118 N.Y.S. 933 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting): I am unable to concur in the decision to be made in this case. The evidence is substantially the same as that given upon the former trial (126 App. Div. 451), and the law of the case has been established, There are three classes of damages embraced in the plaintiff's alleged cause of action: First, those sustained through the fraudulent loans, which the plaintiff recovered upon both trials, and which we may dismiss from further consideration; second, those sustained through the theft and conversion of the securities of the bank by its cashier, which the plaintiff recovered on the first trial but not upon the second; and, third, those resulting from a call loan alleged to have been made by the cashier to himself, without collaterals, for which no recovery was had on either trial, the evidence being insufficient to establish a cause of action therefor. This may be eliminated from consideration. The verdict of the jury, giving to the plaintiff a recovery for the damages sustained through the fraudulent loans, and denying a recovery for the $9,000 call loan, is supported by the evidence. The question requiring serious consideration is based upon the failure of the jury to include in their verdict such damages as were sustained through the criminal conversion of the securities of the bank by its cashier, alleged to have been made possible and successful by the negligence of the president, Prentice. The learned trial justice states in his opinion, written on the decision of plaintiS’s motion for a new trial, after declaring that it was not plain to him why the jury failed to find Prentice negligent as to the loss of the securities when they found him negligent as to the fictitious call loans: “ If the Court had tried these questions of fact its decision thereon would not have been the same as that made by this jury; ” and while, as he says, that fact in itself does not furnish a valid reason for setting the verdict aside, it is a fact which may properly be considered here, in connection with the other facts presented by the record, and weight given it. It is impossible to find in this record an adequate, convincing or satisfactory explanation of the verdict rendered — in view of the uncontroverted testimony, which seems to me to establish as great a degree of negligence on the part of Prentice in connection with the loss of the securities as that found by the jury rendering his estate liable for the money represented by the fictitious call loans — upon any other theory than that the verdict is a compromise one, and
Lead Opinion
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs. No opinion. Hirschberg, P. J., Jenks and Miller, JJ., concurred; Rich, J., read for reversal, with whom Burr, J., concurred.