Judges: Keith
Filed Date: 1/31/1895
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/15/2024
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Transparent Ice Company conveyed certain property by
There are certain undisputed principles of law applicable to the subject of the appropriation of payments, which I shall state without referring to authorities to support them, as they are universally accepted.
The first is where a debtor makes a payment, he has the undisputed right to make such application of it as he sees fit.
If the debtor fails to exercise his right, the creditor may then make the application, and if the power be exercised by neither, it becomes the duty of the court to make it, and in its performance a sound discretion is to be exercised. It is said that the interest of the debtor and the creditor only are to be considered, and none others have any right to insist on the mode in which the payments shall be appropriated. In Gordon v. Hobart, 2 Story, 243, Judge Story said that the “right of appropriation of payments was one strictly existing between the original parties; and no third person had any authority to insist upon any appropriation of such money in his own favor.” To the same effect, see Coles v. Withers, 33 Gratt. 186. Even sureties, so much favored by the courts in many respects, enjoy in this particular no advantage over others. The Supreme Court of Connecticut in case of Stamford Bank v. Benedict, 16 Conn. 437, declares that “ a surety of a debtor has no voice in the appropriation of payments made by the debtor. ’ ’ “The debtor and crditor have the sole ’ right of controlling the payment, and the doctrine that sureties will be favored in the construction and enforcement of contracts has no application in such a case. To do so would be to defeat the object and end of suretyship, and to hold that the surety might have the money which was paid by the debtor so applied as to leave the creditor a loser notwithstanding his care and vigilance. ’ ’ And this seems to be the general current of judicial opinion. In the case just cited, the court held that to
These may be considered cardinal rules by which courts are governed in the exercise of their discretion. Subordinate to these are certain minor rules by which the courts are influenced when neither the debtor nor the creditor have exercised their unquestioned right in making application of the' payment in controversy. As was said by this court in the case of Chapman v. Commonwealth, 25 Gratt. 721, 751: “Where there are no other circumstances upon which the court can lay hold, it will apply the payment to the debt oldest in point of time. ’ ’ As said by the same court in Coles v. Withers, 33 Gratt. 186, 203-4:: “The general rule subject to exceptions is, where there are two debts, the one secured and the other not, the court will apply the payment to the debt for which there is no security, and the reason given is that without such application, the creditor will lose part of his debt. ’ ’ And the court further says, “that this rule is sustained by the uniform current of authorities all over the country. ” How, in this case, the deed of trust creates no priorities among the debts secured, and the debts, though falling due at different dates, came into existence at one and the same time. The debtor has made no application of the money under the control of the court, nor does it appear that it has the slightest interest in the disposition which the court may make of this question. Its only interest is to see that its property, or the proceeds of it, is applied in accordance with the trust which it created upon it, and it is one and the same thing to the Transparent Ice Company, whether the wdiole of this disputed sum shall be appropriated to the note due in six months, or to the one due in nine months, or shall be equally divided between them as was
There is some diversity of authority, as courts have inclined to the common law rule that the application was to be made, where not otherwise directed, in the interest of the creditor, or to the rule of the civil law, that, under such circumstances, regard was to be had primarily to the interest of the debtor.
The great weight of authority seems to be that in such a case as that now under consideration, where the court has no peculiar fact to aid its discretion, the application' must be made to that debt which is least secured, or in other words, in the interest of the creditor; and this seems to have been the principle of Chapman v. Commonwealth, 25 Gratt. 121, where it was applied to the oldest debt, and the law as recognized in Coles v. Withers, where it is said that, in such a case, it should be applied to the least secured or most precarious debt.
In the case of Mathews v. Switzler, 46 Mo. 301, 303, the court says: “The substantial question here is: shall the original creditor, who holds all the notes, have the full benefit of all the securities which he took for his own protection? He was not satisfied with the security of the deed of trust, and therefore required an additional name upon one of the notes. -x- * * In. the meantime he has surrendered no security, and done nothing to prejudice the right of the surety upon the note.” There it seems that, so far from the court applying the payment so as to exonerate the surety, the fact that one note was made secure by the addition of a surety’s name was * the reason which determined the court to apply the payment to the unsecured debt. Where a creditor has two claims against the same debtor, the one secured and the other not, upon a payment being made the court will apply it to the debt for which no security was taken. And Munger on Application of Payments lays it down as law that the holder of different notes, secured by deed of trust, may apply the entire proceeds of the sale under the deed to the payment of those last maturing, and will not be prevented thereby, either in law or equity, from obtaining judgment against a surety on the note first
I am therefore constrained to the conclusion that, in accordance with the preponderance of decisions in other states, and the law as recognized by this court in the case of Coles v. Withers, 33 Gratt. 186; and Smith v. Lloyd, 11 Leigh, 512, where neither the debtor nor creditor has applied the payment, and the court is called upon in the exercise of its discretion to make an application of it, and there is no other fact or circumstance upon which the court can lay hold to guide and direct its discretion, the payment must be appropriated to that debt which is least secured, and that, therefore, the Circuit Court of Roanoke county should’ have appropriated the whole of the sum in dispute to the note óf the Transparent Ice Company falling due at nine months from the date thereof, instead of distributing the money between the two notes, and for this error the decree complained of must be reversed.
Reversed.