11 A.D. 551 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
Appellant carried on a banking business at Addison for several years prior to the death of Mrs. Weatherby, who was his sister, and associated with him in the business as partners were Henry Baldwin, his brother, and his sister, Sarah Weatherby, the testatrix. “They did not put in any capital and nothing was said about profits; they simply lent their names for credit.” The assets of the bank all belonged to the appellant. Mrs. Weatlierby’s name was connected with the bank in April, 1880. The appellant carried on a general banking business, ..receiving and paying out moneys, having personal supervision thereof, and aided át times by clerks and employees. The business of the appellant as a banker was carried on substantially in the same manner down to the time of the trial. The bank had no stated capital, and relied for its credit upon the individual responsibility of the parties associated in the bank.
Appellant insists that the notes mentioned in the ninth finding of fact are barred by the Statute of Limitations. By the evidence it appears that some eleven years antecedent to the death of the tes
In the course of the opinion delivered in Sayles v. Olmstead (66 Barb. 590) the court said: “ There is no principle better settled than that where one pays money to. another, in the absence of any explanation as to the cause of the payment, the presumption is that it was paid because it was due, and not by way of a loan.”
Appellant calls our attention to Crow v. Gleason (141 N. Y. 493). In that case it was said: “ If there be a mere naked payment of money, without anything to show on what account, or for what reason the money was paid, the payment will be of no avail under the statute. The payment must be made under such circumstances-as to show a recognition of a larger debt remaining unpaid.”
We think the circumstances disclosed by the evidence in this. ' case very clearly indicate that the appellant, when he advanced the moneys to his sister in the manner and under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence, intended to have the same applied on the indebtedness which she held against him, and that she, on receiving the money, under the circumstances, intended to apply the same on the notes which she held against him. The confidential relations existing between brother and sister, to which were superadded the confidence which she had reposed in him by loaning to him her name, in his business as banker, as well as the interpretation wliich he put upon the circumstances when he held the interview with his co-executor, quite satisfactorily indicate that it was the understanding of the parties, at the time that the several advances were made, that the money should be applied upon the indebtedness which she held in notes against him. The facts disclosed by the evidence in this case differ very essentially from those in the case of Crow v. Gleason (141 N. Y. 493).
In Steven v. Lord (32 N. Y. Supp. 309) it appeared that payments on account of the interest upon the note in suit were made ■every year between July, 1880, and July, 1892, and that, under the circumstances disclosed in that case, there was manifest a full recognition of the note as an outstanding unpaid obligation, and that, therefore, the Statute of Limitations did not apply.
There was no proof given of any agreement on the part of Mrs. Weatherby to pay interest upon overdrafts; nor was she at any ■time notified or required to make payment of interest on the overdrafts, and the acquiescence of the brother banker in the overdrafts apparently was upon the understanding that the same were caused with the intention on her part of securing from him the interest due to her upon the notes which she held against him.
The testimony of what took place when the inventory was prepared and of the interviews between the appellant and Mr. Manley, shed considerable light upon the intention of the apj>ellant in respect to the advances made to his sister, and, coupled with the acts and payments actually made, support the conclusion of fact pronounced in the surrogate’s findings and warrant his conclusion of law that the Statute of Limitations was not a defense to the notes.
The foregoing views lead to an affirmance of those parts of the decree appealed from.
All concurred.
Portions of the surrogate’s decree appealed from affirmed, with costs against the appellant.