Opinion
December, 1915.
White Case (Walter A. Mulvihill, of counsel), for appellant.
Hayes Kerngood (Julius Davison and George B. Hayes, of counsel), for respondent.
Defendant appeals from a judgment in favor of plaintiff, after a trial without a jury, and from an order denying defendant's motion for the issuance of a commission to take the testimony of a witness outside the state.
The action was brought to recover $320 with interest claimed to be due on sixteen travelers' checks issued by the Whitman County National Bank of Rosalia, Wash., to one Rudolph Rozenzweig, each check being for $20, drawn on the defendant trust company, payable within two days from date of the counter-signature of Rosenzweig, and duly accepted before issuance by said defendant company. Said checks were duly countersigned by Rosenzweig to the order of one Bennett, and, after subsequent endorsement, sold and delivered to the plaintiff company for value.
The answer denies that the defendant has information sufficient to form a belief as to the various allegations of the complaint, and denies that any sum is now due and owing from defendant to the plaintiff, and sets up as separate and distinct defenses: First, that the counter-signature of Rosenzweig was obtained by fraud, with notice thereof to plaintiff, before parting with value for said checks; second, that said checks were delivered to one Curtis and one Davidson for a special purpose, of which the plaintiff had knowledge, and were diverted from such purpose by them and converted to their own use, with notice to plaintiff of such diversion, prior to the sale and delivery thereof to plaintiff.
Before considering whether or not the judgment in favor of plaintiff is supported by competent evidence, it is necessary to consider the order appealed from, denying defendant's motion for the issuance of a commission to take the testimony of Rosenzweig. The rule is well recognized that it is mandatory upon a Municipal Court judge to grant a motion for the issuance of a commission, provided the moving papers, which include, under section 768 of the Code, the pleadings in the action, make out a prima facie case for the issuance of a commission, and that the evidence sought is material. Oakes v. Riter, 118 A.D. 772.
The answer alleges knowledge on the part of the plaintiff, prior to the purchase of the checks, that the signature of Rozensweig, whose testimony defendant desired to take by commission, was obtained by fraud, and that the checks, after being so countersigned, were delivered for a special purpose and diverted therefrom and that plaintiff, through its president, had knowledge of such fraud and of such diversion of the checks. This answer constituted part of the moving papers, and the evidence of Rosenzweig as to the facts and circumstances under which he countersigned the checks and delivered the same to Curtis and Davidson was material to the issues. The denial of the motion was, therefore, error, as was the failure of the justice to state the grounds for such denial. Daly Iron, Steel Metal Co. v. United States Metal Mfg. Co., 76 Misc. 576.
The judgment and order must, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered with thirty dollars costs to appellant to abide the event, and motion for commission granted.
PAGE and PHILBIN, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order reversed, and new trial ordered, with thirty dollars costs to appellant to abide event.