53 Iowa 552 | Iowa | 1880
The ruling we assume was based upon ’the idea that by the payment the lien upon the insurance company’s property was, to that extent, discharged, and that when once discharged it was not within the power of plaintiff and Woods & Son to revive it.
This we think must be the correct view, unless the payment, the insurance company not being a party to it, should be deemed absolute only as extinguishing so much of Woods
As to whether the payment should be regarded as provisional in respect to its application, this must be said: The theory that it should be so regarded has no relevancy, except so far as it might support the claim that the payment did not affect the plaintiff’s lien. But we are unable to conclude that it did not. The plaintiff could have a lien, only for what was due it. If no application had been agreed upon, the law would have made one, and in either case it appears to us that it must have operated to the extinguishment pro tanto of the plaintiff’s lien upon specific property.
If an application was agreed upon or intended by the parties to the payment; and by mistake a different one was made, it appears to us that the application might be corrected so as to make it conform to the intention of the parties, if done before the person against whom the lien was claimed had acted in reliance upon the application. In such case the application as corrected might, we think, be properly regarded as the only application. The plaintiff contends that the application of the payment upon the insurance company account was made by mistake. The argument of plaintiff’s counsel is directed mainly to this question of fact. But we have to say that we do not think that the plaintiff is sustained by the evidence. The application was made precisely as Woods & .Son directed, and as the plaintiff intended to make it, and we are unable to discover that Woods & Son intended to give a different direction.
In our opinion the judgment of the Circuit Court must be
Affirmed.