Aspell v. Campbell

64 A.D. 393, 72 N.Y.S. 76
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 64 A.D. 393 (Aspell v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aspell v. Campbell, 64 A.D. 393, 72 N.Y.S. 76 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Woodward, J.:

Counter appeals are before us in the record, but in view of the conclusion we have reached, it will not be necessary to consider [394]*394the question raised by the plaintiff’s appeal, and the discussion will relate, therefore, to the facts developed upon the trial of the cause before a referee, in which the defendant is held to be liable for $750, with interest, which sum it is alleged the defendant fraudulently retained out of the receipts of the estate of a lunatic of whom the original defendant in this action was the committee.It seems entirely clear to us that the matters set forth are of equitable cognizance, and we have no doubt, if the plaintiff’s theory of this case is supported by the evidence, that a right of recovery exists, and that it is not barred by any Statute of Limitations. Disregarding all merely technical matters, in so far as they relate to ■the plaintiff’s case, and without giving anything more than an equitable consideration to the important question which was raised upon the death of the original defendant without an opportunity to be heard in explanation of the matters as to which he is alleged to have made admissions against his interest to the original plaintiff, all of which matters were in evidence, let us consider the merits of this case, to the end that we may determine whether the high offices of a court of equity may be properly invoked in aid of the plaintiff. In 1858 Thomas J. Curtice, a resident of the village of. Florida, Warwick township, Orange county, was adjudged to be a lunatic, and Lewis M. Jayne was duly appointed committee of such lunatic, giving a bond in the penal sum of $55,000 for the faithful, discharge of the’ duties of the trust. Mr. Curtice was confined in an asylum for a period of several years, but on the 8th day of June, 1863,-upon his petition, supported by the affidavits of Mr. Jayne, his committee, Dr. Jayne, a brother of the committee (who is incidentally involved in the controversy as will hereafter appear^ and others, he was'adjudged to have recovered his mental faculties and a supersedeas was duly entered, Mi’- Curtice coming into the immediate possession of his property. On the day on which the order -of the court was. made superseding the commission in lunacy, Mr. Jayne had a settlement of his accounts with Mr. Curtice, in which a detailed state.ment of all transactions with the property of Mr. Curtice during the period of his lunacy was made to the latter, and the money and property then in the possession or control of the committee was. turned over to Mr. Curtice. According to the statement made to Mr. Curtice, which is in harmony with the only .account book which [395]*395appears to have been kept, and with the sworn statement made and filed with the clerk of the courts of Orange county on the 17th day •of March, 1863, Mr. Jayne, on the 19th day of December, 1861, sold 100 shares of stock in the Cleveland and Toledo Railroad Company, par value $50 per share, for $1,500, or at the rate of $30 per share, and Mr. Curtice, in an affidavit made in the present action, says, in reference to this transaction, that at the time cf the settlement Mr. Jayne said to him: “ Thomas, I am very sorry that I have sold your railroad stock, but it is all gone; I sold the last hundred shares December 19, 1861, * * * and I have credited you with the full amount in each case ; I did so at the date when I sold and assigned the stock. I assigned the last 100 shares to DeWitt C. Jayne, Dec. 19, 1861, and the stock was very low at that time.” In this account Mr. Jayne charged himself with the amount realized for the stock, as well as the interest up to the day of the annual statement of the account on the 14th day of April, 1862, and from the date of the settlement in 1863 up to the 16th day of June, 1887, no complaint was heard by any one, so far as the record discloses, that the settlement was not fair, just and equitable in every respect. On the date last above mentioned Mr. Curtice testifies that he went to Mr. Jayne and complained to him that there was a discrepancy in the books, something very wrong; that he -(Curtice) had discovered that Mr. Jayne had not sold the 100 shares of stock in the Cleveland •and Toledo Railroad Company on the 19th day of December, 1861, but that the stock was actually sold on the 14th day of April, 1862, at which time the price had advanced to $45 per share, making a difference of $750. in the transaction, and this is the basis of the recovery in the present action, all of the other alleged causes of action set up in the complaint having been either abandoned or dis- - regarded by the learned referee. It is claimed that at this meeting Mr. Jayne, without admitting any liability, or that the stock was sold on any other date than that mentioned in the sworn report filed with the clerk of the court, gave to Mr. Curtice a note of the latter, payable to Mr. Jayne for $200, upon which there was $12 of interest -due, with $100 in cash, making a total of $312, and that Mr. Curtice thereupon gave a receipt in full of all demands to June 17, 1887. In fact, it is conceded that this transaction took place. Hothing more appears to have been done until about the 10th of [396]*396February, 1888, when Mr.. Curtice employed an attorney, a Mr. Rowe,‘and the latter visited Mr. Jayne. ■ The interview appears to have resulted in nothing substantial to Mr. Curtice, though the testimony of Mr. Rowe is replete with matters of a general nature which might be. construed into' admissions, and subsequently Mr. Jayne gave Mr. Curtice various sums of money, aggregating, with the amount already mentioned, $1,042. The first of these, subsequent to the transaction in 1887, was $250, in April, 1892; the second $250 in August, 1892, and the third $230 in May, 1893. In September, 1893, Mr. Curtice brought the present action against Lewis M. Jayne. Issues were joined on the 25th day of September, 1893, and the case was subsequently, by consent, referred to Hon. T.' F. Bush to hear and determine. The cause was bn trial until some time in September,. 1896, when the plaintiff rested and a motion was made to dismiss the complaint, which motion was duly argued and decision reserved by the learned referee, the further hearing of the case being adjourned. Before a decision of this motion was reached, and in the month' of ¡November, 1896, the defendant Lewis M. Jayne died intestate, a resident of the county of Orange; Thereafter Frank H. Campbell was duly appointed administrator of the goods, chattels and credits of the said Lewis M. Jayne, and subsequently motion papers were served on the attorney for said Jayne, but without notice to' the administrator, and .on or about the 1st day of May, 1897, and without any.appearance upon the part of the attorney for the said Lewis M. Jayne, an order was made reviving the action and substituting the said Frank II. Campbell as administrator, etc., in the place and stead of the said Lewis M. Jayne. The representatives of Mr. Jayne refused to recognize the validity of this order, resulting in subsequent proceedings and the entry of an order of substitution of a like tenor, and a motion having been made to set aside such order, and refused, an appeal was . taken, which has not a's yet been determined. The referee, after the denial of the motion to set aside the substitution of the said' Frank II. Campbell, iixed a time and place for the further hearing of the case, and, upon the parties appearing, such proceedings were had as resulted iu' a submission of the issues-arising therein to the said referee. - In August, 1898, the referee rendered his decision, the judgment was perfected on the 19th day [397]

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Bluebook (online)
64 A.D. 393, 72 N.Y.S. 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aspell-v-campbell-nyappdiv-1901.