Young v. Boyd

69 A. 33, 107 Md. 449, 1908 Md. LEXIS 36
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 69 A. 33 (Young v. Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Boyd, 69 A. 33, 107 Md. 449, 1908 Md. LEXIS 36 (Md. 1908).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The declaration filed in this case by the appellee against the appellant contains six common counts. Upon demand, the plaintiff (appellee) filed a bill of particulars containing four items, amounting to $5,530.12. The defendant (appellant) filed the general issue pleas and one of set-off containing the common counts, including one for account stated. She also filed a bill of particulars which contained a number of items, amounting to $5,496.02. The items contained in the plaintiff’s bill of particulars constituted a fund which she received from her grandmother’s estate. She testified that the checks were payable to her and that she turned them over to the defendant to keep for her. There are only two bills of exception in the record — one presenting the action of the Court in overruling a motion to strike out the plaintiff’s testimony, relative ¡to three"items which had been admitted subject to exceptions, and the other containing the rulings on the prayers.

The plaintiff testified that she went to Miss Mason’s school at Tarrytown, New York, at the instance and request of the defendant, upon a positive promise by the latter that if the plaintiff would attend the school she would pay all her expenses and for all her clothing while there, and that she would not have gone to that school but for the promise and agree *451 ment of the defendant. The record states that “seven witnesses testified on behalf of the plaintiff that each of them had heard the defendant admit that she was paying said expenses for such schooling and clothing.” The plaintiff also testified that the defendant kept her bank-book and made out all checks which she (the plaintiff) signed upon direction of the defendant. The defendant’s bill of particulars contains four items, being for $100, $500, $2,140.22 and $153.42, amounting to $2,893.64, which she claims she deposited with the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company in the plaintiff’s name.

One of the items included in the motion was $100, evidenced by a check dated September 20th, 1904, and payable to the order of O’Neill and Co. The plaintiff testified that that was for a bill due at O’Neill’s by the defendant, who drew the check and told her to sign it, saying, “I will pay you back as soon as my interest money comes in.” Another item was for $700, as evidenced by a check of May 6th, 1905, payable to the order of C. E. Mason. The plaintiff testified that the defendant sent her a letter, which she destroyed, enclosing the check for $700 and directing her to sign it and give it to the principal of the school — saying in the letter that she would pay it back as soon as she received her interest money. The other item was for $50, but we do not find from the record that evidence of'such sum was admitted subject to exception, and therefore need not discuss it. There would seem to be no possible difficulty about these two items. Although the motion does not assign any reason for striking out the testimony as to them, the seventh prayer of the defendant was a renewal of the motion, and that asked the testimony to be' stricken out because it did not “tend to sustain the cause or ■causes of action of the plaintiff as set out in her amended bill ■of particulars filed the---day of May, 1907, and for other reasons.” The record shows that in the testimony ■of the plaintiff, as to the defendant’s bill of particulars, when •she reached the four items claimed to have been deposited in the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company she demanded of ■the defendant “the production of the bank-book, check-book *452 and checks making up said four items,” and thereupon the defendant “produced said bank-book, check-book and twelve checks, the said twelve checks aggregating the sum of said four items in said defendant’s bill of particulars, to wit, $2,893.64 and constituting the fund [thus deposited in the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company and claimed in the defendant’s evidence, but not in her bill of particulars, to be in the name of the plaintiff.” The plaintiff then referred to each of said twelve checks and denied her liability for the $100 and the $700, for the reasons above stated.

Her bill of particulars charged the defendant with cash received from the administrator of the estate of Frances A. Boyd, trustee, $1,622.61, with cash recejved from the trustee in an equity cause mentioned, $3,515.64, with share of.commissions presented by Clarence ]. Boyd to plaintiff, $177.98, and with additional cash received from the administrator of Frances A. Boyd, $213.89, making in all $5,530.12. The defendant in her bill of particulars charged the plaintiff with the last two items as deposited in the Central Savings Bank with the four items in the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company and a number of other items. The defendant was therefore attempting to get credit for the $5,530.12 to the extent of the items in her bill of particulars, and when she claimed that she had deposited the $2,893.64 to the credit of plaintiff, thereby seeking to get credit for that sum and produced the bank book, check book and the twelve checks, the plaintiff refused to allow her credit for the whole of the $2,893.64 because she had used, .as shown above, the $100 and the $700 for her own benefit and had not replaced those amounts in that account. The plaintiff was therefore not attempting to recover any thing which was not included in her bill of particulars, but was objecting to the defendant being allowed those two sums on the ground that they were included in the deposits made by her, because she claimed the defendant had used them for her own benefit. In other words, the plaintiff sought to show that the defendant was not entitled to a credit or all of the $2,893.64, which included four items in her bill *453 of particulars, because she had used $800 of the amount for her own purposes. It is therefore unnecessary to discuss other grounds, suggested by the appellee, to sustain the action of the Court on the motion to exclude the testimony as we are of the opinion that it was properly overruled.

The plaintiff offered two prayers which were granted, and the defendant offered six — the first and second being conceded, the third and fourth granted and the fifth and sixth rejected. The bill of exceptions states that the defendant excepted to the granting of the plaintiff’s prayers and to the rejection of her sixth. There is also one in the record marked “Defendant’s Prayer No. 7,” but it is simply a repetition of the motion to strike out the testimony which has already been considered and does not appear by the record to have been excepted to. The plaintiff’s first prayer is as follows: “If the jury find by a preponderance of the evidence that Edna Henderson Boyd went to Miss Mason’s school at the instance of the defendant and upon a promise by said defendant that her expenses at such school were to be paid by the defendant, then the defendant is not entitled to be allowed by way of set-off such expenses or any part of them.” The second was to the same effect, excepting it applied to the plaintiff’s clothing while attending said school. There can be no question about .the right of the plaintiff to hold the defendant for such expenses, if the jury found the facts in favor of the former. In Devecmon v. Shaw, 69 Md.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 A. 33, 107 Md. 449, 1908 Md. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-boyd-md-1908.