Court Opinion

ID: 5207903
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-06 16:06:22.99034+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:27:19.157584
License: Public Domain

Gaynor, J.:
The findings of fact sufficed to support the legal conclusion of larceny under the law of this state. Section 528 of our Penal Code makes it larceny for an agent or servant to appropriate to his own use any money or property which he has in his possession as such agent . or servant, “ with the intent to deprive or defraud the true owner of his property or of the use and benefit thereof ”. Section 548 provides that it is a sufficient defence that the “ property ” was “ appropriated openly and avowedly under a claim of title preferred in good faith, even though such claim is untenable ”. But the referee-*197found on sufficient evidence that the appropriation in this case was in bad faith. Moreover, such appropriation did not come under this latter provision. The money was not appropriated under a claim of title, but under a claim of indebtedness by the plaintiff to the agent; and it is provided by the last sentence of this same section, that the said section “shall not excuse the retention.of the property of another to offset or pay demands held against him”.
The claim that the question of larceny should be determined under the laws of Connecticut, where the money was collected and misappropriated, is not tenable, the contract of insurance having been made and delivered in this state to the plaintiff, a resident thereof. The contract was not a roving one but intended the laws of this state (Grand v. Livingston, 4 App. Div. 589; 158 N. Y. 688; Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Wells, 49 App. Div. 171; Stumpf v. Hallahan, 101 id. 383 ; Monroe v. Douglass, 5 N. Y. 447; Union Nat. Bank v. Chapman, 169 id. 538).
The plaintiff complied with the condition precedent of furnishing particulars and proofs of loss.
The judgment should be affirmed.
Woodward, Hooker and Miller, JJ., concurred; Rich, J., not voting.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. , .