerequisite of the sale.” .The contract of sale and agreement were then continuous, and cotemporaneous acts, the one being made a “ prerequisite” of the other, and are to be construed as one act. The court attach importance to this clause, “ said Walker may occupy said house free of rent during the recess of congress, for a period not exceeding the fall of 1838.” The court say, “no right of property is spoken of.” Fall was “ the owner of the land.” Now Fall was not the owner of the land,” but held a mere conditional and unfulfilled contract, and no right of property was reserved, because it had never been parted with, but only a contract to part with it thereafter on certain conditions, and until these were complied with, Walker had both the right of property and of possession, and the reservation of the right of occupancy of the house, being only necessary in case of a compliance by Fall with the conditions of the contract. Therefore this reservation would only begin to operate after the compliance of the conditions by Fall, because, before and until such compliance, Walker held already the right of property and of possession, independent of the reservation, and Walker need only resort to the reservation for his right of occupancy, in case of, and after the fulfilment of the conditions by Fall. This is clearly the true meaning of these continuous and cotemporaneous acts. But were it otherwise, what was the object of this clause 7 This clause is preceded by the statement, “ Whereas said Walker is still desirous of retaining and continuing his residence at said Pearl Dale Place.” The declared object of the clause - was, that Walker might retain and continue his residence at Pearl Dale. Yet the court, in opposition to the declared object and intention of the parties, construe this clause into an abandonment of the residence. Again, look at the verbal declaration of Walker at the time, and tjhe acts of both parties. Walker went to the Pearl Dale house in the recess of 3836; the house was completed at his expense, and not until October 1836, after which all the bills were.paid by Walker. But why all this, if Fall was then the owner of the house, and if Fall was the owner, and entitled to the possession of the house, why did he never take possession until the fall of 1837 7 and why, even after that, did Walker complain and declare he had no „ right of possession of the house 7 Fall’s conduct shows he considered that he had no right to the possession of the house until the fall of 1837, and Walker’s conduct shows, he considered Fall had even then, no right to the possession of the house, nor did he ever admit his right of possession.

Again, “in 1836, 1837, and 1838,” Walker, as Claiborne swears, gave in his residence at that place, and not, as the court suppose, only in 1836; and Claiborne, who was present at the contract of sale, swears, that “'Mr. Walker then assured witness, that he had' no thought whatever- of changing his residence, but intended to retain part of the land, and improve it, and remain there permanently.” Yet all these solemn acts, and cotemporaneous and repeated declarations, seem to be wholly rejected by the court, in deciding the question of residence ; and when Walker should be thrown on the supplemental agreement, by and after the fulfilment of the conditions of the contract of sale by Fall, he reserved not merely the occupancy of the house, but the right to select thirty acres near it, and for the use. of the spring, all indicating the fixed design' of a permanent residence. But suppose Walker had only rented the house, to occupy during the recess, the oply time when he could ,be there, would this forfeit his residence there, because another might occupy it during the sessions of congress, when he must be at Washington 1

The residence is also supported by the testimony of Claiborne and McFarren, witnesses of or present at the contract of sale, and also by Halliday, Howell, Williams, and Barnard. They were all intimately acquainted with Mr. Walker, and with the facts; and Williams proves Walker’s directions to send his letters and papers to Madison, “ up to the 4th of February, 1837, and that they continued to come there, until after February, 1837.” Strange that he should have his letters directed, and that they should come to a place, which was not his residence; and stranger still, if he had abandoned this residence, that not a single witness could be produced to prove it. The testimony is, “Mr.„ Walker always claimed Pearl Dale as his residence, until it was sold to Dr. Puckett, in the fall of 1838.”

From all these facts, were not the jury well warranted to conclude, that Mr. Walker had not abandoned this residence, in February, 13371 The jury have so found the residence, upon their oaths; and being peculiarly a question of fact, of which they are the appropriate triers, the verdict should stand, unless the evidence “ greatly preponderate ” against it. Walker’s furniture, also, which must have been in the house, when he and his family occupied it, in 1835 and 1836, was not included in the agreement with Fall, and would not pass by a contract for the plantation and slaves, and this furniture must have been in the house in February, 1837.

