Frost v. M'Carger

14 How. Pr. 131
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 14 How. Pr. 131 (Frost v. M'Carger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frost v. M'Carger, 14 How. Pr. 131 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

Marvin, Justice.

The plaintiffs are nurserymen, engaged in the business of selling fruit-trees and shrubbery in or near Rochester. The defendant was a young man—his father’s family residing in Orleans county, in this state. He spent a portion of the summer and fall of 1856 in the state of Wisconsin, in obtaining orders and contracts for the delivery and sale of trees, and nursery articles. In October he visited the plaintiffs, and made an arrangement with them by which he sold and assigned to them the orders and contracts obtained by him, for the consideration, as expressed in the contract, of the sum of $2,648.43; and he authorized the plaintiffs, through him, to fill the orders and contracts, and to receive the full sum of $2,648.43, with any expenses they should incur in -delivering the trees, or in collecting the money therefor. He accepted the agency from the plaintiffs to deliver the trees, and receive for them the pay, until they should receive the aforesaid sum; and he agreed to remit to the plaintiffs, as collected, by drafts on New-York, until the full sum aforesaid should be paid to them, and thereupon the plaintiffs were to assign to him and release all further interest in the orders and contracts. The plaintiffs agreed to perform on their part. The contract was in writing.

The plaintiffs furnished the trees and nursery property, and, upon their arrival in Wisconsin, the defendant delivered them to the respective purchasers, and received the pay therefor. He made no remittances to the plaintiffs. Early in December, the plaintiffs received letters from the defendant, written at Madison, in Wisconsin, informing them that he had delivered the trees and received the money, amounting to $5,800, and had lost all the proceeds of the sales except $280. The allegation of the defendant is, that the money was in a pocketbook, in a side coat-pocket, and that it was stolen from him while in the cars near Madison, or at the depot in Madison, on the 17th day of November, 1856.

[134]*134The causes of action, as shown in the complaint, may as well be stated here. It will be necessary hereafter to recur to the positions taken by the parties, and to the character of the affidavits.

The plaintiffs, in their first cause of action, allege, substantially, that they appointed and constituted the defendant their agent and servant to deliver the property owned by them to the purchasers, or contractors, in Wisconsin, and to receive the money to be paid therefor. That the defendant accepted the appointment; that the property [trees,&c.J was placed in his hands; that the defendant delivered the property to the contractors and purchasers, and received therefor the sum of $2,648.43, over and above expenses. That the defendant being so possessed of the money belonging to plaintiffs, and being their agent and servant, with intent to embezzle the same, did, on or about the 17th day of November, at Madison, fraudulently, &c., secrete and make way with, and convert to his own use, the money— the property of the plaintiffs, to the amount of $2,648.43, and wholly neglecled and.-refused to produce and pay over to the plaintiffs the money, or any part of it.

The second cause of action is for a conversion of the money.

I shall not attempt to set forth here the substance of the affidavits read upon the motion. There were some thirty of them. They were mostly taken in Wisconsin—both parties having resorted to witnesses there, mainly upon the litigated question, whether the defendant had actually lost any money. Upon this question the evidence adduced by the plaintiffs, as furnished by the affidavits, is entirely circumstantial—consisting of a great variety of facts, tending pretty strongly to produce conviction that no money was lost by the defendant. Some of the facts stated in the affidavits are mere hearsay.

On the part of the defendant, we have his positive affidavit of the loss of the money and of the circumstances, and of his acts and doings in the premises. Also, many affidavits in which facts are stated explanatory of facts and circumstances put forth in the affidavits read on behalf of the plaintiffs, and some affidavits tending to show the loss of the money.

[135]*135The plaintiffs allege that the defendant was a non-resident of this state; also, that he was about to remove to the state of Missouri, and the affidavits read by the plaintiffs tend to establish these allegations. Those read by the defendant tend to prove the contrary, and that defendant’s residence is Orleans county, in this state.

The principal positions taken by defendant’s counsel are,

1. That the affidavits, upon which the order of arrest was made, do not show a cause of action for which the defendant was liable to arrest.

2. Assuming that the affidavits first used were prima facie sufficient, then taking all the affidavits, as read on this motion, upon the question of embezzlement or conversion, the plaintiffs fail to establish any cause of action : or rather, as a naked question of fact, the weight of evidence is with the defendant; and that the court, upon this motion, must decide upon the cause of action in the same manner it would decide were the cause actually tried by the court, and the same evidence should be produced.

3. As to the residence of the defendant, or his intention to leave the state, the position is the same, viz., that they are questions of fact to be decided by the court, and that the weight of evidence is with the defendant.

The first question arises from the nature of the relations existing between the plaintiffs and defendant, as disclosed by the affidavit of one of the plaintiffs, in which the contract between the parties, as substantially hereinabove stated, is set forth. This written contract was probably drawn by the parties. It is brief, and not very artistic. That the parties intended to create a special agency and trust in the defendant, I have no doubt. The affidavits disclose the nature of the business of the plaintiffs, and the special manner of conducting it by agents. The agents receive the trees and shrubbery, deliver them, or sell and deliver them, receive the pay, and immediately, upon the first opportunity, remit to the plaintiffs.

It appears, from the contract, that the plaintiffs purchased of the defendant all the orders he had taken, and all the contracts [136]*136he had made in Wisconsin for trees, &c., and the authority to fulfil them through the defendant, and to receive the pay therefor to the amount of $2,648.43. The defendant accepts the agency to deliver the trees, &c., and receive for the plaintiffs the pay, until they should receive the amount, $2,648.43, and he, their agent, to remit to the plaintiffs, as collected, by draft on New-York, until the full sum aforesaid should be paid to the plaintiffs, and then the plaintiffs are to re-assign and release all further interest in the orders and contracts to the defendant.

By the Code, § 179, subdivision 1, a defendant may be arrested, for injuring or for wrongfully taking, detaining, or converting property; and, by subdivision 2, for money received or property embezzled, or fraudulently misapplied, by a public officer, and by an attorney, solicitor, or counsellor, or by an officer or agent of a corporation, or banking association, in the course of his employment as such, or by any factor, agent, broker, or other person in a fiduciary capacity.

The defendant was an agent. Was he an agent in a ¿fiduciary capacity? I think he was.

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Bluebook (online)
14 How. Pr. 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frost-v-mcarger-nysupct-1857.