95 N.C. 358 | N.C. | 1886
(State v. Wall's Executors,
At Fall Term, 1876, an order of reference was made, directing J. D. Shaw to take and state an account between the parties, with power to take testimony, when necessary, and to report at the next term of the Superior Court of Mecklenburg. The commission was executed by the referee, and he made his report, finding both the facts and the law, and showing, as the result, a balance of $26.48 due on February 26th, 1877, by the plaintiff to the defendant.
Numerous exceptions were entered by the plaintiff, and passed upon by the Judge, who overruled them, confirmed the report, and gave the defendant judgment for the sum ascertained to be due him, and for costs, from which the plaintiff appealed. As the findings of fact, where there is any evidence in their support, are conclusive, our appellate jurisdiction can be exercised only in reviewing alleged erroneous rulings in law, and these, as appellant's counsel frankly admits, are few in number, and, in our view, not difficult of disposal.
1. Exception. The debts against Whitlock, Maginnis and N. G. (360) Howell, are stricken from the list of claims that are chargeable against the defendant, because, as the referee reports, they were due to the partnership firm of Wiley Ford, the plaintiff being a member, and were settled in a suit in equity, instituted by Ford against the plaintiff and defendant in 1861, for a settlement of partnership matters, there being no evidence that this suit terminated in a decree, or that the debts were ever paid by the defendant.
Assuming, as we must, that these were partnership funds, they were, or ought to have been, disposed of in that proceeding. We notice but two of these claims, those against Whitlock and Howell, specified in the referee's finding, unless that against "Maginnis" is intended for some other debtor, whose name is miscalled, (and there are other specified debtors in the clause of the report to which the referee's ruling equally applies), but the underlying principle on which the referee acted is common to all.
In the absence of the partner, Ford, from the present suit, unless by his death the joint interest survives, of which we have no information, *318 these claims ought not to have place in the individual account of the plaintiff. This exception is disallowed.
2. Exception. The next exception is to the referee's refusal to charge the defendant with the three notes of Sylvester Weaver, respectively of $100, $85 and $40. The referee reports that these claims were solvent, and it does not appear that they were produced at the hearing, or any explanation offered of their absence.
They are rejected on the ground that no demand was made before suit on defendant for payment or settlement.
The exception must be sustained for the reasons given, for their exclusion from the defendant's debits are wholly insufficient, and without support in law.
(361) The notes not being produced, and no explanation made concerning them, after their having been so long in the defendant's hands, furnishes evidence that the moneys have been collected and misused. It was so held in regard to a constable, acting as a collecting agent, inState v. Wall's Executors,
A demand previous to bringing an action for money collected by an agent, is to enable the latter to pay it over without incurring the cost of suit, for the principal must seek him, and not he the principal. Potter v.Sturges,
3. Exception. The exception to an allowance of interest on the defendant's commissions, cannot be supported. An agent or officer, entitled under contract or by law to compensation, measured by a per centum on the amounts he may collect, is authorized at once to deduct the sum to be retained, and to charge himself with the excess only.
If he does not do this, but charges himself with the whole sum, and credits his account with his commissions, interest should be computed thence on both, and the same precise result is reached as if he had pursued the course just suggested.
The other exceptions relate largely to questions of fact, and are vague in terms, while others, based upon an alleged want of evidence, do not point to the evidence itself, but compel us to search for it in the mass of testimony reported, and we cannot entertain them without a disregard of *319
established practice. They are not considered. Currie v. McNeill,
The account must be reformed as directed in this opinion, and in order thereto, it is referred to the clerk to make the required modification and report, so that final judgment may be entered.
Error. Reversed.
Cited: S. c.,