62 Ind. 128 | Ind. | 1878
This was an action by the appellant, as plaintiff, against the appellees, as defendants, to recover the possession of one bay horse of the alleged value of one hundred and fifty dollars.
In its complaint, the appellant alleged, in substance, that it was the owner and entitled to the possession of said hoi’se; that the appellees then had possession of said horse, and unlawfully and wrongfully detained the same from the appellant; and that said horse had not been taken on any tax, assessment or fine or any execution or other writ against the appellant. Wherefore, etc.
On a proper affidavit filed by the appellant, an order for the delivery of said horse was duly issued, by virtue of which the sheriff of Putnam county took the horse from the appellees, and, upon the execution of the necessary undertaking, delivered the same to the appellant.
The appellees answered the complaint, in two paragraphs, in substance as follows:
1. A general denial; and,
2. That, before the commencement of this suit, the ap
To the second paragraph of said answer, the appellant replied in five paragraphs, the first of which was a general denial, and the others stated affirmative matters, which we need not set out in this opinion.
The issues joined were tried by a jury, and a verdict was returned for the appellees, and that the value of the horse in controversy was one hundred dollars.
The only alleged error, properly assigned by the appellant in this court, is the overruling of its motion for a new trial. Of this motion the appellant’s attorneys say, in théii brief of this cause in this court: “The motion calls in question the verdict, as not sustained by the law and not sustained by the evidence, but contrary to both; also the conduct or rather misconduct of the defendants, and the instructions given, refused, and modified by the court.”
We will consider and decide the several matters, thus called in question, in inversion of the order in which counsel have stated them.
Before considering “ the instructions given, refused and modified,” complained of by the appellant in this court, it is necessary, Ave think, to an intelligible view of the case and of our decision thereof, that Ave should first give a summary, at least, of some of the undisputed facts of the case, as Ave gather the same from the record. In 1872, the appellee George W. Black was engaged in the livery-stable business, and in the business of boarding, feeding and grooming horses, in the city of Greencastle, Indiana, In 1873, he and his brother and co-appellee, Robert M. Black, became partners, and as such continued in the same business, in the same place. In both of said years the appellant had an agency for the transaction of its business, in said city of Greencastle, at which point one W. T. Thomson Avas the agent of the appellant. The horse sued for in this action Avas owned by the appellant, and was used by its agent, Thomson, in the transaction of the business of its agency at Greencastle. For some time, in 1872, this horse was boarded by the appellee George W. Black, at his ;said livery-stable, for the appellant, at the agreed sum of
Accordingly, when the agent’s step-son, Theirkoff, a lad of sixteen years, paid the appellee Black the said sum of fifteen dollars, without special directions as to the application thereof, the appellee applied, of said fifteen 'dollars, the sum of nine dollars and fifty cents to the payment of said account, and credited the residue of five dollars and fifty cents on the board bill of said horse for February, 1873. The appellee claimed that there was still due on the board, bill of said horse, for February, 1873, the said sum of nine dollars and fifty cents, which the appellant refused to pay ; and, until such payment was made, the appelleesrefused to surrender said horse, and hence this suit.
Before considering the instructions of the court, complained of, it is proper, also, that we should set out the-statute under which the appellees had a lien on the appellant’s horse for the amount, if any, really due them for boarding said horse. The statute referred to is an act entitled “An act to give livery-stable keepers, and others engaged in the feeding of cattle, horses, hogs, and other live-stock, a lien upon the same for their services as such,: being supplemental to an act concerning liens of mechan
“That the keepers of livery-stables, and all others engaged in feeding horses, cattle, hogs, and other live-stock, shall have a lien upon such property for the feed and care bestowed by them upon the same, and shall have the same rights and remedies as are provided for those persons heretofore having by law such lien in the act to which this is supplemental.” 2 R. S. 1876, p. 335, note a.
Erom the provisions of this act it is clear, that, if there was any sum due the appellees from the aj^pellant “ for the feed and care bestowed by them ” upon the appellant’s horse, they would have a lien therefor upon said horse.