The court say, “ a deed from Mr. Walker to Dr. Gwin, of certain land therein described, dated in December, 1836, in which Mr. Walker is described as a citizen of Madison county, was also read.” The evidence is, defendant also read a deed, recorded in Adams county, dated December 20, 1836, and acknowledged December 30, 1836, from William. M. Gwin, to said Walker, describing said Walker, in said deed, as a resident of Madison county.” Now it was important to prove, by Dr. Gwin, the residence of Walker in December, 1836. But Walker’s own statement, as the court represents it, would be of less importance, particularly as similar statements by Mr. Walker, had been already proved.' The .court, thus, by an unintentional error, deprive Walker wholly of the benefit of Dr. Gwin’s evidence. The following mistakes, as to facts', it is respectfully contended, appear in the opinion of the court:

1. A conditional contract to- sell, is represented as an actual sale.

2. Fall is represented as the owner of the place and house on the 4th February, 1837, when he had nothing but a contract for a future sale, on certain conditions, then unfulfilled.

3. Fall is represented as being in possession of the house in February, 1837, whereas the witness referred to by the court states, Fall had not possession of “the house until the fall of 1837.”

4. The court say Mrs. Walker was in the state, but not at Pearl Dale, during the recess of 1836, whereas she spent that recess with her friends at Philadelphia.

5. The court represent a deed from Dr. Gwin to Walker, as a deed from Walker to Gwin, thus depriving Walker of Gwin’s testimony.

6. The court state the agreement as made after what they call the sale, whereas they were executed at the same time, the agreement being made a “prerequisite” of the contract of sale, both being contemporaneous and continuous acts, and to be taken as one act.

These are most important errors, and more might be designated, but these should be sufficient to prove, that the present opinion should be corrected, and that even if the case is remanded after a rehearing for a new trial, the court would no doubt cheerfully correct any material errors in their opinion, especially as to facts, so as not to permit any erroneous statements to influence the verdict of a future jury.

The constitution of this state; article 7, section 11, declares, “ Absence on business of this state, or of the United States, or on a visit, or necessary private business, shall not cause a forfeiture of citizenship or residence once obtained.” As then Walker was a resident of the state, notwithstanding his “ absence on business of the state,” on, the 4th February, 1837, if his residence was not then in Madison, it must have been at Natchez, and if so notice should have been given there, yet the court seem to have overlooked this material alternative.

Having examined the facts, let us now investigate the legal questions. If Walker had a residence at Madison or Natchez, two questions arise. 1. Was the notice to Washington good 1 2. Was there no necessity of any notice whatever'? These are distinct questions, and must not be confounded, as it is respectfully contended they have been by the court. Both these questions were clearly and unanimously decided by the court before, (then composed of Judges Sharkey, Pray, and Trotter,) in Walker’s favor. 3 How. 264. First, was the notice to Washington good? The court say it was; first, because it was proved he was in the habit of taking out there all letters which arrived there to his address, during the session, and the same cases before relied on, from 16 Johns, and 4 Wend, are again cited. Now these cases only prove, that when a man has a residence at one town, and place of business at another town near the first, and that he transacts his affairs and receives his letters at the latter, notice to either is good.

Now Washington was not Walker’s residence or place of business, he was only there temporarily in discharge of public duties, and if such a notice be good, notice to a resident of this state, who is temporarily present two or three months at the Virginia Springs, and who takes out all letters which arrive there for him during his visit, will be bound by a notice to the Springs. But it is not the place, where a man absent from home on a visit, or on public business, takes out his letters for a« few weeks or months, that the notice avails, but to the place of business, where he receives his letters all the year. In the language of the court on this subject in 2 Harrison’s Reports, page 489, “It must not, however, be a place selected and used temporarily for the transaction of some particular business, as setting up some old books and accounts merely, but his regular and known place of business, for the transaction of his monied concerts; ” and in 16 Louis. Rep. 20, the court say, “ although it is in evidence that he has been for many years in the habit of receiving his letters at Opelousas, and that they are not forwarded nearer his residence, it is not shown that he ever gave the postmaster any instructions to that effect,” and the notice was held insufficient. Opelousas was. not his place of business, and though he received his letters there, the notice was invalid.

