Orleans County National Bank v. Moore

20 N.E. 357, 112 N.Y. 543, 21 N.Y. St. Rep. 609, 67 Sickels 543, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 849
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 20 N.E. 357 (Orleans County National Bank v. Moore) 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
Orleans County National Bank v. Moore, 20 N.E. 357, 112 N.Y. 543, 21 N.Y. St. Rep. 609, 67 Sickels 543, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 849 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Peckham, J.

The question in this case arises as to the application of moneys which are the proceeds of the sale of certain lands on foreclosure of a mortgage given by one George B. Church to the plaintiff herein, on the 22d'day of August, 1884. On that day the plaintiff owned and held a note for $2,500, made by Albert S. Warner (who was then wholly insolvent), and indorsed by George B. Church, dated July 3,1884, and due September 4, 1884. The plaintiff at the same time held and owned a note of $5,000 made by Church and indorsed by one Charles H. Moore, dated June 21, 1884, and due August 23, 1884; also a draft drawn by Church upon and accepted by said Moore for $7,500, dated August 9, 1884, and due August 23, 1884. Moore was an accommodation acceptor of the draft, and Church was the principal debtor therein, and also on the $5,000 note, and was so known to be by the plaintiff before the execution of the mortgage. He was simply indorser on the $2,500 note, and Warner was, in fact, the principal debtor, and was so known to be by the plaintiff. On the date above mentioned plaintiff’s cashier requested Church (who also turned out to be insolvent) to execute a mortgage to the plaintiff as collateral security for his indebtedness, which Church agreed to do, and thereupon he went to an attorney to draw the same, and directed him to draw it for $12,500, the amount of the $5000 note and the $7500 draft above mentioned. Before the mortgage was executed, however, the president of the plaintiff informed Mr. Church that it did not include all his liabilities to the plaintiff, and requested that the mortgage be made to include the Warner note upon which he was indorser, and Church consented, and thereupon the mortgage was made for $15,000, which included the three liabilities. The mortgage was conditioned for the payment of $3 5,000 to the plaintiff one year from date and contained this further condition: *546 This grant is intended as security for the payment of $15,000, one year from date, that is to say, as a collateral security for the paymént of all notes, bills, drafts, checks or over-drafts, or indebtedness of every name or nature due and owing the said Orleans County National Bank by said Geo. B. Church, to the amount of $15,000, at the termination of one year from the date hereof; nevertheless, the security hereby created shall continue and remain in full force after the expiration of said year "until all and every indebtedness due and owing from said Geo. B. Church to said bank is paid and liquidated.”

The plaintiff continued to hold the notes up to the time when the mortgage was foreclosed. Judgment of foreclosure was entered in the Orleans county clerk’s office in an action brought by the plaintiff against the mortgagor and the said Charles H. Moore and others, on which judgment the mortgaged premises were advertised for sale, and the same were sold on the 9th day of February, 1886, and they were bid off by the defendant Moore for $9,600. Neither Church nor Moore appeared in the foreclosure action, and no personal judgment was demanded against Moore in the complaint. Upon entering judgment by default the plaintiff’s attorney, ex pcurte, entered in the judgment a direction to the sheriff to apply the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged premises, first to the payment t>f the note made by Albert S. Warner and indorsed by the defendant-Church, and the remainder, so far as necessary, to the payment of the draft and note held by the plaintiff'and upon which the said Moore was liable as surety. The first knowledge which Moore had that this provision was inserted in the judgment was after the sale of the mortgaged premises and after he had retained counsel to examine the papers in the foreclosure action, when upon such examination by his counsel the direction in the judgment was discovered. Upon the judgment-roll in the foreclosure suit, and upon affidavits stating these and other facts, the defendant Moore then moved for an order erasing from the judgment the direction above alluded to, and for other relief. The motion was opposed by the *547 plaintiff upon affidavits then filed, and the court at Special Term ordered that the direction above-mentioned should he erased. It was further ordered that the sheriff pay the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged premises to the plaintiff, after deducting his fees and expenses; and upon consent of the parties a reference was ordered to determine how the net proceeds of the sale should be applied. The money thus paid to the plaintiff amounted to $9,467.11, which was not put in with its other money but was made a special deposit “ as per order of the Supreme Court.” The plaintiff claims the right to apply the proceeds of the sale, first to the extinguishment of the Warner note, and the balance upon the note for $5,000, and the draft for $7,500. The defendant Moore claimed below that the application should be wholly made upon the note and draft upon which he was hable. The referee applied the proceeds fro rata upon the three pieces of paper upon which Church was hable. The report of the referee was confirmed by the Special Term and plaintiff then appealed to the General Term. The defendant Moore did not appeal. The General Term affirmed the order of the Special Term, and from the order of affirmance the plaintiff has appealed to this court. The question then arises as to what, if any, right the creditor has to make the application, or whether the law is to make.it, and if the latter upon what rule it is to be based.

The right of a creditor to apply a payment made to him by a "debtor, in the absence of any application by the debtor, seems to be confined to cases of voluntary payments. . (Cowperthwaite v. Sheffield, 1 Sandf. 416, 453, 454.) In that case the holder of ten bills of exchange drawn by the same drawers, but indorsed by different parties, sued the drawers thereon in England, and seized, under process of outlawry (they being non-residents and not appearing in the suit), funds of the drawers there sufficient to pay half of the aggregate amount, and obtained judgment for the whole of the ten bills, and applied the funds so seized upon eight of the ten bills to the exclusion of the other two, under the assumed right arising from the warrant and the queen’s grant on the outlawry, which *548 expressly appropriated such moneys to the eight hills exclusively. In a suit in this state by the holder of the two bills against the indorsers thereof it was held, however, that the plaintiffs in the English suit (who were really represented by the plaintiffs in the suit here) had no right to make the application in the way they did, notwithstanding the outlawry proceedings and the warrant and queen’s grant for such application, and that the funds they received in England must be applied ratably to the discharge of all the ten bills embraced in the suit. The judgment was affirmed by this court in 3 Hew York (243); and, at page 253, this particular subject was adverted to, and the principle adopted by the lower court approved.

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.E. 357, 112 N.Y. 543, 21 N.Y. St. Rep. 609, 67 Sickels 543, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orleans-county-national-bank-v-moore-ny-1889.