Opinion by
For about thirty years plaintiff and defendant were associated together as partners in the coal business, plaintiff being in a general way the financial manager and defendant the “outside man.” Dissensions having sprung up a few years ago between them, the partnership was dissolved by mutual consent, eventually this suit was instituted mainly to settle the rights of the respective parties upon the distribution of the fund raised by the sale of the firm property. The trial and decision of the case were by counsel for the parties committed to a referee. Both parties have appealed from the decree of the court. We are now considering the plaintiff’s appeal and it involves two items; a check of December 6,1902, for $1,404.80 and another of January 31, 1903, for $1,-616.10. These amounts as will appear were actually drawn out of the assets of the firm and the question is were they ever repaid. The referee, in his first report, found that they were not, but upon the case being reopened at the instance of the plaintiff, he changed his finding and found that the amounts represented by the
We have stated that the claim of the defendant as to these checks was met in the first place by an absolute denial, both by the plaintiff and his son. Upon the rehearing, they changed their testimony and admitted the checks were drawn by the appellant from the partnership fund of Runyeon & Eaches for a purpose not connected with the business of the firm. Both checks had been, as is claimed, temporary loans to the Reading Hosiery Company to make up the pay rolls of that company and were repaid by the hosiery company by checks on the Reading National Bank. The checks of the Reading Hosiery Company were not produced but it is stated they were deposited to the account of the partnership, not the identical amounts appearing but larger amounts as shown in the bank book. The plaintiff has no positive recollection as to these facts but he draws these conclusions by reason of the fact that the usual deposits of the company were small and these larger deposits appearing about these dates, they must have included the amounts in dispute. The deposit slips were not available having been destroyed by the bank. The court found against the plaintiff on these two items and we cannot support the conclusion better than by employing the very language of
The decree so far as the items involved in this appeal are concerned is affirmed. Appellant to pay the costs.