The next reason given by the court in favor of the notice to Washington, is that, it is said, Walker had no agent to receive his letters arriving at Madisonville, in February, 1837, and the court say, this is proved by Claiborne and Williams. Why Claiborne was then at Washington, as a member of congress, and makes no reference to this subject, at least at this date, and Williams had removed to Adams county, in November, 1836 ; and, although on occasional visits to Madisonville afterwards, he does not say Walker h^d no! agent, but only that he knew of none. But he swears he knows Walker directed his letters to be sent there until February, 1837, and that they continued to come there, then, and afterwards. Now, is it not a fair inference, that Walker would not have directed his letters to-be sent there at that time, unless he had an agent there to receive them? And suppose the postmaster were dead, and he were Walker’s agent, how could the fact be proved ? But the contrary should be proved, in order to avail the plaintiff. But were this so, do not the court perceive that this is a reason, not to make Washington the proper place to send the notice, but to show no notice was necessary, and under this head the court resume this point. Does then proof that a man had left his house temporarily, closed it, and left no agent behind, dispense with any notice? On this point the court cite three authorities. The first is 3 Wend. 408, in which the statement is, “ at the time the note was discounted, it was known to the officers of the bank, that the defendant resided at Geddes, and a memorandum of his then place of residence was made on the note, in conformity to the uniform practice of the bank in.such cases.” Here the notice to Geddes was held good, although the indorser, unkn'own to the bank, had removed from Geddes a few weeks before the note fell due. This was a case of notice given, and not of.no notice, and its analogy to this case is not perceived. The court proceed to say, “ In an elementary writer the rule is clearly laid down, that if the house be, locked up, and no person there in consequence of the temporary absence of the party, it is not necessary to leave a notice at the house, or ascertain where he has gone to. Bailey, 273. And this rule was fully recognized in Williams v. Bank of the United States, 2 Peters, 96. This writer was not Bailey, but an American compiler, and the meaning of the whole is, that if due diligence is used, by calling at the house to give the notice, then, in the case stated, the notary need not “leave the notice at the house.” That this is so, is proved by the only two cases to which the compiler refers for this rule. The first is 2 Peters, 96, which the court state as follows : “ That the notary public, after the protest of the notes and the expiration of the usual day of grace, called at the house of the defendant, Williams, who resided in the city of Cincinnati, which he found shut up, and the door locked, and on inquiry of the next resident, he was informed that the said Williams and family had left town on a visit, whether for a day, or week, or month, he did not inquire. He made use of no further diligence to ascertain where Mr. Williams had gone, or whether he had left any person in town to attend to his business. The witness left a notice at the house of a person adjoining, with a request to hand it to the defendant, when he should return.” This was a case of notice left as stated, and of diligence” in an attempt to give a notice at the domicil. This case at most could only prove, that after inquiries and diligent' efforts to give the notice at the domicil, it was not necessary to leave it at the house, when it was locked, and all absent, especially when left for the indorser with the next door neighbor. This was a question of diligence, and the decision was, that all these inquiries, these efforts to give the notice at the domicil, and leaving it with the next neighbor for the indorser, were sufficient. But is it said that where'there is no diligence, no inquiries, no efforts to give any notice, that all notice may be dispensed with, on proof of ihe house being closed, and temporary absence of the indorser and family 1

