Hill v. Gregory

1 Va. Ch. Dec. 73
CourtVirginia Chancery Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1790
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Va. Ch. Dec. 73 (Hill v. Gregory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Virginia Chancery Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Gregory, 1 Va. Ch. Dec. 73 (Va. Super. Ct. 1790).

Opinion

[74]*74THE facts considerable in these cases are omitted here, because they are stated, partly in the two following decrees, and partly in the remarks on the last.

At the hearing, the 27 day of October, 1790, the high court of chancery delivered this

OPINION,

That the goods and merchandize, sold and delivered by the plaintiff Carter Braxton to the said Fendall Southerland, between the years one thousand seven hundred and seventy six, and one thousand seven hundred and eighty one, ought not to be discounted, at the money prices then charged, against a debt contracted before the commencement of that period ; but ought to be discounted at their true value, which, in this case, may he nearly perhaps ascertained by reducing those prices according to the scale for proportioning the depretiation of paper money ; that the payments made to the said Fendall Souther-land, by the plaintiff Carter Braxton, not appearing to have been directed by him, at the times of payment or before, to be entered to his credit in that account wherein he is made a debitor for the bill of exchange, the said Fendall Southerland might enter them to the credit of the plaintiff Carter Braxton in any other account subsisting between those parties,; and that for the principal money, damages, and charges, due by the protested bill of exchange, in consequence of the settlement thereof made the twenty eighth clay of february, in the year one thousand seven hundred and seventy six, the said Fendall Souther-land was intitled to no more than seven hundred and seventy eight pounds seven shillings and four pence, of current money of Virginia, with interest thereon, at the rate of five per centum pier annum, from the first clay of June thence next following, and pronounced this

DECREE,

That the defendent be perpetually injoined from proceeding further on the judgement of the general court recovered by his testator, the said Fendall Southerland, against the plaintiff James Hill, except as to two hundred and twenty five pounds eighteen shillings five pence and three farthings, of current money of Virginia, appearing by the account, stated according to the principles of this decree from the accounts annexed to the report, to have been due to the said Fendall Southerland the seventh day of december, in the year one thousand seven hundred and eighty four, with interest thereupon from that time ; and except also as to the costs in the action at common law : [75]*75and that tbe plaintiffs do pay one half, and the defendents do pay the other half, of the costs allowed to the commissioner,

The opinion and decree of the court of appeals the 29 day of October 1792 :

The court is of opinion, that the application of the appellants to a court of equity for relief in this case was proper, notwithstanding they might have defended themselves at law not only because the omission of such defence proceeded from mistake or accident, but on the ground of original jurisdiction, to establish the agreement between the parties, made on the twenty eighth day of february, 1776, and to be relieved against the unconscionable and opppressive use made of the judgment, by directing the execution to be levied for one thousand and forty three pounds nineteen shillings and one penny three farthings, when it appears that the utmost of the said Southerlands clame thereon was not more than two hundred and twenty five pounds eighteen shillings and five pence three farthings, with interest from the seventh day of december, 1784, and therefore that there is no error in so much of the said decree as sustains the suit for relief; but that there is error in the relief afforded, not only in tbe adjustment of tbe quantum, but in the application of it, as between tbe appellants, therefore it is decreed and ordered, that the decree aforesaid be reversed and annulled, and that the appellee pay to the appellants their costs by them expended in tbe prosecution of their appeal aforesaid here, and this court, proceeding to make such decree as the said high court of chancery ought to have made, is of opinion, that (without contravening the rule giving creditors the right of application of payments made indefinitely to either of different debts due at the time) from the combined circumstances in this case, the whole of Butlers and Milliards bonds, amounting to nine hundred and thirty five pounds fifteen shillings and one penny, ought to be applied to the credit of the protested bill, since it is evident that the payer so intended it; and that if the receiver did not assent thereto, yet he did not make such a recent and proper application of it otherwise,as ought to controul the choice of the payer ; and therefore that the application ought to stand as stated in the first account of the master commissioner, on viewing this account however a doubt arose, whether the mode of stating interest was a proper one, whereupon one of the judges, declaring himself affected, in his character of an administrator by a decision of the question, retired from the discussion ; and the court, discovering it to he of small importance in its operation in the present case, chose to pass it over on the ground of the masters report not having been excepted to, or the point argued in court; with this caution to avoid an infer[76]

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Bluebook (online)
1 Va. Ch. Dec. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-gregory-vachanct-1790.