237 Mass. 451 | Mass. | 1921
This is an action of contract for money had and received. The answer is a general denial. In substance the material facts are as follows: The defendant was an overseer in charge of the sorting room of a waste mill, which was operated by the plaintiff. As such overseer, it was his duty to keep in his own handwriting a time-book, wherein he should record a weekly statement of the hours worked by and the name of each employee under his charge. It was his further duty to see that the name of each of such employees got in the pay-roll which was made up in the office from his time-book. On the pay-roll, opposite the name of each employee, was a number which corresponded to a like number on a check which was allotted and delivered by the overseer each week to such employee. Each individual employee received his pay from the paymaster by surrendering to him in the overseer’s presence the check given him. If any pay was unclaimed, it was taken back to the office until claimed, the check being kept by the overseer. When an absent employee would come back for his pay the overseer would give that employee the check corresponding to his number and then the employee would go to the office and get- his pay. Sometimes one employee was allowed to draw another employee’s pay upon presenting the check of that employee. This action is based upon the contention that the defendant caused fictitious names to be added to the time-book and to the pay-roll, and thereon collected to his own use pay for unperformed labor.
At the trial the plaintiff relied entirely and exclusively upon alleged admission of the defendant of false entries of names in the time-book and upon the pay-rolls to prove misappropriations of money by the defendant, and the amount thereof. The defendant admitted that one of the alleged fictitiously used names on the time-book and the pay-roll was not the name of an actual employee, and claimed that he used the name to represent an employee whose name he did not know. He further testified that he did not take any money wrongfully of the plaintiff, and that he did not make the admission testified to by the plaintiff’s witness, hereinafter stated.
The jury could have found on the testimony of the assistant treasurer and bookkeeper of the plaintiff, that the bookkeeper, under the direction of the assistant treasurer, had accurately placed a red check mark on the pay-roll against names which the defendant had admitted were not names of actual employees; as also against the amounts accredited to such names, which the jury could find the defendant admitted he had converted to his own use.
To aid the jury in arriving at or checking up the total of the several sums claimed to have been embezzled at times over a series of years by the defendant, the plaintiff submitted a summary statement made by the bookkeeper of the names and amounts accredited thereto which were identified on the payrolls by red check marks. This abridgment or compendium was excluded by the trial judge on the ground that the plaintiff had “not proved any figures as yet.” The pay-rolls and time-books were received in evidence. The judge charged the jury as to the
The charge and colloquy make it plain that the books were not excluded from the consideration of the jury at their deliberations' in the jury room as a matter of discretion, which was not .subject to exception, Krauss v. Cope, 180 Mass. 22, but were withheld from the use of the jury solely on the ground that as a matter of law “the items named in them had not been proved.” Farnum v. Pitcher, 152 Mass. 470. Boston Dairy Co. v. Mulliken, 175 Mass. 447. , Sibley v. Nason, 196 Mass. 125. It is the general rule that all papers which are duly admitted in evidence should go to the jury unless they are withheld by the judge as a matter of discretion. Whithead v. Keyes, 3 Allen, 495. Krauss v. Cope, supra. In the case at bar the discretion of the judge was not exercised to exclude them, and the customary rules as to proof of books of account were not applicable should the jury find, as the evidence clearly warranted, that the defendant had admitted defalcations and had also admitted that the books introduced in evidence showed facts from which the jury by examination and computation could determine with accuracy “how much,” what “specific amount” thef defendant had taken, as they were re
Exceptions sustained. .