(after stating the facts). — I. It is clear that under the law and the evidence plaintiff had no right to recover from Friedman the $455 which was not received by Friedman bnt was paid directly to Syrett by Lang’s agent, and as instructions numbered 4, 5 and 7, offered by the plaintiff and refused by the court, proceeded on the theory that he could so recover, the trial court did not err in refusing them. This is not an action for damages against the defendant and cannot be treated as such.' It is purely ex contractu, assumpsit for money had and received, to mantain which it was necessary for plaintiff to establish that defendant had received his money, or that Syrett had received it as defendant’s agent or for their joint benefit. It was not sufficient to show merely that defendant had acquiesced in or requested the payment to be made to Syrett, the plaintiff not being misled into the belief that he was thereby making a payment to defendant. [N. Y. Guar. & Ind. Co. v. Gleason et al.,
II. The court rightly authorized a verdict for defendant if the jury found that he received the $250 as the disclosed agent of Syrett, and paid it over on his principal’s order before he had knowledge that the deeds to plaintiff were forged. “It is a complete defense to to an action brought against an agent for money, which was voluntarily paid to him as agent, that he has paid the money over to his principal without notice of any claim thereto on the part of the plaintiff, from whom he received the money, the reason therefor is that' in legal contemplation the payment
The judgment is affirmed.
