34 N.Y.S. 772 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
The plaintiff presented to defendant, as administrator, a claim against the estate of Nicholas E. Brodhead for $625 and interest, for money alleged to have been collected by deceased of the firm of George B. Merritt & Co. for the plaintiff. Defendant doubting the justice of said demand, the matter in controversy was referred, pursuant to the statute. The referee, after hearing the proofs and allegations of the parties, made findings in favor of the plaintiff, and judgment was duly entered thereon. Defendant now appeals, on the ground that the judgment is unsupported by the evidence. We have therefore carefully read and considered the testimony in the case. While it is possible that the referee could have properly reached a different conclusion than the one arrived at on the question of fact submitted to him, we are of opinion that, on the evidence, this court cannot properly reverse the judgment on the facts.
It appeared upon the trial that the deceased, as an officer of plaintiff, collected of G. B. Merritt & Co., by their check drawn on the plaintiff, $625 on June 8, 1891; that the money was drawn from the bank on said check; that for a time the $625 so drawn was pinned fast to a slip of paper, and laid aside in the vault; that it lay there for some time; that afterwards said money had been taken from the vault. It also appeared that Mr. Brodhead left the bank as cashier on July 31, 1891. After that, the witness Hume, the then cashier, testified that he had a conversation with Brodhead, and asked him what had become of the $625 which was to be applied on G. B. Merritt & Co.’s indebtedness. Brodhead replied: “I am holding it for the present.” Hume testified further that “neither the $625 nor any part thereof has been paid to the bank to be applied on the indebtedness of G. B. Merritt & Co.” The evidence of the witness Hume was not contradicted. No attack was made on his character. He was an officer of the plaintiff, inquiring of an ex-officer as to $625 collected by the latter. Brodhead then told him, after he had left the employ