54 Mich. 560 | Mich. | 1884
Van Ness, who was Hadsell’s successor as county treasurer of Cass county, sued the latter and recovered for a balance of $800, for which plaintiff had accounted as received from defendant, when in fact there was so much not turned over to him. A good many errors are assigned, but they rest on a few grounds.
We can see no reason why recovery was not proper under the common counts. The money in question was county money which defendant claimed to have accounted for to plaintiff as his successor, and which plaintiff originally supposed had been accounted for, and so credited to the county as against himself. It became plaintiff’s money by his settlements, and he was the person to whom it should have been paid by defendant. It is a very simple case.
The objection that charging himself and reporting it to the county as funds on hand, under his arrangement with defendant, was a compounding of felony and unlawful, is of no force. It may have shown that defendant got some advantage of .plaintiff in persuading him that the account should be made good, if incorrect, and so inducing him to assume the burden ; but it was no wrong in plaintiff to pay the county what defendant ought to have paid, and had agreed to make good if the accounts were incorrect.
Neither is there any force in the argument that, because plaintiff, in his accounting, charged himself in favor of the county with this money, he is estopped from claiming that defendant had not actually paid it to him. The county might, with some force, set up a claim that he should make good his own representations and admissions, if he had attempted to evade them; but no one else had any concern in his entries. The idea that a debtor, because some one else has been induced by him to advance money to the creditor on his behalf, can repudiate his liability to refund the advances, is not veiy plausible.
The defendant’s entries on his own official books were evi
We see no pertinency in the attempt to inquire into plaintiff’s private business or his bank account. It could not under any offer that was made, have had any bearing on the issue whether defendant had paid him. There was no offer to prove anything which would have thrown light on this fact.
If defendant’s defense rested on receipts which he claimed as covering the money in question, the court was quite correct in holding that he must either produce them or give some, good reason for not doing so. This is required as a foundation for secondary evidence.
It was not error to hold that when defendant’s books showed a receipt of money from a township, which he desired to dispute and claimed to have been a changed entry, he should have resorted to the township treasurer to show it was not paid to him. The court did not shut out any other testimony, but this was obviously a proper suggestion, as it must be presumed the town treasurer would take and preserve vouchers of his payments, and would have means of recalling or disputing them.
The judge does not seem to have been favorably impressed with the defense, but we find nothing in his remarks, so far .as covered by any exception, to indicate that he gave any wrong rulings, or in any way misled the jury, or interfered with their functions.
The judgment must be affirmed.