■Why then this studious effort to show this call at the house, ‘ these diligent inquiries and efforts to give the notice, if none were required % In this case of 2 Peters, 98, Sergeant, the distinguished lawyer of Philadelphia, by whom the case was argued, for the notice, says, “The obligation is to call at the dwelling-house of the indorser, or at his place of business, and if he has left no one there to attend to his affairs, it is his loss, and the holder has done his duty.” Nojw this truly great lawyer admitted, “ the obligation to call at the dwelling house of the indorser,” in this very case in which was proved the temporary absence of the indorser, with his family, the' house locked up, and no one there, but in no case was it ever decided, that the mere closing of the house, leaving no one there during a temporary absence, dispensed with all attempts to give a notice. The only other case cited by the compiler, is 2 Caines, 121, in which an attempt was made, in case of a temporary absence, to give notice at the dwelling-house, and finding it closed, the notice was put into the key-hole. But was the house of Walker unoccupied! Was there no one there 1 Of this there is no proof, and as the plaintiff relies on this to excuse want of notice, he should have proved it affirmatively. But the court say, the notice to the domicil would be “useless” in case of such absence, and no one at the domicil. It is respectfully answered, that the law requires the diligent efforts to give the notice, that the law permits no such inquiry, but the contract of indorsement is, that if the indolser has a residence, a notice there, or diligent efforts to give him a notice there, aré'conditions precedent of his liability, and cannot be expunged by proof, that it would have been useless to have performed these conditions. If it be asked, why send the notice to the residence, when there is no one there to receive it 1 the answer is given by Judge Story: It is of no consequence that the drawer or indorsers may not have been prejudiced thereby.” Story on Bills, page 445, art. 377. “ He has a right to stand upon the terms and conditions of his contract, and to require a strict fulfilment of duty on the part of the holder in giving him notice. Hence it will constitute no excuse for want of notice, that the drawer is insolvent, or that fromother causes, the party entitled to notice, could not have sustained any injury or prejudice.” Story, page 346. “ Nor that the drawer or drawee are non-existing or fictitious persons.” Story, page 361. “ Nor that the drawer and indorser belong to the same firm.” Story, page 445. “.So the fact that the drawer of the biil is dead at the maturity of the bill, and that the indorser is appointed his administrator.” Story, page 445. Nor the death of the indorser; notice should be “sent to the residence or domicil of the deceased party,” even though he have no representatives.” Story, pages 305, 344, 361, 403, 425. “ Notice means something more than knowledge,” “ it must be legal notice,” otherwise it is merely a historical fact.” “ The rule is inflexible, and it is not open to the inquiry, whether notice could have availed the indorser.” “ I am not for relaxing one jot further than it has been done this wholesome and convenient rule.” 16 Serg. & Rawle, 157. In the case of the death of the indorser, having no representatives, we see notice must be sent to the late residence, yet have the dead any agent, or can they see or hear of the notice ? In the note to Story on Bills, 331, Judge Kent lays down the doctrine, quoted with approbation by Judge Story that the notice should be given, or attempted to be given, at the domicil, even “if the house be shut up by a temporary absence.” Now no one has studied this subject so much and so long as Judge Kent, as well during his long service on the Bench, in the great commercial state of New York, where so many of these cases arose, as since, in his able treatises on these questions, so often revised, re-considered, and republished by him. His opinion, as above quoted, seems clear; but to remove all doubt as to his meaning, I submitted this case to him last spring, and the result in my favor, on all the points, was laid before the, court last spring. Surely when there is such high authority, and the court is divided, a re-hearing will not be refused? A decision in Mr. Webster’s case is cited in Judge Clayton’s opinion, but we have nothing but a sketch, in nine lines, of Judge Shaw’s views, and on a re-argument, we can have the whole opinion. It seems, from the brief statement in that case, the court presumed Mr. Webster received the notice, but if not sent to the domicil or place of business, the law permits no such presumption. Thus in 5 Yerger, 71, the court say, “ Whether a party received notice or not, must not depend on probabilities, but must be established by proof.” In the decisions of this and other courts, it is held, that if the indorser resides in the town where the note is protested, and notice» be placed for him at that post-office where he receives his letters every day, the court will not presume that he received it; no, not even in the strong case, approved by this court in H- John. 231, where he directed the letter-carrier to bring him his letters every day, and he did so. Yet surely the presumption is much stronger in those cases, than in this, that the notice was received.

There is one point appearing on the record, and presented in the first brief submitted with the case, which has been overlooked by the court. It is thus stated in the first brief, Now here the equity was clearly with the defendant, it being clearly proved that the plaintiff could have made the money from the principal, had he proceeded in time. On all these points the law is believed to be with the defendant, and they would each be separately and strongly pressed, were it not believed that the main point was clearly with us., and that the court would decide the case on that point.” Now had the court decided the main point in my favor, it would have been unnecessary to touch this point, but as the case cannot be decided against me without deciding this point, the case should be reconsidered. The words of our statute are, “ and the person or persons to whom such instruments so payable are assigned, may maintain an action against the person or persons who shall have indorsed or assigned, the same as in cases of inland bills of exchange. Provided that when any debt shall be lost by the negligence or default of the assignee or assignees, that the assignor or assignors shall not be liable, any such assignment notwithstanding.” The law seems clearly to embrace this case, the debt, as against the maker, having been “ lost .by the negligence or default of the assignee.” On this subject, making justice the law, there are many analogous statutes and decisions of our sister states, maintaining this defence, which will be presented on reargument, and many distinguished lawyers in this state, are known to entertain the same opinion. Even if the strict law is against me, on a motion for a new trial, the verdict will not be disturbed, if there has been no misdirection of the court as to the law, provided the equity and justice of the case are with the verdict, and especially in a hard case,” as the court admit this to be. Graham on New Trials. A motion for a rehearing within the four days, was prevented by the-following causes. At the last July term, Mr. Walker wrote and requested V. E. Howard, should the case at any time be decided against him, to move the rehearing in time, which would have been done, but for the fact of Mr. Howard’s absence, and that his brother and partner, tq whom he had entrusted his business, was confined to his bed by severe illness at the time of the decision, and for more than four days afterwards, and the plaintiff being dead at the time, no judgment could be rendered. A rehearing and reargument are requested then, because,

