Freer v. Schmitt

116 A.D. 462, 101 N.Y.S. 737, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2694

This text of 116 A.D. 462 (Freer v. Schmitt) 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
Freer v. Schmitt, 116 A.D. 462, 101 N.Y.S. 737, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2694 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The action was for malicious prosecution. The defendant at the end-of the plaintiff’s case moved to . dismiss the complaint,, which. [463]*463motion was granted upon the ground that the plaintiff had failed to prove a lack of probable cause, and from the judgment entered upon that dismissal the plaintiff appeals. The complaint alleged —■ and the answer admitted — that the defendant charged the plaintiff before a magistrate of the city of New York with the crime of grand larceny. As appears from the testinoony of the plaintiff, the facts within the knowledge of the defendant, upon which this charge was made, were as follows: The plaintiff first entered the employ of the Schmitt Brothers, of which the defendant was a partner, on June 3, 1898, and remained in their employ until April 1, 1900. Schmitt Brothers and the Tiffany Glass and Decorating Company were then consolidated under the name of the Allied Arts Company. The plaintiff was not at first employed by the new company, but on December 15, 1900, at- the request of the defendant who was the treasurer of the Allied Arts Company, he went into its employ as bookkeeper. At that time one Alexander was cashier. Plaintiff continued in this position until September, 1901, when the cashier left and the plaintiff was given charge of the office as cashier and office manager, continuing to keep the books. After Alexander left it was discovered that the books were out of balance, and the plaintiff then made a request of the defendant for a new set of books. Plaintiff testified that defendant said that he had engaged an accountant to go over the books; that he knew that they were irregular, but he did not care to incur the expense of a new set of books; but subsequently admitted, on cross-examination, that in" December he made a design for new books which. were ordered on December li, 1901, and those new books were used after the 1st of January, 1902. The plaintiff continued in the employ of the Allied Arts Company .until May 17, 1902, when he left its employ. During this period, from September, 190-1, to May, 1902, the plaintiff, as cashier of the Allied Arts Company, had charge of the cash belonging to the company; made the necessary cash disbursements in carrying on its business and kept the books showing these disbursements. The company employed various foremen to superintend the work that it was doing, and it advanced money to the foreman to be used in paying the necessary expenses, these advances being - made by the plaintiff as cashier, and the charges to be made were entered in the books of the company by the plaintiff. [464]*464The various foremen to whom these advances were made would at the end of each week return slips to the plaintiff showing the amount of money that each foreman had received and the disbursements that he had made on behalf of the company, and showing what amount, if any, of the company’s money he had in his possession at the time of making the report, or in case his disbursements had been in excess of his receipts, showing the amount that there was due to him from the company. On March 6, 1902, one Donohue, one of the company’s foremen, submitted to the plaintiff a slip showing that "at the commencement of that week there was cash due to Donohue $41.51, and that during that week he had expended $100.08, making a total amount due to Donohue qf $141159, which had been marked O. If. by defendant to show that the various disbursements made by the foreman were a proper charge against the company. Plaintiff entered this amount in the cash book'as a disbursement. In the week ending "March 13/1902, Donohue presented to the company another slip which showed two sums of cash received during that week, one, March seventh, $100, .and March thirteenth, $150, making a total of $250. Under the head of expenses there was stated, “Cash due me,"$141.59,” being the amount due to him from the previous week, as shown -from the previous slip"' submitted on March 6, 1902, and various disbursements made during that week aggregating $245.57, leaving a balance on hand of $4.43. This was also O. If. by the defendant and received by the plaintiff, who on March thirteenth entered in the cash book as expenses incurred by Donohue during the -week ending March thirteenth the sum of $245.57, thus charging the company with the sum of $100.08 twice as cash disbursed by Donohue for account of the company. It was conceded that Donohue did not receive this sum of $100.08 twice, and thus to make the cash book balance it would appear that some one other than Donohue must have received from the cash in the plaintiff’s charge this sum of $100.08. The plaintiff admits that he was primarily responsible for all cash payments made in the office to Donohue and to the other foremen. The-entry of-this amount in the book of the company was not discovered at the time the plaintiff left the company on May 17,1902. At that time he went over his accounts and counted up the cash'in his possession, made out a [465]*465statement and submitted that statement to one Thomas, who apparently succeeded him as cashier. Thomas counted the cash and signed a paper stating that the amount was correct. According to this paper it appeared that the plaintiff had a certain amount of cash on hand in the office and that his books called for the same amount of cash, and he then turned over the books, the keys and the cash to Thomas, squaring the whole matter between the plaintiff and the company at that time as shown by the books and the cash in the drawer, and yet at that time (March seventeenth) the cash book contained these duplicate entries. This statement was admitted in evidence. It ' contained a footing on the debit side of the cash book of $75,885.93, on the credit side of the cash book of $60,353.21; bank balance, $13,282.94; petty cash on hand, $346.87, which was turned over by the plaintiff to Thomas, the balance being money in the"hands of workmen and salesmen on the road, and other small items which made the balance correct.

It would appear that without this duplicate charge the cash book should have shown "an additional sum on hand of $100.08 and that amount should have been in the petty cash in the office which was1 in the possession of the plaintiff. These facts were admitted by the plaintiff upon his examination and cross-examination. He offers no explanation as to this condition or as to what had become of this sum of $100.08. It also appeared from the plaintiff’s examination that in the fall of 1901 there was a question raised about a sum of money which had been received by the plaintiff in connection with the purchases by a Dr. Morgan. There was produced a slip in the plaintiff’s handwriting, dated October 3, 1901, with an entry in pencil:

(This meant that certain articles had been purchased in the store by Dr. Morgan and then had come to the plaintiff in payment of such purchase a check for $36 and cash $21.50. A month or more after this a bill was rendered to Dr. Morgan for this amount which was returned by him with a statement that he had paid it, and [466]*466when this was 'shown to the plaintiff by Schmitt he admitted that he had received the $21 in cash and there was no entry, of the $21 in the cash book; that when Schmitt asked the plaintiff about it, the plaintiff said that somebody must have come' and taken it off his desk; that he did not know anything about it; that the money had been placed on the plaintiff’s desk and the check had been placed in the safe and the money had disappeared; that Schmitt then told the plaintiff that the cbmpany could better afford to lose it than he, and nothing more was said about it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Burt v. . Smith
73 N.E. 495 (New York Court of Appeals, 1905)
Willard v. . Holmes, Booth Haydens
37 N.E. 480 (New York Court of Appeals, 1894)
Rawson v. Francis H. Leggett
77 N.E. 682 (New York Court of Appeals, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 A.D. 462, 101 N.Y.S. 737, 1906 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freer-v-schmitt-nyappdiv-1906.