96 N.Y.S. 90 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
Plaintiff has recovered judgment awárding her possession of three. notes of $500 each made to her order by one Mary C. Eagan. In June, 1902, the plaintiff, negotiated with the said Mary C. Eagan the sale of a floating bath in the city of Mew York. Upon that sale $1,200 in cash was paid to the plaintiff, and the three notes in question were given to her as part of the purchase price. These notes were indorsed by the plaintiff in blank. They afterwards came into the possession of the defendant, who held them at the time of the commencement of the action, claiming to have received them from a brother of the plaintiff, to wit, one Charles E. Krack. The evidence of the plaintiff was to the effect that these notes were feloniously taken from her possession by the said Charles E. Krack, and that the defendant had neither the. title nor the right to the possession of the same. The plaintiff claimed the title to the floating bath in question under the last will and testament of her mother, Sarah Krack, who was confessedly at one time the owner of this bath. In said last will, with the exception of a ten-dollar legacy to her brother, this plaintiff was the sole legatee. After the plaintiff had given evidence of the receipt and her possession of these notes, and of the unlawful abstraction thereof by Charles E. Krack, the
The defendant contends upon this appeal that the court in its charge .ignored the right of the defendant to the possession of these notes as a bona fide holder, for value, irrespective of the finding of the jury upon the questions submitted, to them. The respondent does not question the legal proposition which the appellant asserts, that if the defendant were a bona fide holder of these notes, the plaintiff could not recover whether or not they were abstracted from the plaintiff by Charles Krack, and whether or not the plaintiff was the lawful owner of the floating bath at the time of the sale. The question as to the bona fides of the defendant was not submitted to the jury. There was no request by defendant’s counsel that the question should be submitted to the jury. Ho exception whatever was taken to the charge of the court except the exception noted above. Defendant' contends that this exception is sufficient notice
. Several exceptions are urged to the rulings of the court in admitting and excluding evidence1. . The memorandum by the surrógáte’s clerk upon the back of the petition of the plaintiff in her application for letters testamentary was properly excluded as hearsay evidence. The testimony of the physician as to the condition of Sarah Krack at and about the time she executed this bill of sale was properly admitted upon the waiver of professional secrecy by the plaintiff as the executrix of Sarah Krack. The testimony of Rash as to what occurred at the time of the attempted execution of the power of attorney was admissible as part of the res gestes as it appears that the bill of sale of the bathhouse to the Knickerbocker Bathing Company in question was afterwards executed upon the statement of Charles Krack that it was the same paper which was discussed with Rash at this time. We have examined the other exceptions to which reference is made and find no error which calls for the reversal of this judgment.
The judgment and order should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred ; Houghton, J., not voting, not being a member of this court at the time this decision was handed down.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.