84 Pa. Super. 498 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1924
Argued October 22, 1924. The action was in assumpsit. The gist of the plaintiff's claim, as averred in his statement, was that the defendants, who were private bankers, had agreed, in consideration of the payment to them by the plaintiff of $535, on September 14, 1917, to cause to be credited to his account in the Russian Government Bank in the City of Moscow, within eight weeks thereafter, the sum of three thousand rubles; and that this had not been done. The proof on the trial, in the shape of incontrovertible documentary evidence, was that the plaintiff on that date bought from the defendants for $525 a draft on the Russian Commercial Industrial Bank of Moscow for 3,000 rubles. And a representative of C.B. Richard Co., defendants' correspondent in New York, testified, without contradiction, — and was supported by his firm's books, — that instructions had been sent by it to said bank to honor this draft against its account when presented for payment, which were duly acknowledged by the bank.
Plaintiff further testified on the trial that on November 16, 1917, defendants had agreed in consideration of the payment of $10 to exchange the above-mentioned draft into American money and return him $525. Again the proof, documentary in character, and, in part, attested by plaintiff's own signature, showed that on November 16, 1917, plaintiff had signed an application to the Government Savings Bank of Moscow for a deposit to be opened in his real name (Mendel Gering) in the amount of 3,000 rubles; and it was shown that advices were promptly sent by the defendants, through their New York correspondent aforesaid, to the Russian Commercial Industrial Bank of Moscow, to cancel the original draft, and if not already paid, to cause to be opened in place thereof a savings account with the Government Savings Bank of Moscow for the said 3,000 *501 rubles, in favor of Mendel Gering, as per plaintiff's application therewith enclosed.
At the conclusion of the testimony the learned trial judge affirmed defendants' point for binding instructions, and subsequently refused a new trial. The reasons given by the court were that the contract proved on the trial was not that set up in the plaintiff's statement, and that "neither under his own testimony, nor upon that offered by the defendants, was plaintiff entitled to recover." In our opinion the action of the court was fully warranted on both grounds. The court would not have been justified in permitting a recovery by the plaintiff in the face of the overwhelming written evidence of the transaction between the parties: Lonzer v. R.R. Co.,
The rule relied upon by the appellant, that an appellate court will not enter judgment non obstante veredicto because of an alleged variance between the pleadings and the proof, when the question was not raised at the trial, (Boyd v. Houghton,
The assignment of error is overruled and the judgment is affirmed.