1. Many material errors as to the facts, are contained in the opinion.

2. These errors the court would not permit to remain and influence the jury on anew trial, and therefore should be corrected on a rehearing, in any event.

3. For errors of law.

4. For the omission to decide the question presented by the record, and by the first brief as to the discharge of the assignor by “ the default or neglect of the assignee.”

5. Because the court admit it is “a hard case on Mr. Walker,” and where justice and equity are with the verdict, it will not be disturbed on a question of strict law, where there has been no misdirection as to the law.

6. Because all these important questions were decided by a divided court.

7. Because it is a well known fact, and now proved, that the plaintiff in error was dead at the time of the judgment, and therefore no judgment could be entered in his name ; and the best way to correct this error, is by granting a rehearing. It is indispensable, in all courts, that there should be parties, a plaintiff and defendant or no judgment can be rendered; and as there was no party in court at the time, in whose favor a judgment could be rendered, the defendant and his counsel were not in default, and the four days rule can have no application to such a case, especially as our,statute as regards cases pending in.any court,” requires a revival in case of death of either party, and such is believed to be the invariable practice in this court. If the party, when temporarily absent, must have an agent at the domicil, in order to entitle himself to notice, or an attempt to give notice there, then the rule must go farther, and require that the agent should have power, not only to take out all letters arriving at the post-office of the domicil by mail, but also power to open and read these letters, even though sealed, otherwise the notice-to the domicil of the absent person by mail in a sealed letter,' which the agent cannot open or read, is just as “ useless” as the court deem a noticé when there is no agent. But it may be said the agent would forward such notice to the place where the indorser is staying temporarily, and were this so, would it not be quite as useless” in this case, as to have sent no notice to the domicil, inasmuch as the agent would only have sent, the letter sealed and unopened to the same place, where the notary would have sent it himself? Such is the confusion arising from inquiring into the usefulness of the notice, or the probability of its reception, and departing from the plain and well established rule, which requires, in all cases, notice, or diligent efforts to give the notice, at the domi-cil or place of business. ' - R. J. Walker.

We concur in the opinion that a rehearing ought to be had, and reargument ordered in this case.

V. E. Howaed,

R. M. Gaines,

J. A. Quitman,

- W. YeegeR,

£ Geo. Adams.

The following affidavits were filed, in support of the petition for a rehearing:

B. D. Howard, one of the counsel in the above case, being duly sworn, says; Tha,t during the present term of this court, he has been too much indisposed to attend the same, and when the above stated case was decided, he was prevented by ill health from moving the court for a re-argument, within the four days allowed by the rules.

B. D. Howaed.

Sworn to and subscribed before me, this the 11th day of November, A. D. 1843.

J. H. Boyd, J. Peace, in and for the county of Hinds, State of Mississippi.

Albert Tunstall, plaintiff in error, v. R. J. Walker, defendant in error.

In High Court of Errors and Appeals, State of Mississippi.

H. T. Ellett, being swoi’n, saith; That Albert Tunstall, the above-named plaintiff, died in the month of September last.

H. T. Ellett.

Sworn and subscribed, this 11th November, 1843, before me,

L. L. TayloR, J. Peace.

R. J. Walker, the defendant in error, being sworn, saith ; That he would have attended at the present term of the court, to move a re-hearing, within the time prescribed by the rule, had he not felt certain, under the circumstances of the case, that no judgment would be entered up against him at this term.

R. J. Walker.

Sworn to and subscribed before me, this the 11th day of November, 1843. L. L. Taylor, J. Peace.

