
    Butterfield vs. Howe, impleaded, &c.
    ALBANY,
    Dec. 1837.
    A testatum clause is no longer necessary in a fieri facias issued to a county different from that in which the venue is laid.
    In this case among other grounds relied on for setting . aside the plaintiff’s proceedings, it was urged that the execution was irregular in not containing a testatum clause: the venue in the cause having been laid in the county of Oneida, and a writ oí fieri facias having been issued to the county of Jefferson.
    
    It was. insisted on the part of the plaintiff that since the statute authorizing executions to be issued at the same time to sheriffs of different counties, 2 R. S. 364, § 6, the practice of inserting a testatum clause, must be considered as abolished, even as a matter of form. To which it was answered that the statute did not change the practice ; that previous thereto executions were issued in the mode pointed out therein, at the peril ,of paying sheriffs’ fees in each county, if property to a sufficient amount to satisfy the debt was levied upon in more than one county; and that inasmuch as the statute was silent upon the subject, a testatum clause was as necessary now as it ever had been.
    The Chief Justice denied the motion.
   Anon.

An attorney is not bound to take a letter from the post -office charged with postage, though he has reason to believe it contains law papers, and the effect of his omission is a default of his adversary.  