Ve pass now to the consideration of the instructions of the court, complained of by the appellant in this court. The eighth instruction of the circuit court to the jury trying the cause was as follows:
“ 8. If, from the evidence, the jury believe that Thomson was the agent of plaintiff, at and for Greencastle, and that at the time of payment by plaintiff of fifteen dollars At the hands of the step-sou of the agent, Thomson, the plaintiff was indebted to George W. Black for buggy and horse hire, for the use of the company, and for feed for the company’s horse, theretofore procured from Black, and was also indebted for the boarding of said horse of the -company in a further sum, in all amounting to twenty-five dollars or more, and that there was no express direction as to how the said sum should he applied, Black had the right to elect for himself upon what pai’t of said indebtedness said payment should be applied.”
It is very clear, we think, that this eighth instruction did not contain a full, fair and correct statement of the law applicable to the case made by the evidence in this Action.
In the case of Tayloe v. Sandiford, 7 Wheat. 13, it was. said by the Supreme Court of the United States, Marshall, C. J., delivering the opinion of the court: “ A person owing money under distinct contracts has undoubtedly a right to apply his payments to whichever debt he may choose; and, although prudence might suggest an express, direction of the application of his payments at the time of their being made; yet there may he cases in which this, power would be completely exercised without any express direction given at the time. * * * A payment may he attended by circumstances which demonstrate its application as completely as words could demonstrate it.”
The question in all such cases is, what was the intention of the debtor ? and, whether this intention is expressed in-words, or is implied from the surrounding circumstances, of the ease, when arrived at, it must prevail and will prevent any other different appropriation by the creditor.. When, therefore, in this case the jury were told, that, in the-absence of express direction from the appellant as to the-application of the payment made, the appellee Black had the right to elect for himself the application of the payment made, we are clearly of the opinion that the court mistook the law applicable to the case made, and erred in such instruction.
At the proper time the appellant asked the court below to give the jury the following instruction :
“ Payment of the exact amount due on one of two bills is a direction to apply on the bill, the exact amount of which is paid.”
“ Payment of the exact amount due on one of two bills is a circumstance you may consider in determining whether there was a direction to apply on the bill, the exact amount of which is paid.”
The court gave the jury this instruction, as modified, and to the refusal of the court to give the instruction as asked the appellant excepted, and excepted also to the giving of the instruction as modified.
It seems clear to us, that the court did not err in refusing to give the instructions as asked for by the appellant. The payment of the exact sum due on one of two bills of different amounts can not he regarded of itself as a direction to apply on the hill, the exact amount of which is paid. Rut we do not think that the instruction, as modified by the court and given to the jury, contained a fair and correct statement of the law applicable to the case made by the evidence. It was not claimed in this case, that, at the time of the payment of said sum of fifteen dollars, the appellant, or its agent, Thomson, or the agent’s step-soil, Theirkoff, who made such payment, gave any direction for the application or appropriation of such payment. The question for the jury, therefore, was, not whether there was a direction given to apply the payment on the particular bill, for there was no direction given. Rut the question for the jury was, what was the appellant’s intention in making such payment at the time it was made, as shown by the facts and circumstances attending such payment, as to its application or appropriation to the payment of the particular bill, the amount of which it would exactly pay ?
Where, as in this case, the payment made would exactly pay the sum due on one of two hills, and such payment would largely overpay the sum due on the other of said two bills; these are circumstances which, in the absence of
In our opinion, therefore, the court erred in giving the jury the said modified instruction.
The conclusion we have reached in regard to the instructions complained of renders it wholly unnecessary for us to consider or decide the other questions presented by the appellant’s counsel. Those questions are questions of fact rather than of law, and they may not arise again on another trial.
Eor the reasons given we think that the court erred in overruling the appellant’s motion for a new trial.
The judgment is reversed, at the appellees’ costs, and the cause is remanded, with instructions to sustain the motion for a new trial, and for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.