The following is the opinion of Chancellor Kent, referred to in the argument of Mr. Walker : '

1. If the residence of a member of the senate of the United States is in the state he represents, would a notice of protest to him, as indorser, directed to Washington city, be good, on proof that, at the date of the notice, he was present in Washington city, during the session, and that he was in the habit of receiving there all letters to his address, there being no diligence or inquiry as to the residence, and the fact of his residence in the state being established by proof?
Answer. I am of opinion, that the 'notice in the case stated would not be sufficient; assuming, as we may, from the statement, that the notice was not proved.to be actually received by the indorser, on the arrival of the notice at Washington., Whether notice, if so personally received, would be sufficient, without notice at the permanent domicil of the party, in his own state, I give no opinion.
(Signed) James Kent.
2. Under the circumstances above stated, is not notice required to his residence, or place' of business, in the state he represents, although his family be .absent with him, during the session, and no agent left in the state?
Answer. I am of opinion, that the notice is required to be given at the residence of the indorser, in his own state.
(Signed) James Kent.
3. Does a' member of the senate of the United States forfeit his residence in the state he represents, and the privileges incident to such residence, by attending the sessions of congress, at Washington city, and receiving there all letters to his address, his family spending the session, and sometimes the recess, at Washington? ' f
Answer. I think not. There is no change of domicil, or home. The residence at Washington is temporary, and for a special purpose.
(Signed) James Kent.
4. Will a-no tice of protest'to a member of the senate of the United States be good, if left at, or directed to, any other place or house, where he may be staying temporarily, than his residence, or place of business, in- the state which he represents, and in which he resides, there being no diligence or inquiry to ascertain the residence or place of business ?
Answer. I think not; excepting, however, the question, whether service of notice actually made on person, out of his state, or distant from his home, would alone be sufficient. The inclination of my mind is, that it would not be sufficient; but I give no decided opinion on that point.
(Signed) James Kent.”

Montgomery, in opposition to the petition.

As to the application for a re-hearing, I am satisfied I cannot make a stronger argument in favor of the justice and propriety of the decision of the majority of the court, than that contained in the opinion; but I will notice a few of the positions taken by the petitioner.

The position relied on is, that the court erred, as to the evidence of the defendant on the 4th of February, 1837; and it is contended, that the conduct of defendant, after that date, is not to be regarded in discussing that question. Now, I think it is a perfectly legitimate argument, to test a man’s declarations by his acts. But I will not hesitate to admit, that defendant was candid in his statements to Claiborne and others, that he intended to continue his residence; but as the proof is fall and uncontradicted, that he never did reside there, after the' sale to G. R. Fall, nor kept furniture, servants, or anything else there, it would be a perversion of language to call it his residence. If such can be considered a residence, then a man may have his residence in a place far distant from the place where he usually or uniformly lives and transacts business.

All the authorities which speak of the necessity of sending notice to a man’s residence, during his temporary absence, instead of sending it to the place he is supposed to be, give, as a reason, that it will be received by his family, or some agent who, knowing where he is, will forward it, so that he will be speedily and certainly informed of the dishonor, in time to protect himself. But the authorities concur, that if the holder call at the residence, to give notice, and find the door locked, and the family, &c., from home, although temporarily, he need not give notice, but has used all the diligence the law requires. Now, if the notary had gone to Pearl Dale,” and found the house vacant, as the proof abundantly shows, and Mr. Walker contends was the case, would it not, under the authorities, have excused notice Í

The law never requires a vain and foolish thing; and we can scarce conceive of anything'more vain and foolish, than such a trip to Pearl Dale, on the 4th of February, 1837. It is proved that Mr. Walker and his family were more than one thousand miles from that place, and had not left even a cock to crow at Pearl Dale.

But I take the broad ground, that the defendant did not, on the 4th of February, 1837, reside at Pearl Dale, neither potentially nor intentionally.

To prove this, let us inquire who was the owner of Pearl Dale at that time. Mr. Walker produced the supplemental contract with Fall, which shows that there was a principal contract, of conditional sale. What these conditions were we are not informed; but from all the evidence, we are forced to the conclusion, that the conditions were complied with, as it is -prhved' that Fall took possession with the approbation of Mr. Walker, as is evident from the remarks made by Mr. Walker to Williams, and also the-proof, by Claiborne and others, that Fall continued in possession, until he sold to Puckett, and nothing is said about a forfeiture for non-performance of any condition. But Mr. Walker could have proved the condition, and that the title was retained by him, if such were true, and should have done so.

