68 Ky. 183 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1868
delivered the opinior op the court:
July 30, 1864, L. B. Oldham and J. F. Nelson executed their note for four thousand and eighty-nine dollars and sixty-three cents, which McDaniel guaranteed, payable at ninety days, to Barnes, White & Co., bankers in Mount Sterling, Kentucky; and same day, and at same length of time, Oldham executed his individual note to same payees for six thousand dollars ; both notes, however, were the individual indebtedness of Oldham.
In the latter part of October, and before the debts were due, Oldham made several deposits with the payees, in checks, some of which were on themselves and some on others, amounting, in the aggregate, to seven thousand dollars, which stood accredited to his general deposit account for some months, and until after Oldham went to Illinois and failed, and become entirely insolvent, when the payees appropriated Oldham’s balance on his deposit account — first, to the payment of his single note for six thousand dollars, and then the remainder to the joint note; and having brought suit on it, McDaniel, the guarantor, first pleaded that he had had no notice; but this court having decided that no notice was necessary where a party guaranteed, on the back of a note, for a given sum, due at a given place and time, said answer was withdrawn, and payment pleaded.
The evidence of the debts still remaining with Barnes, White & Co., and deposits still being made, after a sufficiency to have canceled the smaller debt without taking it up, and all before the debts were due, go to fortify Hoffman’s statement.
But whether Oldham directed the appropriation of the credits or not, it is equally clear that Barnes, White & Co. had not so appropriated them within reasonable time, and before Oldham became insolvent; so they then had no more right, of their own volition, than Oldham, to direct the debts upon which the credit should go at that time; but in the absence of any direction, first by the debtor, and next of election by the creditor, the law must make the appropriation; and how this must be done is often controlled by circumstances, from which presumptions and equities arise.
Thus, if one debt bears interest and another does not, the law presumes it to be the interest, and, therefore, the intention of the debtor, to pay it. So, if one debt be older than another, this will sometimes raise the presumption in favor of applying it to the elder; but if one
We are satisfied that this has now become recognized as the settled rule; and no matter what may have been the reasons w'hich influenced the court, the judgment accords with this rule, and it is, therefore, affirmed.