258 F. 363 | 2d Cir. | 1919
(after stating the above facts). This is a suit in equity brought for the recovery of $1,500,000 with interest. The general rule of course is that, where the cause of action is for the payment of a sum of money merely, there is no reason why a court of equity should be resorted to. Raton Waterworks Co. v. Raton, 174 U. S. 360, 19 Sup. Ct. 719, 43 L. Ed. 1005. An action at law is regarded as the appropriate remedy in such cases; the remedy at law being full, adequate, and complete. The Judicial Code (Act March 3, 1911, c. 231, 36 Stat. 1163) in section 267 (Comp. St. § 1244) expressl} declares that suits in equity shall not be sustained in any court of the United States in any case where a plain, adequate, and complete remedy may be had at law. The bill of complaint in this case, however, alleges that the plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law and that the fund which they seek to recover is held by the defendant in trust. Whether there is or ever has been a specific trust res, or anything more than an ordinary indebtedness, payment of which the plaintiffs might have obtained in an action at law, and whether such an action would have been fully adequate, has not been raised by motion or answer, or on the argument. We observe, however, that counsel for defendant states in his brief as a fact that “there is no fund in a proper sense; there is merely an indebtedness of $1,500,000 owing by the defendant.” Although an appellate court may, and not infrequently does, sua sponte, take the objection and dismiss the bill (Southern Pacific R. R. Co. v. United States, 200 U. S. 341, 26 Sup. Ct. 296, 50 L. Ed. 507), it will not in all cases pursue that course. We see no reason why in the present situation we should enter upon that inquiry, but we will assume that, if the plaintiffs are entitled to the money for which they have filed their bill, they may maintain their suit in a court of equity.
We may, however, add that the complainants derive through an assignment, and that the assignee of a chose in action under the decisions of the Supreme Court cannot proceed in equity merely on the ground that his interest is an equitable one, but must proceed at law. New York Guaranty Co. v. Memphis Water Co., 107 U. S. 205, 2 Sup. Ct. 279, 27 L. Ed. 484; Hayward v. Andrews, 106 U. S. 672, 1 Sup. Ct. 544, 27 L. Ed. 271. We are not unaware that, where a part only of a chose in action has been assigned, the assignee has been allowed to sue in equity, upon the theory that courts of law would not recognize the right to split up a single cause of action into many
We come, then, to consider first whether the Russian government has surrendered effectively any interest it may have had in the $1,500,-000 owing by the defendant; and it is to be observed in respect to this phase of the case that the agreement of December 18, 1917, by which the Russian government is said to have transferred to complainants all its interest in the fund was by Khrabroff as president of the Russian Supply Committee in America, “acting for and on behalf of the Russian government,” which reads as follows:
“Whereas, by agreement dated the 8th day of March, 1916, made between the parties hereto and ® * * as voting trustees, two hundred (200) shares of tlie capital stock of * * * the Agency Company, were assigned and pledged to the said voting trustees as security for the performance by the Agency Company of the two contracts mentioned in said agreement; and
“Whereas, all matters and questions arising out of or in connection with the performance of said contracts have now been adjusted and settled and it is desired to dissolve the voting trust created by said agreement and to reassign said shares:
“Now, therefore, this indenture witnesseth: The parties hereto hereby consent and agree to the cancellation of the said hereinabove recited agreement, dated the 8th day of March, 1916, and to the dissolution of the voting trust thereby created and the reassignment of the shares of the capital stock of the Agency Company mentioned in said agreement and the delivery of the certificates of said shares to the holders of the voting trust certificates issued under the provisions of said agreement.”
On July 5, 1917, the United States government recognized Boris Bakhmetieff as the Russian ambassador. The record contains a certificate, signed and sealed on May 8, 1918, by Robert Tansing, Secretary of State of the United States of America, stating that Boris Bakhmetieff presented his letter of credence to the President and was officially received by the President as ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary of Russia on July a 5, 1917, and that he has since that date been recognized by the Department of State as the ambassador of Russia. The certificate of the ambassador declared the official character of the Russian Supply Commission, and that it was organized to purchase supplies in the United States for Russia, and to accept supplies purchased or manufactured in the United States for Russia, and that it had power to settle all matters relating to contracts for supplies so purchased or manufactured during the time herein involved.
