Atlantic, Tennessee & Ohio Railroad v. Morrison
Atlantic, Tennessee & Ohio Railroad v. Morrison
Opinion of the Court
The bond declared on in this action was executed by defendant Morrison with the other defendants his sureties, conditioned for the safe keeping and proper disbursement by said Morrison, as treasurer of the plaintiff company, of the money and effects which might come into his hands belonging to the company, and for the performance of his duty as such treasurer in all other respects. A
The defendants in their answer, admitting-the appointment and acting of Morrison in the position of treasurer and the execution of the bond declared on, deny any breach of the conditions of the bond, and aver full performance of his duty in all things. And they specially set up and rely on, as a bar to any further accountability, a settlement had with a finance committee of the company covering all matters of account of the first fiscal year ending the 31st of May, 1873, and also an account and settlement with one Springs, receiver, on the 21st of April, 1874, in respect of the money and effects of the company which came to- the treasurer’s hands after the settlement with the finance company, as a bar to any opening of the accounts for that year.
On the opening of the cause for trial the defendants insisted on an issue to be submitted to the jury on the question of breach or no breach, but His Plonor was- of opinion that inasmuch as the accounting character of defendant as treasurer was admitted in the answer, the plaintiff would have a right to an order of account as of course, if it were not that the defendant had set up and pleaded settlements had with the company in bar of an account, and that therefore the proper preliminary issue was as to the existence and sufficiency of the alleged settlements to bar the further investigation of the accounts of the treasurer. To this refusal of the issue desired on the part of the defendants and the submission of one instead as to the existence and sufficiency of the settlements pleaded in bar, the defendants excepted; and therein it is claimed that His Honor erred.
Under our new system the courts being required to recog
It would seem then upon authority that the issue as to the matters relied on in bar was a preliminary issue and should be settled before any other progress was made. And apart from authority the course pursued by His Honor was well justified by the reason of the thing. .Evidently no good
On this decision of His Honor as to the issue proper to be submitted, the plaintiff conceded a full and final settlement for the first fiscal year ending the 31st of May, 1873, but claiming that there was no full and final account of the agency of defendant Morrison after that date, His Honor framed and submitted to the jury an issue as to the fact of a full and final accounting for the last year. In support of the affirmative of the issue, Morrison introduced a receipt of Springs as receiver, dated 10th of April, 1874, giving an itemized statement of tfhe assets of the company consisting of bonds and notes turned over to him, and testified in his own behalf, that-no examination of his books, accounts and vouchers was made, but expressly declined, and that Springs refused to give a receipt to operate to any further extent than to the assets turned over to him. He further stated that Springs also said that during his last year’s agency, he carried forward upwards of one thousand dollars on hand at the close of his accounts settled before the finance committee for the year before; that he (witnessj had received from Gormsley, a temporary receiver, a sum of money, and during the year had received thousands of dollars, as much as twenty thousand, and he had paid a 11 of it out under advice of counsel; but no estimate of the accounts in re
This being all the evidence in support of the fullness and finality of the settlement alleged by defendants, His Honor held that it amounted to no evidence and directed the jury to find the issue in favor of the plaintiff and defendants excepted.
, Upon this exception the question is, did the testimony-offered amount to no evidence of the full and final account alleged ? If it was of this import, or not such as reasonably to warrant a finding of the fact under investigation it is settled that in such case the court should not have allowed the jury to pass on the issue at all, but have directed them to-find against the party on whom rested the burden of proof. State v. Patterson, 78 N. C., 470, and cases therein cited.
What is a full and final account? An account can not be said to be full which does not embrace all the items of' charge and discharge, nor can it be said to be final, if as. made it is contemplated that a future reckoning is or may be had. Here upon the treasurer’s own statements, the receipt embraced nothing more than an enumeration of the assets turned over, and no estimate was then made of the thousands of dollars which he had received during the year, and as to the finality of the settlement made, it was expressly refused to give a receipt of any operation except to the extent of the articles therein mentioned and turned over at the time. The alleged settlement was not full, in that it omitted any account of the money received and claimed to-be disbursed; and it lacked finality, in that the restricted receipt that was given in effect left the treasurer exposed to-accountability as to all things not itemized therein.
It is our opinion therefore that His Honor did not err in: his ruling and directions to the jury upon the question of the evidence adduced as to the alleged settlement between, the treasurer and Springs, the receiver.
No error. Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ATLANTIC, TENNESSEE & OHIO RAILROAD COMPANY v. E. F. MORRISON and others
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published