127 N.Y. 355 | NY | 1891
The subject of controversy is a claim made by the plaintiffs' testatrix, who has died since the trial, against the estate of the defendants' testator and referred pursuant to the statute. Those persons intermarried in the year 1859, and shortly thereafter the husband took the possession, care and management of the separate estate of his wife, consisting of property both real and personal, and opened and kept an account of the rents, issues, profits and income of the property and of disbursements and payments until near the time of his death, which occurred March 23, 1887. The referee found that certain of such disbursements so charged from and after September 15, 1869, to Mrs. Johnson were on his own account, in payment of his debts and moneys given to Mrs. Johnson to pay for clothing and other necessaries suitable to her position in society; and that of the money so received by him he "retained and never paid over" to her the sum of $7,814.83, the amount of items improperly charged against such rents, profits and income which he received, and directed judgment for that sum against the defendants. The account through that period of time consisted of a large number of items debited and credited to the defendants' testator. And the plaintiffs' claim was founded upon such account and made up of items alleged to have been improperly credited by the husband to himself as for disbursements and payments to and on account of Mrs. Johnson. A portion of them was entered in the account more than six years prior to the death of the *359
defendants' testator and some of them within that time. And to the refusal of the referee to find that the claim on such of them in question as were entered prior to March 23, 1881, was barred by the Statute of Limitations, the defendants excepted, and now insist that such refusal was error. It may be observed that the amount of such rents, profits and income received by and debited to Mr. Johnson within six years preceding his death exceeded the amount of the recovery; and in view of the rule that payments made upon an account will, if nothing appears to the contrary, be deemed applied upon the earlier items of it, the amount remaining unpaid may be found in or represented by the later ones. And for that purpose the moneys represented by entries of disbursements improperly made or charged by the defendants' testator on his own account would be treated in behalf of his wife as still remaining in his hands. Applying that rule to the present case the claim would be relieved from the bar of the statute. (Thompson v. St.Nicholas Nat. Bank,
Although the evidence may have warranted the conclusion that such was the effect of the several balances so represented, it cannot, as matter of law, be so held, as it does not necessarily appear that it was done by the consent or acquiescence of the plaintiffs' testatrix. This was at least a question of fact for the determination of the referee, and there was no error in his refusal to find as so requested.
There is a further inquiry presenting the question of the sufficiency of proof to justify the allowance of items in the account of cash which the referee found was given to Mrs. Johnson "to pay for clothing and other necessaries." It embraced such entries without anything appearing in connection with them showing the purpose for which the moneys were given to her, and as they appear in the account as disbursements they, without some explanation, must be deemed *360
to have been properly charged as such, since the account was put in evidence by her. The only other evidence on the subject having relation to the use to which the moneys were applied was given by her testimony as follows: "Q. The cash items that are charged against you in the account. What was the cash used for? A. For my support and clothing and a great deal that I needed and household expenses." To the introduction of this evidence objection and exception were in due time taken by the defendants' counsel. And if it tended to prove the purpose for which the money was given to her by the defendants' testator it was inadmissible. (Tooley v.Bacon,
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.