53 Barb. 272 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1869
In the additional findings of the referee, he finds, as matters of fact, that the various sums, which the defendants claim they had a rightto appropriate to the individual use of B. F. Carver, were transmitted in the regular course of their-business, from Chicago to the defendants, by B. F. Carver & Co. composed of the said B. F, Carver, Coddington Billings and Court-land G, Babcock, and that this was done without the knowledge and consent of Billings and Babcock. The plaintiff’s firm were bankers in Chicago, dealing in money and government bonds, and loans and discounts, and nothing else. The speculations in stocks and the other transactions of B. F. Carver, individually, of which there is sufficient in the evidence to infer that the defendants were cognizant, were frauds upon the plaintiff’s firm, having been entered in the defendants’ accounts as part of their transactions, when it was evident that these transactions were not in the ordinary course of their business. When the defendants witnessed this misappropriation of the funds of the firm, they were at least put upon inquiry to ascertain from the other members of the firm whether tñey consented to the course, in which Carver was individually- engaged, and whether the funds of the firm should he applied to his individual transactions. Undoubtedly, where there is a general partnership, and one of the firm borrows money
The only doubt I have felt in this case arose from the absence, in the referee’s findings of fact, of an express finding of knowledge on the part of the defendants of the misapplication of the funds by Carver; but, as the evidence satisfactorily shows this, and as there is enough in the whole findings to show that the funds were received from the firm for the business in which they were engaged, and that the transfer was made for the individual purposes of Carver, without the knowledge and consent of the other members of the firm, I think it is not necessary to send back the case to the referee.
The judgment should be affirmed with costs.
Clerlce, Sutherland and George G. Barnard, Justices.]