170 Mass. 337 | Mass. | 1898
The decree which was entered is quite informal, and is substantially defective in not specifying the time within which the payment is to be made, or what shall be done in case of failure to make payment at a certain time.
There was no evidence that Mr. Perry was ever in express terms authorized by the defendant to receive payments of principal upon this loan, but the authority, actual or ostensible, was inferred from his course of dealing with and for the defendant in this and other matters. Mr. Perry was at that time a member of the bar, and had been employed by the defendant in respect to loans of money by her, and in all matters in which she required legal assistance. She had great confidence in him. The loan of $4,000 to Doyle was made through him; she never saw Doyle or the mortgaged property, but relied wholly on Mr.
It seems that Mr. Perry misappropriated the SI,500, and the defendant never got the benefit of it; but the evidence reported (of which the salient features are given above) was sufficient to warrant the court in finding that he was authorized to receive the money for the defendant, or at least that he was held out by the defendant as having such authority, by the previous dealings
The defendant contends that three payments of interest of $75 each, indorsed upon the note by Mr. Perry under dates of September 2, 1894, March 2, 1895, and September 2, 1895, respectively, should not be allowed to the plaintiff, because, if the sum of $1,500 is treated as having been paid on the principal, the semiannual interest on the balance remaining due would not amount to $75, and she contends that there is no evidence that said amounts were paid by the Doyles to Mr. Perry. We are unable to deal with this matter, because the facts are not distinctly stated, and we do not know how it was dealt with by the Superior Court.
The allowance to the plaintiff of the payment of $1,500 was warranted; and that sum should be treated as having been paid on March 16, 1894, and interest thereafter should be computed on the balance. The decree will need to be modified in the particulars mentioned at the outset, and if there was any error in respect to the three subsequent indorsements of interest, such error can be corrected in the Superior Court.
Ordered accordingly.
The decree was as follows: " This cause came on to be heard before this court, and, after a full hearing and upon consideration of the evidence