10 Daly 225 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1881
The money advanced in this case by the plaintiffs was at the defendants’ request to enable them to pay the expenses incident to the proceeding they were conducting, to recover from the executrix of the trustee of Mrs. Whittelsey money left in trust for Mrs. W. The money was loaned by Mr. Town, as agent of the plaintiffs, and for the benefit of Mrs. W., who was without means'. It
Town’s account was made out against the defendants, whom he seems to have regarded as the debtors. He took it first to the defendants, and then to Mrs. W., and she signed it in the form of an order in these words: “Please pay the above amount and charge to my account.—Mary E. Whittelsey.” The settlement was thus carried through, the $22,500 was paid over as above stated, and the account with Mrs. W.’s order was sent by Town to the defendants’ office for the payment of it, with a young man, who called several times without seeing them ; and who finally presented it to Mr. Dayton, about three days after the order was signed, or about the 19th of May, 1879, and demanded payment, which was not made, Mrs. W. in the meanwhile, on the 17th of May, 1879, having written a letter to the defendants, saying that she signed the order under a misapprehension, and that, upon reflection, she considered the charge unjust, forbidding them to pay the
In a later letter to the defendants she declares it outrageous that she should be required to pay the whole of the amount and interest, when others as well as she were to be benefited;. referring, I suppose, to the fact that the husband of one of the plaintiffs and the other plaintiff, who were her brothers, had a remote contingent interest in the $15,000 which was in trust for her for life, and which, upon her death without issue, was to go to them. She and the defendants, her attorneys, probably, thought that, in view of this contingent possible interest in the trust fund, the plaintiffs should bear some part of the expense of the legal proceeding which had resulted in securing it, or should at least relinquish the interest on the loan, which may or may not have been a reasonable expectation. However that may be, Mr. Town, who had become one of Mrs. W.’s trustees, desired that what had been advanced to enable the defendants to go on with the proceedings, with interest, should be paid out of the $7,500 that was to be paid to the defendants for Mrs. W. on the settlement, before he would assent to the settlement, which was reasonable on his part, as the money had been advanced by him, as the plaintiffs’ agent, to enable Mrs. W. to prosecute proceedings which had resulted in the settlement.
There is nothing in the evidence that would warrant the court below in assuming that the money advanced by Town was a contribution by the plaintiffs toward the expense of a proceeding in which one of them, and the husband of the other, had a remote contingent interest. Neither Mrs. W. nor the defendants, as her attorneys, entertained any such view of it, for they, with her approval, repaid Town the principal, $800. The only dispute or point of difference was the payment of the interest, which, if it were a loan either to the defendants or Mrs. W., was necessarily payable from the time of the making of the loan. As the settlement was made, the instru inent signed by Town, and the $7,500 paid over to the defendants, with the distinct understanding, on the part of Town, acting for the plaintiffs, and of the defendants, acting
In my opinion, the judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide event.
J. F. Daly and Beach, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to abide event.