Bank of California v. . Webb

94 N.Y. 467, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 289
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 94 N.Y. 467 (Bank of California v. . Webb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of California v. . Webb, 94 N.Y. 467, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 289 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Earl, J.

In July, 1878, the defendants gave the plaintiff their written guaranty whereby they guaranteed the payment at maturity of any and all drafts that might be drawn at sixty days sight by Mr. Adams, the agent of the American Guano Company at Honolulu, on that company in New York, between the 1st day of August, 1878, and the 31st day of July, 1879, provided that the amount guaranteed should not at any one time exceed the sum of $13,000; and it was stated in the *470 writing that the guaranty was to be continuous during the period named, and that upon the payment by the company of any of the drafts the guaranty was again to be in full force and effect, as to any other of the drafts until the maturity and payment of the last draft made during the period named. Thereafter on the 30th day of June, 1879, Adams as agent of the Guano Company drew a draft at sixty days sight upon the company for $13,000, payable to the order of Bishop & Co. and on the 7th day of July he drew a similar draft for $8,000. Both drafts were by Bishop & Co. before maturity indorsed to the plaintiff ; and both were accepted, were unpaid at their maturity and were duly protested for non-payment. In November, 1879, this action was commenced against the defendants upon their guaranty, to recover the amount of the first draft. In their answer they admit the drawing of the draft, its acceptance, non-payment, protest, a demand upon them for its payment and their refusal to pay; and they allege that the Guano Company had delivered to the plaintiff a bill of lading of a cargo of guano on board ship worth about $8,000, which cargo had been sold, or would soon be sold, and that the proceeds thereof were to be applied and should be applied upon the draft in suit; and- also that the company had in January; 1880, paid to apply upon the draft the further sum of $2,545.47. Upon the trial of the action which took place in December, 1881, the plaintiff called as a witness Henry B. Laidlow of the firm of Laidlow & Co., who were its New York agents, who proved the indorsement of the draft to the plaintiff, and that since the commencement of the action two payments of $1,500 each, made respectively December 20,1880, and June 25, 1881, had been made upon the draft. He was then cross-examined by defendants’ counsel, and testified that Bishop & Co. were bankers in Honolulu and that the receipt for the bill of lading dated October 21,1879, mentioned in the answer, reciting that tlie hill was on account of the two drafts, wás sent by them to him, and that the proceeds of the guano were $7,199.92, and that the plaintiff had also through Bishop & Co. at Honolulu, on the 6th day of January, 1880, received the further sum of *471 $2,144. The sole controversy between the parties is as to the application of this sum, the plaintiff claiming that it was applicable upon the draft for $8,000, and the defendant that it was applicable pro rata upon the two drafts. The court below held that none of it was applicable upon the draft in suit, and we are of the same opinion.

The defendants alleging payment of the sum of $2,144 upon the two drafts were required to prove the payment, and this they attempted to do by the cross-examination of plaintiff’s witness Laidlow. He had no personal knowledge of the payment ; all he knew about it was from information communicated to him by letter from Bishop & Co. If his evidence were stricken out or disregarded, then the defendants would have no evidence whatever of the payment. We must, therefore, take his evidence about the payment as he gave it, and that is that in September, 1881, Bishop & Co. informed him by letter that the payment had been made January 6, 1880, and he then as the authorized agent of the plaintiff credited the amount against the draft of $8,000. Plaintiff offered to read in evidence the letter of Bishop & Co. advising Laidlow & Co. of the payment, but it was excluded on the ground that it was a mere declaration of past events by Bishop & Co. The exclusion was improper. All the proof the defendants had of the payment was the information conveyed by that letter, which was called out upon their cross-examination of plaintiff’s witness. They thus made the contents of the letter their evidence, and the plaintiff was entitled to have it read in evidence. Either that letter was competent or the entire evidence of the witness was incompetent and should have been stricken out or disregarded. We must then take it as proved in this case that this sum was received by the plaintiff in January, 1880, after the commencement of this suit, and more than a year thereafter credited against the draft for $8,000. That it had the right thus to apply the payment is established by abundant authority. (Stone v. Seymour, 15 Wend. 20; Sheppard v. Steele, 43 N. Y. 53; 3 Am. Rep. 660; Harding v. Tifft, 75 N. Y. 461; Nat. Bank of Newburgh v. Bigler, 83 id. 51; Mayor *472 of Alexandria, v. Patten, 4 Cranch, 317; Simson v. Ingham, 2 Barn. & Cress. 65; Philpott v. Jones, 4 Nev. & Man. 14; Field v. Holland, 1 American Lead. Cases, 362.) The rales as gathered from these authorities, subject to some modifications depending upon circumstances which do not exist in this case, are as follows : A debtor paying money to a creditor to whom he owes several debts may direct the application of the payment be- ■ cause the money is his and he may do as he will with it and control its application. But the debtor must exercise liis option as to the application when he makes the payment. After that the money has ceased to be his and is no longer subject to his control. Then it belongs to the creditor,' and he is master of it, and may control its application. As between him and his debtor, certainly unless the debtor intervenes and requests him to exercise his option, there can be no limit of time within which he must make the application. But if neither party makes any application of the payment and the matter comes into court, then the court will make such application' of the payment as ■ equity and justice require. Here the debtor, the Guano Company, made no application of the payment at any time, and hence the creditor, the plaintiff, could at any time make the application before it was made under the direction of the court, and so the application here made was not too late.

But we think there is another view of this case still more favorable to the plaintiff. The guaranty of the defendants was a continuing one to the extent of $13,000. It was not confined to drafts amounting to just $13,000, or to not more than that sum or to just one draft drawn for that sum. Such was clearly not the purpose and understanding of the parties. The defendants were willing to guarantee all the drafts of the company, only limiting the amount of their liability upon all of them at any one time to the sum of $13,000. ■There might be one draft for $13,000 or more. There might be several drafts amounting in the aggregate to $13,000 or more. But in no event was the liability of the defendants to exceed $13,000. Up to that amount it was to be effectual to *473 the plaintiff.

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94 N.Y. 467, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-california-v-webb-ny-1884.