147 Misc. 401 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1933
This is a motion to set aside the verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiff in an action brought to recover the stun of $7,000. This sum represents the aggregate amount deposited by plaintiff with the Bank of America on various occasions between June 20, 1930, and September 8, 1931, and has not been repaid. The Bank of America was subsequently merged with the defendant. The account was opened by the plaintiff in 1929. At that time she was twenty years of age. In June, 1930, after the plaintiff had reached her majority, and being then apparently unaccustomed to commercial transactions, she was informed by one Lupis, a teller of the bank, that, if she would transfer part of her moneys then on deposit to a special account, and agree to leave the deposit with the bank for one year, she would receive interest at the rate of ten per cent instead of three per cent. The Banking Law (§ 248, subd, 1, as amd. by Laws of 1920, chap. 129, § 2; Laws of 1930, chap.'678, § 32) permits savings banks to accept deposits to be held for definite periods. For the purpose of transferring the sum of $2,500 from the regular to this special account, the plaintiff was
The plaintiff’s testimony that the teller represented to her that it was necessary to sign a withdrawal slip in order to transfer funds from one account to another, that the amounts specified in the withdrawal slips signed by the plaintiff were not turned over to her, that when she signed the withdrawal slips she received in the first instance a pass book of the bank with an entry of the amount purported to have been transferred and the date when it was payable, and that in the later instances an entry of the amounts was made
The motion of the defendant to set aside the verdict and for a new trial is denied. Exception to defendant.