Farrand v. Gage

Prentiss, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court. — The exception, founded upon the allowance of the notes charged in the plaintiff’s account, which is the only exception relied upon by the defendant, might have been available, if it had not appeared that the defendant, on his part, introduced and claimed charges, connected with the notes, in a way, which rendered it proper that the notes should be considered and allowed by the auditors.' The plaintiff’s account, it appears, consisted of the notes, and various other articles admitted to be properly chargeable on book; and the defendant’s account consisted, amongst other things, of several executions, which the defendant, as an officer, held, in favor of diflerent creditors against the plaintiff, to collect. The notes charged in the plaintiffs account were delivered by him to the defendant to be collected and applied in satisfaction of the executions piesented and claimed by the defendant; and the defendant had collected and received payment of the notes, but had not applied them on the executions. The auditors allowed the defendant the amount of the executions, and the plaintiff the amount of the notes. If the defendant had not brought the executions into, the account, he might with propriety have objected to the notes* but having brought in the executions and insisted upon them as a claim against the plaintiff on book, he thereby made the notes, or the amount received by him upon them, a proper matter of adjustment in the settlement of the acounts. The executions, no more than the notes, were proper items of book charge ; but if the defendant claimed, and the plaintiff consented, to have the executions adjusted with the other accounts, whatever the defendant had received in payment of, or to apply upon them, was of course to be considered and allowed in the adjustment.

It is said that the delivery of the notes to the defendant created no immediate debt against him, and that no article can be charged on book, unless the right to charge it existed at the time of the delivery. This is undoubtedly the general rule, but the circum*328stances already mentioned render it inapplicable to this case. The allowance of the notes, whatever may have been the form in which they were presented and allowed, is nothing more in substance than an application of them in payment and extinguishment of the claim for the executions. It is true that the notes, as allowed, with the other payments made by the plaintiff,exceeded by a small sum the amount of the executions; but as the notes were received by the defendant to be collected and applied in payment, not only of the executions, but also, as the report further states, of other charges the defendant might have against the plaintiff, the surplus was properly allowed against the defendant’s other charges.

Phelps, for plaintiff. Woodbridge & Hawley, for defendant.

Judgement affirmed.