98 Me. 517 | Me. | 1904
This is an action brought by Irene C. Seavey against Matthew Laughlin as administrator of the estate of Maude S. Ober, late of Brewer, in the County of Penobscot- The claim is alleged to be for money loaned September 18, 1895, by said Seavey to said Ober. The evidence of the alleged loan is a cashier’s check. The verdict was for the plaintiff and the case comes up on motion by the defendant.
On the 18th day of September, 1895, Pebecca J. E. Stanley had a deposit in a bank in Brooklyn, New York, in trust, for her daughter, Irene C. Seavey, the plaintiff, and drew upon the deposit a cheek to her own order, of one hundred and fifty dollars, indorsed it in blank and delivered it to Irene, who took the check, put it in a sheet of writing paper, folded it, and enclosed the check and paper in an
Inference of fact can be found by a jury only from other facts proved. “Inference is a deduction or conclusion from facts or propositions known to be true. When the facts themselves are directly attested, the jury may deduce or infer or presume from them the truth or falsity of the main proposition.” Gates v. Hughes, 44 Wis. 336. Can it be-said, from the admission in the extract of the letter quoted, that it is a fact proved, that it referred to the check in question? The defendant in his brief says, “Two inferences can be drawn from the facts in this case. One is that the money was sent directly to J. Howard Ober and that it was a loan to him. The second is that the check was sent to Maude S. Ober who turned it over to her husband, J. Howard Ober to collect for her, as the check was payable to bearer after the indorsement in blank. But the jury drew the latter inference.” These alternative findings, which the jury were authorized to make, were not based upon facts proven but upon probabilities, what might or might not be so. As before observed, the only evidence before them upon which to base tbe inference was the letter of Maude S. Ober to her sister Irene, but this letter does not in any .way refer to the check as the indebtedness
Verdict set aside. New trial granted.