117 N.Y.S. 177 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1909
The action is for an accounting of all transactions had by the firm of Hopkins Brothers, of which the defendant is the surviving member, for the account or in the name of the plaintiff, and for any stocks, bonds or other property belonging to the plaintiff, and particularly of all moneys received or paid out in her name or for her account. The complaint also asks that the defendant be decreed to pay over to her any sum found due her on the accounting. There is no dispute as to the facts in this case. .The defendant did not offer any evidence, but relies entirely upon the facts proved by the plaintiff to establish certain defenses pleaded and hereinafter mentioned. In 1898 the plaintiff received several legacies from England. With this money, on the advice of her husband and several friends, she purchased ten $1,000 bonds of various railroads, and also ten shares of the preferred stock of the H. B. Claflin Co. and ten shares of Western Union stock. These securities she intrusted to her husband to be put in the safe of the company where her husband was employed for safe keeping. Later, on the advice of her husband, she determined to sell the Olaflin and Western Union stocks and invest the proceeds in the bonds of the Erie Telephone & Telegraph Company. For this purpose she indorsed the two certificates of stock
Ordered accordingly.