Cohen v. L'Engle
Cohen v. L'Engle
Opinion of the Court
The appellees sued the appellant in.assumpsit to recover five promissory notes made'by M. A. Dzialynski to the appellant as payee, and endorsed by him to the payee, and endorsed by him to the appellees, as follows : Two notes for $500 each, dated August 22d, 1885, payable, respectively, in 60 and 90 days after
To the declaration the appellant as a first plea alleged payment by the maker, M. A. Dzialynski, and by W. A. Young, as assignee of said Dzialynski. On this plea issue was joined. The defendant also pleaded specially, alleging that Dzialynski, the maker of said notes, before the commencement of the suit, had made a general assignment of all his property to one W. A. Young, for the-benefit of all his creditors, and that in said assignment the plaintiffs’ entire claims against Dzialynski were preferred, inclusive of the notes sued upon, for which the defendant was liable only as accommodation endorser. That the plaintiffs had acquiesced in and accepted said assignment by accepting and receiving from the assignee thereunder large payments upon their claims. That said trust estate was not yet settled or closed, but that a large part of the assets still remained in the hands of the said Young, as assignee, sufficient fully, under said assignment, when disposed of, to pay the plaintiffs’ claim in full, inclusive of the endorsed notes sued upon. Said plea claiming that the suit of the plaintiffs should be abated or postponed until said trust was closed, and until after they had received the full pro rata share, under said assignment, of the assets thereof. To this plea the plaintiffs demurred, and, upon argument, the demurrer was sustained. This ruling is the first error
After this demurrer to his plea was sustained the defendant interposed a plea upon equitable grounds, in substance, as follows : That the defendant was the accommodation endorser of the notes sued on, and that the maker thereof, M. A. Dzialynski, received the benefit of all moneys advanced by the plaintiffs thereon, except upon the note for $234, that was received by the defendant. That the plaintiffs held other' evidences of indebtedness from said'Dzialynski to the aggregate amount of $3,500, and held collaterals to secure the same to the aggregate amount of $3,203, in the shape of divers notes and mortgages of divers third persons. That plaintiffs also held, besides all these, three other joint notes made by M. A. Dzialynski, Philip Dzialynski and C- L. Mitchell, dated October 26th, 1885, November 26th, 1885, and December 26th,
To this plea the plaintiffs also demurred upon divers
On the 6th of June, 1889, the cause was tried, and resulted in a verdict for plaintiffs for $1,630.72, the full amount due upon the notes sued upon with interest. Judgment being entered upon this verdict, after motion for new trial refused, the defendant takes his appeal therefrom to this court.
■ At the trial defendant’s counsel propounded to W. A. Young, the assignee of M. A. Dzialynski, as defendant’s witness, the following question : “State whether or not in arriving at the pro rata amounts which you paid over to the plaintiffs out of the assets of Dzialynski held by you as assignee, you took into consideration the amounts they had collected on the collaterals in their hands, and reduced thereby the indebtedness
It is also assigned as error that the court erred in refusing to permit the defendant to testify that he was merely an accommodation endorser for M. A. Dzialynski on the notes sued upon, and received no benefits therefrom. In this ruling the court’erred. The equitable right to have the payments made by the assignee, under the circumstances here, apportioned pro rata among the different items of indebtedness held by the plaintiffs against Dzialynski were much stronger in favor of an accommodation endorser thereon, than in favor of a joint principal who had derived benefits from the debt. For this reason it was material to the defendant to show that in reality he was merely an accommodation endorser on the claims sued upon. The real contention in this case is as to the proper application of the payments made by the assignee, W. A. Young, to the plaintiffs. Under his plea of payment the defendant had the right to show and to get the benéfit of any and all payments to the plaintiffs, whether partial or in full, that were legally applicable to and creditable upon the claims sued on. • Upon the following facts adduced in evidence there seems to be no conflict: The total indebtedness of M. A. Dzialynski to the plaintiffs at the time of his failure and
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and a new trial ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Solomon Cohen v. E. M. L'Engle and W. A. Dell, Partners under firm name of State Bank of Florida
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- APPLICATION OF PAYMENTS —PLEADINGS—EVIDENCE. 1. A bank holds an aggregate indebtedness of $7,014 against D. as principal debtor made up of divers notes, upon some of which other parties were joint makers with the principal debtor, and upon others of which still other different third persons were accommodation endorsers and sureties. D., the principal debtor, makes an assignment to Y. for the benefit of his creditors generally, in which the bank’s entire claim is preferred. The assignee, Y., makes dividend payments to the bank upon its aggregated claim, without any directions as to whether such payments should be applied by the bank to any particular item or part of its claim, or not; Held, that in such case, whether the assignee gave any directions or not as to the application to be made by the bank of the payments made by him, the law applies the payments made by the assignee pro rata among and between all of the different unpaid obligations or evidences of indebtedness held by the creditor against such principal assigning debtor, without regard to any seniority as between such evidences of indebtedness in date or maturity; Held,further, that the creditor, in such case, had no right, with or without directions from the assignee as to the application of his payments, to apply them otherwise than pro rata as credits upon the different unpaid evidences of indebtedness held by such creditor against the assigning principal debtor ; Held further, that the payments made by the assignee, in such case, should be applied pro rata among all of the different unpaid evidences of indebtedness held by the creditor against the assigning principal debtor, notwithstanding the fact that for some of his evidences of indebtedness the creditor may hold other distinct and independent collateral securities pledged to him by the debtor prior to his assignment as security for such distinct items of his claim. The payments made by the assignee should be applied pro rata- to those items of the creditor’s claim for which he holds independent collateral securities, as well as to all the other different evidences of his claim. 2. The general rule is, that a creditor, who holds several obligations or claims against his debtor, has the right to apply a payment made to him by the debtor to either of the obligations he holds, unless the debtor at the time of making the payment directs its application, which right the debtor has in every case. But this rule is confined to cases of voluntary payments by the debtor himself, and does not apply to payments made* in invitum, or to payments made by an assignee or trustee, acting under a deed of assignment by the debtor for the benefit of his creditors generally. In the latter cases the law makes the application of the payments pro rata to all the separate obligations of the debtor in the proportion that the aggregated claims of the creditor bears to the amount of the payment made; and this, too, whether the creditor for some parts of his claim holds other independent collateral securities or not. 3. Where a debtor owes his creditor several different obligations, and for some of them pledges other independent collateral securities, and then fails in business and assigns all his effects in trust for the benefit of his creditors generally, the creditor has the right to apply collections made by him out of such collateral securities to those specific portions of his claim for the security of which such collaterals were pledged, to the exclusion of other obligations of the debtor held by him that did not enter into the pledge of such collaterals. 4. Where an accommodation endorser issued upon his endorsement, and pleads payment, under such plea he has the right to get the benefit of, and to establish by proofs, any credits that the claim sued upon is legally entitled to, that may have been paid thereon by the principal debtor, or by an assignee acting under a deed of assignment made by the principal debtor for the benefit of his creditors generally ; and, under such plea, has the right to have payments made by such assignee to the suing creditor equitably pro rated among all of the different obligations held by such creditor against such principal debtor, as well to those upon which he is endorser as to all the others held by the creditor.