Admit that no technical conveyance of title was made, does that constitute Walker the owner of the land 1 To constitute perfect ownership, right of property, right of possession, and actual possession, must concur. Walker had neither. At most, he held the mere legal title, while the right of property was in Fall, who, on the performance of the conditions of sale, could have compelled a conveyance. If these conditions had not been performed, why did not Walker complain that Williams did wrong, in delivering possession of the land and slaves'?

Again, Williams says he gave possession on the faith of the contract, and without instructions from Walker. And Walker told him, he should have given possession of the land and slaves, but not of the house; which shows that the conditions of sale must have been complied with. But Williams put the right construction on the contract.

The supplemental agreement only reserves the right to occupy the house, “ during the recess- of congress,” under which, the fair construction is, that Fall was entitled to the use of it, at least during the session of congress, if not all the time that it was unoccupied by Walker, or his family. The agreement is only permission to Walker, personally; he could not transfer or assign it, nor could he require that it should remain unoccupied. He could only require the use of- it, by actually taking possession ; and having never taken possession proves, that he never made his election to occupy it, and until such election, he had no right under the contract. By reading the contract, it will be seen that the land to be reserved is not to include this dwelling-house, which shows that the intention of the parties was, that the ownership of the Pearl Dale house was to pass, by the contract, to Fall, and the mere privilege of occupancy, during the recess of congress, to be reserved.

Now I would ask, if, under this contract, Walker had a clear legal right to occupy that house during the session of congress 1 Had he a right to have his family there % Had he a right to have an agent there 1 These questions must be answered in the affirmative, otherwise it must be conceded that Walker did not intend to reside there at the time the note was protested.

A word or two on some of the authorities relied on. Story, Con. Law, 96. “ A domicil once acquired, remains until a new one has been acquired, and the presumption, in all cases, is against a change of domicil.” The author evidently uses the term domicil in a political sense, and not as designating the dwelling occupied by a.man and his family. For it would be absurd to say that a man could not sell his dwelling until he had purchased another, which would be the meaning of the sentence, unless we construe domicil to mean the district or section of country in which a man exercises his political or civil rights, and not his habitation. A man may reside in Jackson, and exercise all his political and civil rights there, call it his domicil or home, yet never eat two meals at the same table, nor sleep twice in the same bed or gutter ; nor have his shirt washed. The case Somerville v. Somerville, 5 Yesey, 756, was not a question where a man had his habitation, and might be seen by those having business with him, but of what state or country he was a citizen, and to what laws he owed allegiance. And it was correctly decided, that, as he was a Scotch peer, and entitled to a seat in parliament as sitch, that he must be regarded as a citizen of Scotland, notwithstanding he resided, or had his habitation in London. But we are, in this case, inquiring where Walker had his habitation, where he dwelt, on the 4th February, 1837. His political domicil, or residence, was not changed^ we admit. We had business with him personally, and the law made it our duty to ascertain where he dwelt permanently, and to comniunicate with him there. Now, where was that place ? He was not at Pearl Dale, his family was not there, nor anything else that was his; nor had they or he any right to be there at that date.

Suppose this note had been protested at Washington city, and the notary had been á personal friend of Walker, and in the habit of daily intercourse with him and his family; and had gone to the rotunda of the capitol, and, looking into the senate .chamber, saw Mr. Walker in his place, had inquired of Judge Black for the residence of M-r. Walker, and been informed it was at Pearl Dale; and, instead-of giving Walker the notice, had travelled off to Pearl Dale, and finding a log cabin, shut up, uninhabited, and, on inquiry of Fall, had ascertained that Mr. Walker had no right to occupy the house, except during the recess of congress, would that have been sufficient diligence to excuse the failure to give notice? Mr. Walker contends that Cook, who knew he was at Washington, should have used some such diligence to' ascertain his residence, when all the diligence he could have used, even to going to Pearl Dale in person, must have resulted in ascertaining the facts, which he knew at first, that Walker had no residence, or right of residence there, on that day, and was, in fact, in Washington city.

As to the judgment, I admit it should not have been entered until revivor; but that can be set aside, and leave granted to revivo, without ordering a re-argument. The parties were all alive when the cause was argued. The death between verdict and judgment, does not prevent judgment, &c.

