J. The plaintiff, upon becoming the manager of one of the stores owned by the defendant, deposited with the defendant $200, which was to be applied “against all shortages, arising from any cause whatsoever, as disclosed in the accounts kept” by the defendant, which was to return on demand the balance of the sum deposited with four per cent interest after the end of the employment.
The defendant excepted to the instruction that it had the burden of proving the existence and amount of a shortage in the accounts. That instruction was correct. White v. Middlesex Railroad, 135 Mass. 216, 221. Blake v. Corcoran, 211 Mass. 406. The burden being on the defendant, and the jury not being bound to believe its evidence that there was a shortage, its motion for a directed verdict in its favor was properly denied.
Exceptions overruled.