137 N.Y.S. 1073 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
The plaintiff is a daughter-in-law of the defendant, and brings this action to recover two items, one of $700, alleged to have been loaned to the defendant on the 10th day of January, 1906-, and the other for $353.17, alleged to have been loaned September 28, 1907. She has recovered for the full amount of both claims, and the defendant appeals from the judgment
The plaintiff makes a prima facie case, in so far as the $700 item is concerned, by introducing her check, made payable to the order,of the defendant and collected by him, and her testimony that the same was given as a loan out of funds standing to her credit in the bank on which the check was drawn, and that it has not been repaid. The defendant, however, denies that he ever borrowed this sum of money from the plaintiff. His story of the transaction is that he was doing business as Siebrecht & Son, though the evidence discloses that the plaintiff’s husband, who is one of defendant’s sons, was not a partner in the business; that this son was employed as an agent in the defendant’s nursery business, being paid a salary and five per cent of the profits upon his transactions; that this son collected a sum of money, $763.25, from one of defendant’s customers, and placed it in a bank to the credit of his wife, the plaintiff; that subsequently this came to the attention of the defendant, and he asked the son to return the money, and that the son requested his wife to give a check for the $700 in controversy, which she did, the son writing the check and'the wife signing the same; that later in the day it developed that the plaintiff did not have $700 in the bank on which the check was drawn; that this fact was 'communicated to one See, the defendant’s general financial man, and that Mr. See then took three checks belonging to the defendant, and which had been paid in on account of rents due to him, and deposited them to the credit of the plaintiff’s account, so that the check might not be dishonored. That these checks, aggregating $700, were so deposited is evidenced by the deposit certificates and the books of the bank, and the evidence is not disputed. It might be gathered from the evidence that plaintiff’s husband had authority to indorse checks for collection; even that he had, by custom, the authority to make use of the proceeds on account of his commissions, which were subject to adjustment, so .that it might be contended that if the sum collected from the customer had ' been in the bank to the credit of the plaintiff, she might have had good trúle to it, it being in evidence that she' had been
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.
Jenks, P. J., Thomas, Carr and Rich,, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order ' of the County Court of Westchester county reversed and new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.