33 Cal. 650 | Cal. | 1867
This is an action for money had and received. The defendant is not charged, nor is he upon the facts of the case chargeable as a bailee.
The objection, that all the persons who were interested in the purchase money for the mining claim should have been joined as plaintiffs, is deemed to have been waived because of the failure to take the objection by answer, the matter not appearing upon the face of the complaint. (Practice Act, Sec. 45.) In respect to the receipt of the money by the defendant for the use of the plaintiff, and the demand of the same from the defendant by the plaintiff, the evidence is conflicting, and we are not warranted in saying that those facts were not sustained by the evidence.
The verdict for gold coin appears to be proper. The purchasers of the mining claim paid the defendant on his account (which included among other items the charge for the purchase money for the claim), in gold coin and dust, all of which he entered in his book as “ cash.” The account was introduced in evidence by the defendant, and that showed a charge by the defendant against the purchaser of the claim of “ cash ” paid to the plaintiff, and the only cash mentioned in the testimony being gold coin, the jury might well find for the plaintiff in that kind of money.
The instructions to which our attention is directed involve some of the rules relating to the application of payments. When the defendant charged to the purchasers of the min
There was, however, evidence in the case tending to show an application of the money by the directions of one or the agreement of both of the parties. It was shown that two hundred dollars was at one time paid by the purchasers to the defendant, on the debt to the plaintiff, and that the defendant at another time assented to the remark of the purchasers, that the bill of sale was then settled or clear. The debtor may, at or before the time of payment, direct the application of the payment, and if the creditor receives the money, he is bound by the direction. If the debtor omits to do so, the creditor may, generally, apply it to any debt he chooses ; and when the application is made, he is bound by it, and cannot, without the consent of the other party, change the application to another debt. (See 1 Am. Lead. Cases, 268; Notes to Mayor, etc. v. Patton, and Field, v. Holland.) The evidence tended to show an application of the money to
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice Sawyer did not express an opinion.