DocketNumber: No. 13977
Judges: Harrison
Filed Date: 3/19/1891
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
February 4, 1875, Adam Murdock borrowed from the defendant Clarke eight thousand five hundred dollars, and executed to him his promissory note therefor, “with interest thereon at the rate of one and one fourth per cent per month from said fourth day of February, 1875, interest payable semi-annually, and if not so paid, to be added to the principal and bear a like rate of interest ”; and at the same time conveyed to him certain real property consisting of the Big Valley ranch and the Beaver Creek ranch “for the purpose of securing the payment of said promissory note according to the terms thereof.” March 22, 1875, Clarke iconveyed to his co-defendant, Cox, an equal one half of said note and security, and on the same day Murdock borrowed from Clarke and Cox the further sum of five thousand dollars, for which he gave them his promissory note for that amount, “with interest at the rate of one and a half per cent per month from date until paid.” At that time it was agreed between Murdock and the defendants that the defendants “should have and hold the possession and control” of
The case came on for trial April 30, 1888, and in its decision, rendered February 18, 1889, the court settled the account of the defendants from the time they took possession of said property down to May 1, 1888. In its findings of fact the court found “that since they have been in the possession of said property, as aforesaid, the total expense of defendants in the necessary
From these findings the court found, as its conclusion of law, that the plaintiff was entitled to a reconveyance of the property, “upon the payment to said Cox and Clarke of the said sum of $29,752.59, with simple interest on the notes held by them against said estate since the first day of May, 1888, and such further sum as may have been expended by them for the benefit of said estate since said date, less such sum as they may have received from said estate by the sale of cattle and other products, and the leasing of hay-land, and less a rental of $1,000 per annum since said date for the use of said ranches for their own stock”; and directed a decree-to be entered accordingly. Prior 'to the entry of the decree, a supplemental account, rendered under the foregoing directions, from May 1, 1888, was settled by the court, and in its decree, after settling said account, the
The points presented on behalf of the appellants are, that the court should have computed interest upon the eight-thousand-five-hundred-dollar note, by compounding the same according to its terms, and that the same rate of computation should be continued until the entry of the decree.
1. The rules governing the application of indefinite payments made by a debtor to his creditor to whom he owes different obligations had their origin in the civil law; but in those countries where the common law prevails, the rules of the civil law have been greatly modified, and in some respects entirely repudiated. Both systems concur in giving to the debtor the right to designate at the time of the payment the debt to which he wishes the payment applied. Both systems also hold that if the debtor shall not then designate the debt to which he wishes the payment applied, the creditor may make application of the payment, and that if neither make such application, it shall be made by the court. The principles upon which the application is to be made by the creditor or by the court differ widely in the two systems. By the rules of the civil law, if the
This rule has been recognized in some of the states of this country, but in the courts of the United States and of the greater number of the individual states it has been repudiated, and it may now be considered as the settled rule in this country, wherever the common law prevails, that when neither party to the transaction makes any application of the payment, and there are different debts due from the debtor to the creditor, the law will make the application in such a manner, in view of all the circumstances of the case, as is most in accordance with justice and equity, and will best protect and maintain the rights of both parties. (Field v. Holland, 6 Cranch, 8; Logan v. Mason, 6 Watts & S. 9; Stone v. Seymour, 15 Wend. 19; Smith v. Lloyd, 11 Leigh, 511; 37 Am. Dec. 621; Allen v. Culver, 3 Denio, 284; Story’s Eq. Jur., sec. 459 b; 2 Greenl. Ev., sec. 533.)
One of the elements underlying the rule for the protection of each party in his rights is, that the burden shall be made as light upon the debtor as is consistent with giving to the creditor all that the debtor has bound himself to pay. If the creditor by any application that may be made for him can receive all for which the debtor is under an obligation to him, it is but equity that it should be applied in such a mode as will be least onerous to the debtor. On the other hand, when the interest of the debtor cannot be promoted by any particular application of the payment, or when it is a
“3. If neither party makes such application within the time prescribed herein, the performance must be applied to the extinction of obligations in the following order; and if there be more than one obligation of a particular class, to the extinction of all in that class ratably: 1. Of interest due at the time of the perform
Neither of these subdivisions is directly applicable to the facts in this case. All of the obligations of Murdock are equally secured, and the moneys received by the defendants were at no time sufficient to extinguish all of the interest then due upon the principal obligations. The obligations also bear different rates of interest, and upon one of them the interest is to be compounded semiannually, while the others bear only simple interest. Hence, instead of having the Civil Code as a guide, the court was compelled to take as its guide the equitable principles found in the above rule. Under these principles it was its duty to apply the payments that had been from time to time received by the defendants to those obligations which were most onerous to the plaintiff, so far as such application could be made without impairing any of the obligations in favor of the defendants. Ordinarily this rule would require the payment to be applied in the extinguishment of the interest upon that obligation which bore the highest rate; but inasmuch as in the present case the obligation which bore a lower rate of interest provided for compounding that interest, that became the most onerous, and within the principles above stated was the first to be extinguished, especially since thereby the defendants would suffer no loss, but would receive all that Murdock had obligated himself to pay to them.
The findings show that from the time the defendants took possession of the property they were in the annual receipt of an income therefrom far in excess of their expenditures for its care and preservation, and that from that date until the time of the accounting they had in their hands moneys belonging to the plaintiff, which, added to the amount of annual benefit which they derived from the property, and for wdiich the court found
This application of the money in the hands of the defendants to the discharge of the interest upon the eight-thousand-five-hundred-dollar note, instead of being “ a modification of the contract entered into between the parties,” as is stated in appellants’ points, is in reality an exact compliance with the contract. In this mode the interest on the note that was “payable semi-annually” was discharged in exact accordance with the terms of the note. The defendants received all that Murdock had agreed to pay them, and at the very time that such
The findings do not show the tabulation or stating of the account between the parties, but merely give the amount of the receipts and disbursements for each year and the result of the accounting, “ without making any allowance for compound interest.” This result is consistent with the rule we have above stated. Inasmuch as the evidence upon which the findings were made is not before us, and the findings themselves do not show the several dates at which the money was received by the defendants, or present any facts inconsistent with reaching this result upon the principles herein laid down, we must assume that it is correct. We do not understand that the appellants contest the accuracy of the computation upon this principle. Their contention is that the account should have been stated by allowing compound interest.
2. The settlement of the account by the court as of May 1, 1888, was an adjudication by it of the amount then due from the plaintiff to the defendants, and was in the nature of a verdict or finding for that amount. A finding by the court in an action upon a promissory note embraces the whole amount due for principal and interest thereon at the date of the finding, and bears interest therefrom as a whole at the legal rate, and not according to the rate of interest stipulated in the note. (Alpers v. Schammel, 75 Cal. 590; Mill Co. v. Machine Works, 82 Cal. 184.) Section 1035 of the Code of Civil Procedure prescribes that “the clerk must include in the judgment entered up by him any interest on the verdict or decision of the court, from the time it was rendered or made.” Under this rule, the defendants had no reason to complain of the mode of computation adopted by the court in its conclusion of law.
We cannot say from this statement in the decree that a proper computation of the amount to which the defendants were entitled was not properly made by the court, inasmuch as it is not shown at what dates the moneys were respectively received or expended by the defendants.
We find no error in that portion of the judgment from which the defendants have appealed, and it is therefore affirmed.
De Haven, J., Sharpstein, J., Paterson, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred,