Slotnick v. Silberstein

108 N.E. 899, 221 Mass. 59, 1915 Mass. LEXIS 783
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 19, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 108 N.E. 899 (Slotnick v. Silberstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slotnick v. Silberstein, 108 N.E. 899, 221 Mass. 59, 1915 Mass. LEXIS 783 (Mass. 1915).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

The plaintiff under an account annexed seeks to recover of the defendant $350 as a balance due for labor performed and materials furnished. After offering evidence tending to show that he made a contract personally with the defendant and that the defendant was the real owner of the premises upon which the work was done and the material furnished, he admitted that his books contained a charge solely against Louis Silberstein, in whose name stood the title to the premises; that his receipts for payments on account ran to Louis Silberstein; and that checks received on account were payable to and indorsed by Louis Silberstein to him; but he contended that the manner of bookkeeping and of receipt and bill making was in accordance with a suggestion of the defendant that it be “done that way.” It further was admitted that he made out a bill for some extras to Louis, and that he formerly had done jobs for the defendant personally which he conceded were the defendant’s own jobs.

[60]*60The paramount question in this case was whether the credits were knowingly and designedly given to Louis Silberstein. Upon that issue the receipts, the credits, the bill for extras to Louis, the fact that the plaintiff formerly had done jobs for the defendant personally which he admitted were the defendant’s own jobs, and the fact that he claimed to have made this contract personally with the defendant, charging the work, as requested by the defendant, to Louis, “were competent and strong evidence, but not conclusive” in the defendant’s favor. James v. Spaulding, 4 Gray, 451. To offset and destroy, if possible, the effect of this testimony and the inference that the jury could draw therefrom, the plaintiff was permitted to offer testimony tending to show that the defendant was the real owner of the premises in question and the buildings thereon. To this end the plaintiff called one Bernard Brooker, who testified that he and his brother Morris were partners, under the firm name of Morris Brooker, in the builders’ finish business; that he made a contract with the defendant personally, to furnish certain materials for the building upon the premises in question, upon which there was still owing $1,540. In cross-examination it developed that the above named contract followed a proposal contained in a letter dated November 13, 1912, addressed and sent to Mr. L. Silberstein; that the letter was signed “Morris Brooker per Bernard Brooker;” that it was in the handwriting of a younger brother named Benjamin who was not a member of the firm but was the bookkeeper and the person who attended largely to the correspondence. This letter was written as dictated by Bernard Brooker.

The defendant then offered a letter dated May 31, 1913, addressed and sent to Mr. Louis Silberstein, signed “Morris & Bernard Brooker, (by) Bernard Brooker.” This letter demanded in forcible language the payment of a balance of $1,040 claimed to be due on the aforesaid contract. The letter was in typewritten form. Like the previous letter it was written on the firm stationery, with the same heading. It admittedly was written by the same bookkeeper who wrote the former undisputed letter.

When shown this letter, the witness Bernard Brooker denied “that he dictated or authorized or knew of this letter until two days after it was sent.” The presiding judge excluded this letter [61]*61on the ground that it was not sufficiently shown to have been authorized by the witness, — to which ruling the defendant duly excepted. The defendant then called the bookkeeper who as such wrote both letters and who was still in the employ of the witness. He testified that “he was the bookkeeper of his brothers’ firm from June, 1912; that he kept the books, attended to the correspondence and ran the typewriter; that he wrote the letter [proposal] of November 13, 1912, in long hand at the dictation of his brother [the witness] Bernard; that he. wrote the letter dated May 31, 1913, in his employers’ place and on the employers’ typewriter; that he was in the habit of writing, underneath the firm name, that of the partner who dictated the letter, but denied that his brother Bernard dictated, saw or knew of the latter letter or authorized it in any way before he wrote and sent it. He said he could not explain why he put on the words 'Per [by] Bernard Brooker,’ if Bernard did not dictate it.”

After this testimony the letter again was offered in evidence and was excluded by the presiding judge

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 N.E. 899, 221 Mass. 59, 1915 Mass. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slotnick-v-silberstein-mass-1915.