Heartt brought an action of assumpsit against Youmans as surviving partner of Bundy & Youmans. Bundy in his lifetime was a member of three firms: Bundy & Martindale, carrying on a shingle mill; J. F. Bandy & Co., carrying on the lumber business, except sawing; and Bundy & You-mans, owning and operating a saw mill and salt works. Heartt had business with Bundy & Martindale, and also with Bundy & Youmans, but had no business with J. F. Bundy & Co. The business of Heartt with the two firms was in 1872. Bundy & Martindale kept a separate set of books; but all the business of the other firms was kept on Bundy’s books, and all the bank business of all the firms was kept in Bundy’s name.
The business with Bundy & Youmans consisted first in a written contract for sawing about three million feet of logs.
In November, 1874, Heartt presented his claims against both firms to the commissioners on claims in the estate of Bundy/ in which he claimed ten per cent, interest, and applied enough of Bundy’s two notes to balance the Bundy & Youmans account. Accompanying the accounts thus submitted was a written statement that in so presenting his claim he did not waive his rights to enforce and collect the same from the firm of J. F. Bundy & Co. or the survivors thereof, or against the firm of Bundy & 'Martindale or the survivors thereof. ■ It appears that at this time Heartt supposed that the firm of J. F. Bundy & Co. and Bundy & Youmans were one and the same. These claims being disallowed, he brought suits thereon. The Bundy & Martin-dale suit was tried first, and in this the court applied on that claim one thousand six hundred and eighty-eight dollars and sixty-seven cents of the two notes. This case was next, tried and the court applied the balance of the two notes, being one thousand three hundred and fifty-three dollars and forty-two cents, and charged the jury that Heartt had made no application of the notes, and also that he was entitled to interest at seven per cent, on equated averages prior to January 1, 1874. To the charge allowing interest, and the application of the notes as made by the court, plaintiffs in error complain.
Plaintiff in error’s counsel makes a conrputation of the accounts to show that the jury must have made a mistake in the interest allowed by them, and this' contrary to the charge of the court. Even if this were so, this is not the proper place to correct that error, this matter should have been presented to the court below on a motion for a new trial. We cannot correct mistakes thus made by a jury.
I. As to the interest, Hnder the written contract, Heartt was to pay for the sawing as often as three hundred thou
II. As to the application of the amount of the notes as made by the court. It is conceded that no application was made by either of the parties, unless the accounts submitted against Bundy’s estate by Heartt could be considered an application. In the accounts thus submitted, Heartt disclaimed expressly the waiver of any rights he might have against either of the firms or the survivors thereof. We must consider the entire submission as a whole; and in so doing, we see that Heartt, in submitting his accounts under such a disclaimer, had no intention of making, and did not thereby make, any application.
It is said that the judge, in the suit against Martiudale, must have assumed that there was a certain amount due on the Bundy & Martindale account, and a certain amount due on the Bundy & Youmans account, neither of which facts he could then have known, and that upon such assumption he divided the amount pro rata. Where the parties do not make a specific appropriation of the moneys paid, the law will appropriate it usually as the justice and equity of the case may require. These notes were Bundy’s, endorsed by J. F. Bundy & Co., with which firm Heartt had no deal
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.