General Electric Co. v. Anchor Casualty Co.

87 N.W.2d 639, 251 Minn. 305, 1958 Minn. LEXIS 552
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 17, 1958
Docket37,210, 37,211
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 87 N.W.2d 639 (General Electric Co. v. Anchor Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Electric Co. v. Anchor Casualty Co., 87 N.W.2d 639, 251 Minn. 305, 1958 Minn. LEXIS 552 (Mich. 1958).

Opinion

Magney, Commissioner.

This is an appeal by defendant from an order granting summary judgment and from the judgment entered thereon. As the order is not appealable, the judgment alone is here for review.

Tieso & Kostka Electric Company, Inc., was awarded the electrical contracts on two school construction jobs, Anoka High School and Mounds View High School. Defendant, Anchor Casualty Company, issued a performance bond on each job. Plaintiff, General Electric Company, furnished electrical materials used in the performance of the contracts and brought this action against the surety to recover $58,994.18, the claimed balance due and owing it for materials so furnished. Depositions were taken. Records of the accounts between plaintiff and its debtor were before the court. Upon motion by plaintiff, the court granted summary judgment against defendant. Tieso & Kostka Electric Company, Inc., became Bond Electric Company in January 1954. The basis of this litigation arises out of the method of accounting used by plaintiff in the handling of the accounts between it and Tieso & Kostka Electric Company, Inc., during 1953 and between it and Bond Electric Company during the early part of 1954.

During the calendar year 1953 and for some time prior thereto, the accounts between plaintiff and Tieso, with few exceptions, were carried on plaintiff’s books in one general account, or running account, upon which were entered charges for materials furnished by plaintiff to Tieso on its many different jobs, credits for returned mer *307 chandise, and cash credits. At the end of each calendar month, plaintiff sent Tieso a copy of the general account showing the general balance at the beginning of the month and at the end of the month and the charges and credits entered during the month. The first date of delivery of materials on the two school jobs here involved was March 17, 1953. On that day the balance owing on the general account was $16,015.96. Between March 17, 1953, and December 31, 1953, the materials delivered to the Mounds View job amounted to $52,-714.65 and to the Anoka job $8,330.44. After December 31, 1953, additional materials were delivered to the Mounds View job up to March 1955 and to the Anoka job up to February 21, 1955.

Tieso made the following payments after March 17, 1953: $25,000 dated June 19, 1953; $4,500 dated August 31, 1953; $25,000 dated September 23, 1953; $25,000 dated October 12, 1953; $10,000 dated November 30, 1953; and $15,000 dated December 16, 1953. The remittance on each of the above payments bore the following notation: “to apply on account” or “on account.” The main question in this case centers on the application by plaintiff of the above payments.

Under date of January 19, 1954, plaintiff sent Tieso a letter, which was received, in which it listed 12 specific job accounts totaling $144,-031.53 as the “balances owing our company” on December 31, 1953. Then the letter continued:

“We have applied your payment of June 25, 1953, $25,000.00 as follows:
“Penker Contract $12,331.24
“Open Account 12,668.76
“Total $25,000.00
“The following payments have been applied to your open account, which account includes all bills and credits not listed on the aforementioned job accounts:
“9-1-53 $ 4,500.00
“9-24-53 25.000. 00
“10-13-53 25.000. 00
“12-1-53 10.000. 00
“12-18-53 15,000.00”

*308 The Tieso company acknowledged the correctness of the amount of indebtedness by signing a statement as follows: “The above balance of $144,031.53 was correct at December 31, 1953.”

The 12 listed specific job accounts mentioned in the letter included Mounds View and Anoka. What plaintiff did was to select from the total charges made during 1953, aggregating about $248,000, specific items in the general account to which the payments of $104,500 were applied, and the remaining charges of $144,031.53 comprised the 12 job accounts listed as unpaid accounts. The payments which had been entered on plaintiff’s books as general credits on the running or open account from June 25, 1953, to December 31, 1953, were thus subsequently, in January 1954, applied to specific charges and the debtor notified of this application in the letter of January 19, 1954. It was the intention of plaintiff to “separate those shipments which were secured by bonded jobs from those that weren’t.” After January 19, 1954, payments by Tieso, or Bond as it was then known, usually contained designations for application to specific job accounts and were applied by plaintiff to such accounts, and, in cases where payments were applied to the open account, debtor specifically so designated. Each of the 12 job accounts listed as unpaid in the letter of January 19, 1954, except Mounds View and Anoka, were paid in full during 1954 by payments designated by the debtor. After January 1, 1954, Mounds View and Anoka, which up to that time had been carried in the general account, were carried by plaintiff as separate job accounts. The unpaid balance on the Mounds View job on March 31, 1955, was $34,426.02. The unpaid balance on the Anoka job on February 21, 1955, was $24,568.16. The trial court ordered judgment for $58,994.18, the total of the unpaid balances of these two accounts.

Defendant contends that the court erred in granting summary judgment. The chief basis for this contention is its claim that, when a debtor makes payments on a running account without directing application of payment and the creditor accepts these payments without seasonably making application, the attempt by the creditor to subsequently apply these payments to specific charges was ineffective. It is the position of plaintiff that, the debtor having made payments on a running account with written instructions that they be “applied on ac *309 count,” the creditor was free to apply them to specific charges of its own selection and that objections which might afterwards be made by the debtor are immaterial.

The general rule in the law of application of payments is that a debtor has the right to direct upon which part of an indebtedness any specific payment is to be made. If the creditor accepts payment when the debtor has exercised this right, he is bound to conform to the direction. If the debtor makes no such direction, the creditor may, within a reasonable time, apply it as best suits his interest. Restatement, Contracts, § 387; A. Y. McDonald Mfg. Co. v. Lima, 187 Minn. 240, 244 N. W. 804; Martin Brothers Co. v. Lanesboro Co-op. Merc. Co. 198 Minn. 321, 270 N. W. 10.

Defendant does not dispute the accuracy of the statement of the law as stated above. It does not claim that it has any right to direct application of payments made by Tieso to plaintiff, nor does it claim that any application of payments which legally may have been made are void merely because it is detrimental to it.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.W.2d 639, 251 Minn. 305, 1958 Minn. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-co-v-anchor-casualty-co-minn-1958.