On petition for re-argument by Walker.

Mr. Chief Justice ShaRKey delivered the following opinion on the application for a re-argumcnt.

Having examined the petition for re-argument, I have but little to say on what I regard as the merits of the case. I see no reason whatever for changing my opinion; if I could perceive any ground for a doubt, under the circumstances of the case, I should incline to grant the application. The opinion may be wrong, but I think, on re-argument of the same questions, I should be forced to come to the same conclusion.

There are some circumstances, however, connected with the petition, which I feel bound to notice, and I do so because the petition itself has confirmed me in the propriety of having the case retried in the court below. The case was submitted on lengthy briefs in April last. After the'submission the. counsel were indulged in filing additional arguments, without the consent of the opposite counsel. A brief of thirty odd pages was submitted, which contains a very able and ingenious argument. After full examination the case was decided, and a new trial granted. In the petition a new ground is assumed. It is insisted that the holder lost his recourse under a statutory provision, by not suing the maker in time. This is a question of importance, and it is a -new one. The record does not show that it was made in the court below, where properly it should have been made; nor does the evidence present it in such a shape as to justify a decision on .it, for the only evidence on which it could rest is not free from vagueness, and there is strong circumstantial evidence tending to contradict it. We could not decide it without weighing the evidence. We could not decide it unless we "should undertake to do so on a very doubtful case, and that too without anything to show us that it ever entered into the consideration in the court below. Nay, move, we have satisfactory proof that it was not considered below. I quote the language of the brief already referred to. “A new declaration was filed (alluding to the amended declaration) averring, as an excuse for not giving notice, that the defendant had'no known place of residence, and on this the issue was joined and cause tried, on this one single, simple and material point.” But again ; this question, important as it is, was totally neglected in the first argument. In the very lengthy brief it occupies but three lines, and then it is only incidentally touched, as an argument to show that the equity of Jhe case is with the defendant. Under such circumstances we should be doing injustice to the question, injustice to the cause, and injustice to ourselves, to reinvestigate on this ground. When it does come up we wish it to come fairly, and it cap only be fairly made by remanding the cause for a new trial. If it was a matter constituting a good defence before, it will also-be good when presented in a more prominent form. It is a defence which is not likely to be lost before another trial' can be had. I feel bound to add too, that a re-argument is not a matter of the same moment when a new trial only has been. granted, that it is when the judgment is final. I should be inclined to yield more readily to an application on a final judgment, because the prejudice is not so serious in case the decision should be wrong.

But there is another strong reason for refusing a re-argument in the present case. The whole of a lengthy argument was directed to the sufficiency of notice. Counsel must cover the whole ground on the first argument. It will not do to sanction experiments on_a single point, and if that fails, then allow a change of position. On this principle, litigation would be endless.

Accompanying the application there is an affidavit on which perhaps much reliance has been placed. The cause was argued and submitted in April, and by the court taken under advisement. ' In September it appears by the affidavit, the plaintiff’ in error died, which was before the final decision, but after submission'; and it is said this is a reason' why a re-argument should be granted. If there was anything in this point, the application should have been made to set aside the judgment. An application for re-argument directs itself to the propriety of the opinion on the merits of the case, and not to any accidental circumstance which would make it improper to render judgment. By setting aside the judgment, and ■ reinstating the case, a re-argument would follow, but then it would be a mere consequence, without reference to the propriety of the decision. But this affidavit presents no obstacle whatever, and the question is so well settled that I will barely refer to a few of the authorities. In Bemus v. Buckman, 3 Wendell, 673, King v. Dunn, 21 Wendell, 253, and Green v. Watkins, 6 Wheaton, 260, this point was directly decided, in cases too which had not been submitted before the death of the party. The rule is that judgment shall be entered as of a term previous to the death of the party. In cases taken under advisement our judgments should always be^ entered nunc pro tunc, and the judgment must be so amended in this instance, and then it can be revived.

Note by the RepohteRS. This cause was decided by the court, in October, 1843, and should have been reported in the first volume of Smedes and Marshall’s Reports. The preparation of the case, however, for report, was delayed for the purpose of obtaining the brief and petition for re-argument, of the defendant, which were needed to make the report of the case complete. The latter was furnished to us after the second volume was partially through the press; the former was mislaid, and could not, therefore, be obtained.  