United States v. Bradbury

24 F. Cas. 1218
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJune 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 F. Cas. 1218 (United States v. Bradbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Bradbury, 24 F. Cas. 1218 (D. Me. 1841).

Opinion

WARE, District Judge.

The instruction to the jury was. that when a debtor makes payment to a creditor, to whom he is indebted in several sums and on various accounts. as by note, bond, and book account, he has a right to direct to what account or what debt the payment shall be appropriated. This is a rule which arises out of the nature of the act. The payment is the act of the debtor, and he has a natural right to determine the quality of his own act, that is to make the appropriation of his own money. If the debtor pays generally on account, this right results to the creditor; he may then make the appropriation, and apply it to the payment of which debt be ebooses. But the imputation, whether made by the debtor of creditor, must be made at the time of payment; in re presentí, hoc est statim. atqne solutum est. Dig. 46. 3. 1. If not then made, it is not permitted to either party to go back afterwards and apply the payment, but the law intervenes and makes the application according to its own notions of justice, between the parties. In cases of open, running accounts, where there have been a number of successive charges and payments, from time to time, if neither of the parties has imputed these payments to extinguish auy particular charges in the account. the law applies them to the payment of the debits in the order of time in which they stand in the account, each payment being appropriated to tbe extinguishment of flu* oldest charge on the debtor side of the account. Such was the direction to the jury, and, as a general rule, this is too well es[1219]*1219tablished to be brought into doubt. U. S. v. Kirkpatrick, 9 Wheat. [22 U. S.] 720. Postmaster General v. Furber [Case No. 11,308]; U. S. Wardwell [Id. 16,640]; Clayton’s Case, 1 Mer. 572.

The Roman law. from which our rules for the imputation of general and unappropriated payments are in part derived, looks, generally. to the interest of the debtor, and is governed by what may be presumed to have been the will of a prudent and discreet man, if his attention had been particularly called, to the subject; “quod verisimile videretur diligentem debitorem admouitu ita suum ne-gotium gesturum fnisse.’’ Dig. 40, 3. 97.

When there were several debts, and the payments were general, the law imputed it to a debt which the debtor owed on his own account, rather than to one for which he was liable as surety; to one which bore interest. before one which did not; to a debt secured by mortgage or by sureties,' rather than to one which was not; to one having a penalty attached to it, rather than to one which had none, and, generally, to extinguish the debt which was most onerous to the debtor. It proceeded upon this principle, that, as the right of making the appropriation belongs of right to the debtor in the first instance, when none is made by either party and it is left to be made by the law, that ought to look to the supposed will of the debtor rather than that of the creditor. But if the debts were all of the same character, this preference was abandoned; for though the debtor, on some accounts, may have an interest in extinguishing the more recent lather than the more ancient debts, the law adopted the more equitable rule between the parties, and applied the payment to the oldest. “Si nihil eorum interveniat, vecustior contractus ante solvitur.” Dig. 46, 3, 97. 5; Poth. Obl. Nos. 565, 571; 7 Toullier, Droit Civil. Nos. 173. 186. In this rule, therefore, the common and civil law agree, and the rule itself has its foundation in principles of natural justice. There was. then, no error in the instruction given to the jury in laying down the principles of law applicable to the genexal question, independent of the specialties belonging to the particular case.

The only question which can be considered as fairly open, is whether there is in this case such an appropriation of the payments made by the debtor, as will take it out of the common rule. It is contended that there was. and that this, as a fact, may be justly inferred from the circumstances under which the payments were made, and from the re-eeipts which were taken. The bond bears date, Jan. 26. 1S38. Bradbury remained postmaster for three quarters after; and at the end of each quarter paid the amount of postage which had accrued during the quarter, and took a receipt for the sum. which described it as ‘being the amount due from him to the United States for the quarter ending, etc., as shown by his account current, including all previous dues.’ It is argued that this receipt makes an appropriation of the payment, first to extinguish the debt which accrued the past quarter, and that the excess only, if any there were, was to be applied toward paying the old balance; and that such was the intention of the debtor is a just inference from the fact that each payment was the precise amount of postage which had accrued during the preceding quarter. Undoubtedly it was the right of the defendant to have the money so applied, if he chose to make the application. But to carry this intention into effect it must be made known in a clear and intelligible manner, either by positive directions or by circumstances equivalent to a direct order. The fact that the payments were in each case precisely equal to the postage of the preceding quarters does undoubtedly raise a strong presumption that they were intended to be applied to the extinguishment of that part of the debt.. In the case of Marryatts v. White, 2 Starkie, 101, Lord Ellenborough seemed to consider this circumstance as conclusive in a case which in its leading features resembles the present. That was an action on a promissory note, against the surety, given to secure the payment for flour to be afterwards delivered to the principal on the note. He was at the time indebted to the plaintiff for goods previously delivered. There was, therefore, an open running account. By the usage of trade a-credit was allowed of three months, and if payment was sooner made, the debtor was entitled to a discount. Lord Ellenbor-ough observed, ‘that the payment of the exact amount of goods previously delivered is irrefragable evidence to show that the sum was intended in payment of those goods, and the payment of sums within the time allowed for discount, and on which discount has been allowed, affords a strong inference, in the absence of proof to the contrary, that it was made in relief of the surety.’

It will be observed that this case, in one important circumstance, differs from the ease at bar. A discoxmt was. by usage, allowed when payment was made before the expiration of the credit, and on some of the payments a discount was. in fact, allowed. This conclusively proved that the imputation was to the new. and not to the old debt; because if it had been applied to the old account no discount could have been claimed. Two circumstances here concurred to indicate the intention of tne debtor, but one of which exists in the present case. That, it is true, Lord Ellenborough seems to have considered as conclusive. when standing alone and unconnected with any circumstances contributing either to confirm or weaken the presumption.

As a universal proposition, this will perhaps be found to be not wholly free from difficulty. But in the present case it does not stand alone; a receipt was taken, and an ap-pi-oprintion of the payment may lie made by the form of the receipt. Manning v. Wes-[1220]*1220terne, 2 Vern. 607. Does this receipt, in its legal construction, make the appropriation which is contended for? In its terms it professes to be for the amount of the last quarter, including the previous dues. This form of expression seems to contemplate the whole debt due as one mass, and to impute the payment to the aggregate.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Cas. 1218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bradbury-med-1841.