Gleason v. Gage
Gleason v. Gage
Opinion of the Court
We are of opinion that the trustee must be discharged on his answer. He answered that the principal defendant had engaged to do a job of work for him, for which he was to pay him $250 when it was completed, but that nothing had become due upon it at the time of the service of the writ; that $37 had become due to him for extra work; that he had paid him generally on account for work, without any agreement as to its application, $110.25, which more than balanced all which might be due for extra work; and that he was not indebted to him when the process was served for labor or upon said job. The allegation filed by the plaintiff avers that the payment was actually made by the trustee in part payment of the work done on the job. This allegation is in direct conflict with the answer, and was therefore inadmissible to charge the trustee.
The doctrine of the application of payments is well settled. If the party paying chooses to make the application of the payment to any particular debt, he may do so. If he pays generally, without making any particular application, the other party may make it. If it is made by neither, the law applies it. But the party receiving the money can only apply it to some existing debt; and if he fails to make the application, the law will only
Trustee discharged.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Abner C. Gleason v. John M. Gage & trustee
- Status
- Published