3 N.Y.S. 747 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
Lead Opinion
It is alleged in the complaint that the defendant wrongfully took and collected three promissory notes which belonged to the plaintiff, of the value of $818, and that by reason thereof the defendant became indebted to the plaintiff in that sum, and he wrongfully received said money; and that he refused to pay it to the plaintiff, notwithstanding she had made demand therefor. The proof was that in the fall of 1883 plaintiff became insane, and was removed to an asylum, where she remained until June, 1887; that at the time of her removal she was residing with her father and step-mother at Gran-by, N. Y.; that she was then the owner and in possession of the notes in question, and also of other notes, mortgages, and personal property, which were in her trunks, and left at her father’s house; that her father subsequently -died; that after her father’s death the defendant, with the consent of the plaintiff’s step-mother, took charge of the plaintiff’s trunks and their contents, and removed them to the place where he and his wife, who was the plaintiff’s ¡sister, then resided; that the notes in question were collected by the defendant; that after they were collected, and before this action, a conversation took place between the parties, in which the plaintiff inquired of the defendant where her money was, to which he replied that he had every dollar of it and was saving it for her. There was neither claim nor proof that the defendant ■ever had any money which belonged to the plaintiff except that which he collected on those notes, nor was there any proof of any demand for the money thus collected.
It is quite apparent from the evidence that the defendant took possession of the plaintiff’s property, collected these notes, saved the money for the plain-tiff, and preserved her other property, because she was the sister of his wife, who was, so far as the evidence discloses, the only surviving relative she had, .and the only person interested in her welfare, or in the preservation of her property. That defendant has acted in the most perfect good faith towards ■.the plaintiff in the care and preservation of her property, and that the plaintiff has been benefited thereby, we can find no reason to doubt. But the plaintiff contends that the taking and collection of the notes was wrongful in that it was without her consent, and hence that the judgment was proper, and should be upheld. It is, perhaps, true that, while the defendant was .guilty of no moral wrong, yet that he was guilty of a technical one, for
Hardin, P. J., concurs.
Dissenting Opinion
I concur in that part of brother Martin’s opinion holding that the answer pleads a counter-claim, which the plaintiff admitted by failing to reply, and that the court erred in refusing to so hold, for which error the judgment must be reversed; but I cannot agree that the-case contains sufficient evidence of ratification by the plaintiff of defendant taking and collecting the three notes, to sustain a holding, as a matter of law,that plaintiff ratified defendant’s acts. In the autumn of 1886, at Willard asylum, the parties talked about defendant having some of plaintiff’s property in his care, but she swears “the subject of these particular notes was not-mentioned; nothing was said about his collecting notes, getting the money