92 Ga. 793 | Ga. | 1894
Benson rented to Hilliard a tract of land for the year 1891, for $150. Hilliard then owed him an open account for the year 1890, of $108. In May, 1891, Hilliard mortgaged to Oofer the crop planted on this land, to secure á debt for supplies which Cofer had furnished him; and the mortgage was duly recorded. After the crop matured, Hilliard delivered to Benson, out of the crop made on the land, cotton which 'Benson sold for $232.05; and Benson, with the consent of Hilliard, applied the proceeds first to the payment of his open account, and the balance to the rent. Cofer foreclosed his mortgage upon the balance of the crop and had the mortgage ft. fa. levied upon it; and Benson sued out a distress warrant for the balance of his rent, and this was also levied upon the same property. The crop was sold by the sheriff; and the proceeds not being sufficient to satisfy both claims, the question as to which of these parties was entitled to the fund was submitted to the court, without the intervention of a jury. The coui't decided that the fund should be applied first to the balance due on the distress warrant, and the remainder to the mortgage fi. fa.; and to this ruling Cofer excepted.
As between the parties themselves, when a payment is made by a debtor to a creditor holding several demands against him, the debtor has the right to direct the claim to which it shall be appropriated; and if he fails to do so, the creditor has the right to appropriate it at his election. If neither exercises this privilege, the law will direct the application in such manner as is reasonable and equitable, both as to parties and third persons. Code, §2869. In all cases due regard must be had to the rights of third persons. "Where one of the claims held by the creditor is secured and another unsecured, he cannot appropriate the payment first to his unsecured claim, over the objection of another cred
There is no suggestion in the agreed statement of facts that the cotton received and disposed of by Benson brought less than its full value, or was sold subject to Cofer’s mortgage. Nor does it appear that it is accessible to seizure under that mortgage. As cotton is a commpdity which passes rapidly through the channels of commerce and disappears after once being put in those channels, the fair presumption is that this cotton is forever gone beyond the reach of the mortgagee, and that he is without remedy against the same. There is no injustice to Benson in adopting this theory, for it was by his act that the cotton disappeared, and he has received and appropriated its full value.
Judgment reversed.