Windsor v. Kennedy
This text of 52 Miss. 164 (Windsor v. Kennedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
. We cannot see that this case involves anything more than the question — more than once decided by this court — as to how payments shall be applied where the debtor owes a second and unsecured debt to the same party.
Windsor & Randolph executed a chattel mortgage on a future- crop and on their mules, to secure advances made and to be made, to the amount of $3,000, bjr S. H. Kennedy & Co., of New Orleans. A note for the $3,000, to fall due the succeeding winter, was given to represent the sum expected to be advanced, which note is particularly described in the mortgage, with a provision that when the same is paid off the mortgage shall become void. During the year supplies were obtained by mortgagors to an amount largely in excess of $3,000.
Early in the fall, and before the maturity of the note, cotton sufficient was sent forward by the mortgagors to pay. off the-note and a portion of the excess of supplies furnished.
Subsequently the mortgagors sold their mules to D. A. Windsor, to whom they were indebted. Thereupon S. H. Kennedy & Co. filed their bill to foreclose the mortgage, making the purchaser of the mules a party. With their bill they filed an account current against defendants, which showed [167]*167credits by cotton to an amount considerably larger than the note with interest. The answer of defendants set up the complete payment, and satisfaction of the note and mortgage by the defendants, of cotton, as shown by complainants’1 own exhibit. There was no proof other than the various exhibits. The chancellor, by his decree, applied the payment of cotton to the account for supplies furnished outside of the note, and ordered a foreclosure as to the amount found due on the latter. We think that this was erroneous. The mortgage-was not given for the sum of $3,000 “ and further'advances,” but for the specific sum of $3,000, evidenced by a promissory-note specifically described. It is true that at the time the note was taken no actual indebtedness had accrued, but the parties elected to limit the future indebtedness to a fixed amount, and we are bound to conclude that this was the full’ sum for which defendants were willing to incumber their property.
At all events it was the full sum for which they did incumber it. If complainants chose thereafter to extend credit beyond this amount, they became, as to said excess, mere ordinary creditors, and whenever thereafter any payments were made by delivery of the mortgaged crop, every intendment of law must be that they should be placed to the credit of that portion of the debt which was a lien on-the-thing delivered. It is said by complainants’ solicitor that the debtor having-given no directions as to the application of the payments, the creditors had the right to apply them to the unsecured account. We. should be reluctant to hold, in the absence of some express or strongly implied assent on the part of the debtor, that a mortgage creditor can receive the mortgaged property and apply it on an unsecured debt, leaving the second debt unpaid. We do not think, however, that the record in this case shows any special application of the cotton by the creditor. The account current, as made out by complainants, is simply an itemized bill of particulars of articles and cash furnished throughout the entire year, footing up an aggregate of $6,737. [168]*168It is then credited by tbe proceeds of cotton and by proceeds of note of defendants, which, it seems they had placed upon the market and sold, or discounted themselves.
There is no special application of the proceeds of the cotton to any particular debt.
It is just as if the whole thing were an open account, with a limitation in the mortgage to a specified sum.
In such case the law would apply the payments to that portion of the account which was secured, and when that was paid off the mortgage would be discharged. McLaughlin v. Green, 48 Miss., 205; Pointdexter v. La Roche, 7 S. & M., 699; Neal v. Allison, 50 Miss., 177.
Complainants’ solicitor insists that the true theory of the dealings between the parties, as disclosed by the account current, is as follows:
The note for $3,000, given by defendants in March, was forthwith discounted by complainants, and the proceeds, amounting to. .$2,685, placed to the credit of defendants. This became defendants’ money. By the 6th of July it had all been checked out or consumed by them in supplies.
The cotton received in the fall was intended to be applied to the advances thereafter made, which very nearly absorbed it, leaving the original note still protected by the mortgage.
This is too artificial. It is leaving the substantial rights of parties to be defeated by a trick of book-keeping.
It being conceded that the payments made exceed the amount due on the note, the decree of the court below is reversed and the bill dismissed.
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52 Miss. 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/windsor-v-kennedy-miss-1876.