
    Clifford J. Gale, Respondent, v. The New York Hay Company, Appellant.
    
      Principal and agent — accounts rendered by an agent containing false statements as to matters peculiarly within the agent’s knowledge do not become accounts stated.
    
    The principle that accounts rendered, and retained for many years without objection by the person receiving them, become accounts stated, does not apply to an account rendered by an agent to his principal, in which the agent makes misstatements, in a respect peculiarly within his own knowledge, which cannot be discovered by an inspection of the account or by any other means possessed by the principal.
    Appeal by the defendant, The New York Hay Company, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Kings on the 1st day of June, 1899, upon the"report'of a refere'e.
    
      Hugo Hirsh, for the appellant.
    
      John C. Judge, for the respondent.
   Hirschberg, J.:

This case was decided correctly by the learned referee. The plaintiff, a resident of Ohio, had shipped hay to the defendant, to be sold on commission, and the action was to recover a balance arising from the claim that -the sums alleged in defendant’s accounts-as the selling price were misstated. The transactions covered a period of years. It was undisputed that the defendant in the various state-men.ts or accounts of sales which it rendered to the plaintiff from time to time set forth a figure, as the price at which the hay was sold by it, which did not represent the actual selling price, but that from such price a deduction was made for storage, demurrage and other like charges, not disclosed, and the balance only appeared in the statements as the selling price. On the part of the plaintiff it was contended that the hay had been shipped pursuant to an understanding that one dollar per ton only should be charged by the defendant, and that no deduction should be made excepting for freight. On behalf of the defendant the deductions complained of were justified by the assertion of a custom of the trade. On both questions the case presented a conflict of testimony, but the conclusions reached by the referee are adequately silpported, and no ruling warrants interference with the result.

The defendant insists, however, that the many accounts sales rendered to plaintiff and retained by him for years without objection, became an account stated in which the plaintiff must be deemed to have acquiesced. In support of this contention numerous cases are cited, the latest being that of Stern v. Ladew (47 App. Div. 331), decided by this court in January, 1900. Most, if not all, the cases, like the one named, are controversies between vendor and vendee,, and they are based upon the general principle that if an account has been kept so long that the party receiving it has had ample opportunity to examine it and to object to it if it is wrong, his silence will be regarded as an acquiescence in its accuracy. The principle can have no application to dealings between principal and' agent, where the agent misstates an account in a respect peculiarly within his own knowledge, and which misstatement cannot be discovered by an inspection of the account or by any other means possessed by the principal. The plaintiff never knew until shortly before the action that the defendant had deducted the charges for storage, etc., from the price at which the hay was sold, and, therefore, could not be deemed to have acquiesced in what he did not know and could not have discovered save by chance.

The judgment should be affirmed.

All concurred.

Judgment affirmed, with costs..  