Judges: Brien, Ingraham
Filed Date: 5/5/1899
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This i§ an action to recover moneys claimed to ■ have been loaned to the defendants as a firm, and never to have ■ been repaid. The complaint alleges that a partnership existed be- ■ tween the three defendants for the buying and selling of horses, - and that the plaintiff loaned various sums to this firm which were ■ never returned. ' The defendant Antony, who is the husband of the ■plaintiff, did not defend; but Dickel and Kroehle answered, denying the partnership, .the receipt of the money by them, and, as a separate defense, alleged an accord and satisfaction. There is no meal dispute as to the agreement between the plaintiff’s husband ¡and Dickel and Kroehle. The latter were a firm engaged in conducting a riding academy, and the plaintiff’s husband at the time of the arrangement was engaged in giving riding lessons in their academy. Apart from the business of the academy, the three agreed to go into the business of buying and selling horses; and whether w.e call it a partnership or a joint venture, or by some-
It is conceded that the. plaintiff advanced moneys to the amount for which she recovered a verdict; and the jury was called upon to determine whether she loaned the same to her husband, or to her husband jointly with the other defendants. The plaintiff testified positively that, as the result of an agreement made, the moneys were loaned to the three, and she details the persons to whom the several sums were given at different times. From her testimony it would appear that the amounts were paid directly to either member of the firm of Dickel & Kroehle or their bookkeeper, Edward Dickel, except in a single instance, when, at the request other husband, she gave to him personally the cash to purchase a horse from a Mr. Standish. That this horse was so purchased and placed in the riding academy, subject to the control of the three defendants, is not disputed. We have therefore the positive assertion of the plaintiff, and the equally positive denial by defendants, that any such arrangement was made, or that any moneys were loaned to them; and there were thus presented questions of fact, for the determination of the jury, as to whether the sums were loaned to the three defendants, or advanced to the defendant Antony alone. The evidence on this issue is not so preponderating in defendants’ favor as to justify our setting aside the verdict as against the weight of evidence. With regard to the defense of a settlement, or, what is practically an accord and satisfaction, it appears that in June, 1894, an adjustment of accounts was had between the defendant Antony and Dickel & Kroehle, by which, in payment of a credit in Antony’s favor on the books, 20 shares of stock were given him in the Dickel & Kroehle Riding Academy -Company, a corporation formed at that time, which took over the ■assets of the firm of Dickel & Kroehle. Were this question one between the defendants alone, then the form of the receipt given at the time by Antony for the stock (from which receipt it appears that the shares were given in full payment of his claim against the other two defendants) would be nearly, if not quite, conclusive. The defendants Dickel & Kroehle undertake, however, to hold the plaintiff bound by this settlement made with her husband in June, 1894, and their contention is that, as she was present at the meeting when the adjustment was had, she must have understood, as they then informed her, that the settlement embraced all the dealings between the parties; including her advances of money. The plaintiff, however, did not sign or join with her husband in the receipt then given, and the stock was not made out in her name; and ■she insists—and to some extent she is supported by her husband, whose testimony, however, is not complete or satisfactory—that
With the purpose of reaching a conclusion concerning these conflicting contentions, and of determining, what was actually included in the. settlement, we take up the statement of the account as it.appears in the exhibits. We are not materially aided; for, although there are many items relating to the purchase of certain horses, which items correspond with amounts set forth in the particulars given in the complaint of moneys loaned by the plaintiff, it does not therein appear whether horses other than those specified were bought by the other defendants, nor how many horses were sold, nor what were the profits. It is merely, therefore, a •partial account showing that some horses were bought by Antony at prices for which he was credited on the books, and it does not fully describe the transactions or dealings of the parties in their purchase and sale of horses. We have no statement of what, if anything, the other defendants advanced or contributed; nor do the exhibits purport in any way to refer or relate to advances made by the plaintiff, except in so far as the inference might be drawn that the plaintiff advanced the moneys directly to her husband for the purchase of such of the horses as are mentioned in the account. A slight consideration, therefore, shows that from these exhibits, upon which the defendants place so much reliance, no inference can be satisfactorily drawn that the settlement was understood by the plaintiff as including her claims, or that the stock given to her husband' was an adjustment of all differences. And that the plaintiff did not so understand that there was a final settlement, we think, appears from the fact that she refused to-sign any receipt, and, as she says, insisted then, as she has ever since, that she was entitled to receive back the money advanced by her, which money, she states, the defendants have repeatedly promised to repay her. Upon this state of the record, we do not see how the learned judge below could have made any other disposition of the controversy than by submitting the issue, as he did, to the jury, as a disputed question of fact.
So, also, the defendants’ contention that the plaintiff assented to and ratified the settlement made in June, 1894, as payment, of her claims by bringing to them subsequently the certificate for the 20 shares given to her husband, Antony, and receiving and receipting for $535 in cash, and two new certificates of stock, one for six and the other for seven shares, is met by the plaintiff’s statement that she received the money and the certificates, and gave the receipt in behalf of her husband and in payment of profits due him.
With the jury’s verdict, solving all the disputed questions in> favor of the plaintiff, we do not think that we should interfere,