Bucknell v. Marcy

Robinson, J.

The note in controversy, was given by the defendants, who are husband and wife, on the fifth day of October, 1887, for the sum of seventy-seven dollars and fifty cents, with interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, and was payable one year after its date. It was secured by a mortgage on the homestead of the defendants, and on a small strip of land connected with it. The mortgage was also given to secure two other notes, one of which was due in two, and one in three years from their date. Both of them have been paid. The plaintiff admits the payment of five dollars and ninety cents on the note in suit. The defendants claim that, in addition to the payment admitted by the plaintiff, there have been paid, in the price of a certain gray mare, in labor, and in use of a horse, sums amounting to one hundred and two dollars; and that.the amount thus paid was the full amount due on the note. The plaintiff denies that payménts were made by the defendants as claimed, and alleges that the gray mare, for which a credit of eighty-five dollars is asked, was taken in part payment of a chattel mortgage thereon which he held. The district court found that the plaintiff was not entitled to any relief, and adjudged that the mortgage in suit be satisfied of record,

*137The gray mare was sold by the defendant, Peter Marcy, to the plaintiff, in September, 1891, for the agreed price of eighty-five dollars. At that time the plaintiff held the note in suit, and two other notes, which were made by the defendant, Peter Marcy, and his son, Wash. Marcy. They were dated November 28,1888, and were past due. Each was for the sum of sixty-two dollars and fifty cents, with interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent, per annum. They were secured by a chattel mortgage on the gray mare. That mortgage also secured the payment of the note in suit, and another note for twenty-seven dollars and eighty cents, which was due in 1889. The plaintiff had indorsed on the notes for sixty-two dollars and fifty cents each, several small sums as credits for money paid, labor performed, and pigs taken. When the mare was purchased he indorsed on one of these notes a payment of forty-four dollars, and on the other a payment of twenty-four dollars and fifteen cents, as the full amounts due thereon, and applied the remainder of the purchase price in the payment of several small sums which Marcy was owing him. The plaintiff states that all the notes secured by the chattel mortgage, excepting the one in suit, are paid. The defendants and a married daughter testify positively that, when the mare was sold to the plaintiff, he agreed to apply the purchase price on the note in suit. Much of their testimony was given in response to leading questions, to which objections by the plaintiff were duly made, and for that reason it cannot be given the weight which it would have been entitled to had it been given in response to proper questions. The plaintiff testifies positively that no agreement to apply the price of the mare on the note in suit was made, but that the notes secured by the mortgage on the mare were to be first paid. He is corroborated in part by Ed. Jewell, who had agreed to take the *138mare from the plaintiff at the price he was to allow for her, and was present for the purpose of taking her away. He knew of the mortgage on the mare, and understood that it was released by the sale. A few days before that time, a young man, named Bartie Bucknell, had been told by the plaintiff, that he had a mortgage on the mare, and desired Bartie to purchase her. In consequence of what was said to him, Bartie went to Peter Marcy, and was told by him that he wished to sell the mare to pay the mortgage on her, which the plaintiff held.

The presumptions which naturally arise from the admitted facts, are in favor of the plaintiff. Having a mortgage on real estate to secure the note in suit, and a mortgage on the mare to secure other notes, it would be contrary to ordinary business usage for him to waive his right to apply the price of the mare to the payment of the notes which were secured only by the mortgage on her, and use it for the payment of a note which was otherwise secured. The labor, for which the largest credit on the note in suit was claimed by the defendants, was performed by the son, who signed the two notes, on one of which credit for his labor was given. It is probable that the son lesired credit for his labor to be given on a note on which he was liable, rather than on another. However that may have been, it appears that a settlement between the plaintiff and Peter Marcy in regard to the credit due the latter for labor was had, and the indorsements were made pursuant to that settlement. The burden is on the defendants to prove that the note in suit was paid. Their testimony is, in some respects, unreasonable, and fails to convince us that their claims are well founded. After a careful examination of the record submitted to us, we reach the conclusion that the defendants have failed to establish their defense in any particular, and that the *139preponderance of the evidence shows that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief he demands. The decree of the district court is therefore reversed.