88 N.Y.S. 246 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
This appeal is upon the facts as well as upon the law. Upon July 1,1902, the plaintiff claims to have deposited with the defendant a $1,000 bill. This the defendant denies, claiming that the bill deposited was a $100 bill and not a $1,000 bill. These claims present the pivotal fact in the case which has been disposed of by' the jury in favor of the plaintiff. Upon the trial was presented a square conflict of testimony. The plaintiff distinctly swears that the bill deposited was a $1,000 bill, while the defendant’s teller who received the bill swears positively that it was a $100 bill. Evidence was given upon the part of the plaintiff to corroborate his story. It was shown where he received a $1,000 bill a short time before the deposit. Evidence was given on behalf of the defendant to corroborate the contention of the defendant’s teller. Upon making the deposit the deposit ticket was made out by the teller himself as a deposit of $100. Upon plaintiff asking for something to show for the deposit, the teller gave him a bank book upon which was credited a deposit of $100. It was further shown that the cash balanced substantially upon that night, and other witnesses who had drawn out $100 or more in cash upon that day were sworn to the fact that they had received no $1,000 bill given to them as a $100 bill. Upon this conflict of testimony the jury has given credence to the plaintiff’s version of the story, and we are not able to see that the evidence preponderates against their conclusion or that the jury was actuated in reaching their conclusion by any other motive than a desire to ascertain the exact truth.
There were several rulings made during the progress of the trial upon which is based in part the claim of the defendant for a new trial. Upon the plaintiff’s side of the case witnesses were sworn to the, fact that within an hour and a half of the time of the deposit, in a business transaction, in a law office in the city of Kingston, the plaintiff received a $500 bill and a $1,000 bill. This was sworn to by several witnesses who were present without objection on behalf of the defendant. Thereafter Mr. Searing, the attorney, was called to
After having made the deposit, and upon the 12th day of July, 1902, the plaintiff drew two checks, one for $600 and one for $45, against the account. The $45 check was paid, and the $600 check was protested. The defendant objected to the introduction of the $600 check and its objection was overruled, to which ruling an exception was taken. This ruling also is claimed .to have vitiated this verdict. The objection was not made until after the evidence was received, and it may well have been overruled as coming too late. .
This deposit was made upon the 1st day of July, 1902. A bank book was thereupon given to the plaintiff as his receipt. Upon July twelfth, upon receipt of the check for $600, the cashier of the bank telephoned to the plaintiff that he only had $100 in the bank. Thereupon the plaintiff went to the bank with his bank book, and opening it for the first time discovered that the bank book showed a deposit of $100 instead of $1,000. U pan these facts, at the close of the charge, the appellant’s attorney asked the court to charge “ That it was the duty of the plaintiff to look at his pass book wheh he
One other objection is urged to this judgment. The complaint alleged a deposit by the plaintiff of the sum of $1,000, and third, “ That on the 22nd day of July, 1902, the said sum of one thousand' dollars remained in the hands of the defendant on deposit as aforesaid, and on that day plaintiff duly demanded from the defendant the repay ment of said sum to him, but the defendant refused'and still refuses to repay the same.” In the defendant’s answer the deposit of the $1,000 is denied, and the 2d paragraph reads as follows: “ Defendant further denies that on the 22nd day of July, 1902, or at any'other time, the sum of one thousand dollars belonging to or deposited by or for the plaintiff, remained or was in the hands of this defendant on ■
All concurred, except Parker, P. J., dissenting.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.