Court Opinion

ID: 6228061
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-17 20:15:42.504176+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:57:44.990211
License: Public Domain

Per, Curiam.
When a plaintiff in person gives notice of action to a justice of the peace, he must not endorse the name of his attorney on it; but why should he not sign it with his name? Though not requiring the form, such a notice ought to have the substance of a declaration; and it ought to be complete in itself without borrowing certainty from matter dehors. Thus a notice signed by the plaintiff, and endorsed, “ Henry Reed, Esq., living in Poplar Lane,” was held to be an insufficient indication that he was the plaintiff’s attorney; yet no one would doubt that his name was endorsed to satisfy the statute, which requires the name of the attorney to be endorsed. So dating a notice at a particular place, has been held an insufficient averment that the party resided there, though legal acts are almost invariably dated at the place of the party’s residence. Here an unsigned notice was handed to the justice by the plaintiff in person; but what if it had been sent by a messenger ? The justice might have exacted the necessary information from him in respect to the identity of the writer ; and so he might have done, in respect to the information wanted in the cases taken from our own decisions. But there cannot be one rule for a notice served by the plaintiff, and another for a notice served by his agent. To avoid the uncertainty that would be incurred by departing from a plain and practical rule, it is necessary to say that the notice must contain the elements of the information required within itself. The want of the plaintiff’s name as an act of authentication, therefore, is a defect that cannot be remedied.
Judgment affirmed.