Jobe v. Mondereau
Jobe v. Mondereau
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This is a suit brought to recover the sum of $650 which
We have thus four factors bearing upon the question whether the proceeds of the first mortgage went into the second, the identity of the mortgagee, the proximity of' the date, the likeness of the amount and the presence of the same comortgagee. . We may also add that defendant’s name as attorney is appended to the certificate of the residence of the mortgagees in the second mortgage. The courts excluded the offer of the mortgage. We think it was competent. There was sufficient evidence to submit the matter to the jury as to whether the facts bore out the statement made by the defendant that he had reinvested the money in the second mortgage. It was some corroboration of defendant’s story. Had there been a long interval of time and evidence of frequent loans, the
There is another matter in the case which we need but give passing notice. The defendant offered what he claimed to be a book of original entry in which there is an item showing that the $650 of Minnie Jobe was re-loaned to William Knolle. The account does not bear any of the indicia of a book of daily entries. It is merely a memorandum of moneys received and paid out by the defendant entirely made up of cash items and not containing any charges against any person. The court properly excluded it.
The first three assignments of error are sustained. The judgment is reversed with a venire facias de novo.
Reference
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- Attorney and client — Accounting for proceeds of mortgage — Evidence. In an action by an executor against an attorney at law, to recover the proceeds of a mortgage collected by the defendant and for which it is alleged he’ did not account for to the deceased, where the plaintiff testifies that the defendant had admitted that he had collected the mortgage, but had not paid over the proceeds, and the defendant does not deny such admission, but claims that he stated to the plaintiff that he had immediately invested the proceeds in another mortgage for the deceased, it is reversible error to refuse to admit in evidence the second mortgage, which showed on its face that it was executed the day following the satisfaction of the first mortgage, that the name of the decedent appeared as one of the mortgagees, that the sum payable to her was precisely the same, and that the same person was comortgagee of the deceased in both mortgages. Evidence — Booh of original entry — Memorandum of moneys received. A memorandum of moneys received and paid out, entirely made up of cash items, and not containing any charges against any person, is not a book of original entry.