Hammond's Admr. v. Hammond

76 Vt. 437 | Vt. | 1904

Start, J.

The important inquiry is whether the squash credited on the plaintiff’s account at forty-five cents and butter at one dollar and twenty cents, under the date of September 7, 1895, are general credits.. If they, or either of them, are such credits, the account is not barred by the Statute of Limitations, and the plaintiff is entitled to recover. The evidence, which it is claimed tends to show that these items were delivered in payment of specific items of the account, is as follows: There is a charge on the plaintiff’s account of twenty-five cents for soda, and a like sum for sugar, under the date of January 5, 1895, and a charge subsequent to the credit of the butter, under the date of September 30, 1895, of seventy cents for salt, and these charges amount to one dollar and twenty cents; and there is a charge of thirty-five cents for coffee and ten cents for codfish, under the date of September 4, 1895, amounting to forty-five cents. If these facts tend to1 show that the squash and butter were delivered in payment of these items upon the debtor side of the account, then the referee so finds; otherwise he finds they are general credits upon the account.

These facts do not tend to show that the butter was delivered in payment of any specified item or items of the account. In amount it does not correspond with any o:ne charge upon which it is claimed it should apply. In order to get a sum that will equal the credit, the referee goes back in the account some nine months to two items amounting to fifty cents, and forward to an item, subsequent to, the credit, of seventy cents. In going back in the account, we find many charges of fifty cents to which the credit will apply equally as well as to the two items under the date of January 5, 1898. Also, there is a charge of one dollar and twenty cents on which the credit might apply without dividing it. In going *440forward in the account, we find an item of fifty cents for paper charged 'on the same day that the seventy cents for salt is charged. It is not probable that the parties intended the credit to apply upon anticipated transactions in part only, when the credit would just extinguish the indebtedness arising from that transaction. Under these circumstances, it will not be presumed that the parties intended to divide the credit and apply a part on particular charges that preceded it and a part on an indebtedness to thereafter accrue, when there was an existing indebtedness exceeding the credit’ on which it would naturally apply. There being no evidence tending to show that the butter was delivered in payment of any specific items of the account, it must be considered and applied as a general ■credit upon the account.

The referee computed interest on the annual balances. In this there was no error. Langdon v. Caselton, 30 Vt. 285.

Judgment reversed, and judgment for the plaintiff to recover the balance of account found due by the referee on the basis that no part of the account is barred by the Statute of Limitations, with interest.