The same principle is the established law of England. Republic of Peru v. Dreyfus, 38 Ch. Div. 348, 356, 359. In the same way the question who represents and acts for a foreign sovereign on nation in its relations with the United States is determined, not by the judicial department, but exclusively by the political branch of the government. In re Baiz, 135 U. S. 403, 10 Sup. Ct. 854, 34 L. Ed. 222. So that the certificate of the Secretary of State, above referred to, certifying to the official character of Boris Bakhmetieff as the Russian ambassador to the United States is not only evidence, but it is, the best evidence, of Mr. BakhmetiefFs diplomatic character, and is to be regarded by the courts as conclusive of the question, and the court could not proceed upon argumentative and collateral proof. And the certificate of Mr. Bakhmetieff, given under his hand and seal as Russian ambassador, concerning the membership and powers of the Russian Supply Committee, must be regarded in like manner as an
In the Goods of Anne Dormoy, 3 Hagg. Ecc. 767 (1832), the court held that the certificate of the French consul general was sufficient proof of the law of France, the doubt being whether the French ambassador himself should not have certified, instead of the consul general. In the Goods of Klingman, 3 Swabey & Tristram, 18 (1862), the ambassador to Great Britain of the King of Hanover gave a certificate under the seal of the legation that a will executed in accordance with law of England was a valid will under the law of Hanover, and the court held that such a certificate was sufficient evidence of the foreign law. In the Goods of Prince Oldenburg L. R. 9 Prob. Div. 234 (1884), the question was as to the law of Russia concerning the validity of a will of a deceased member of the royal family. The court received in evidence a certificate under the hand and seal of the Russian ambassador in England to the effect that by the law of Russia no testamentary dispositions of any member of the royal family could have any effect unless approved by the Emperor. The certificate was accepted as sufficient proof of the law of Russia.
“As the people as a whole were bound at. their creation by the acts of organized agents, each new government succeeds not only to the fiscal rights but to the fiscal obligations of its predecessor.”
And in section 160 he says:
“It is the privilege of every state to adopt any form of government It deems best suited to its internal wants and conditions, and its identity is never lost so long as its corporate existence survives. While that is preserved neither internal revolutions, nor alienations of parts of its territory can diminish any of its rights or discharge it from any of its obligations.”
The question at issue being, on this phase of the case, whether the Russian government has effectually divested itself of all interest in the moneys now in the hands of the defendant, this court holds that the certificate of the personal representative of that government, duly accredited to and recognized by the government of the United States, certifying that the official who assumed to assign and release any such interest as his government might have was authorized to act in behalf of his government in making such assignment and release, is competent and conclusive evidence, which the court below properly held to be decisive.
“will allow .a charge by you [the Recording Company] for interest at the rate of 2 per cent, per annum, or such other rate as the Can Company [defendant] may actually receive from its hanking house on the deposit of the aforesaid1 sum upon such sum as may be paid to you from the aforesaid sum; said interest to be figured from November 1, 1917, to the date of payment of the amount. It is furthermore understood that no charge for interest prior to November 1, 1917, shall be allowed.”
At the time that agreement was made there were, as w.e have seen, disputes pending between the Recording Company, the Agency Company, and the Russian government, and also between those parties and the defendant. As this fund was withheld pending the settlement of the disputes, it was agreed that interest was “to be figured from November 1, 1917, to the date of payment of the amount,” and it was also expressly agreed, as above appears, that “no charge for interest prior to November 1, 1917, shall be allowed.” The District Judge accordingly has held, rightfully, that the Recording Company was entitled to interest only from November 1, 1917.
Then the agreement was that interest was to be allowed at the rate of 2 per cent, per annum, or such other rate as the defendant received from its banking house on the deposit of the $1,500,000 fund; and the testimony in the record shows that defendant has not received from any banking house interest on any deposit at a higher rate than 2 per cent, per annum since November 1, 1917. The District Judge accordingly has held that the Recording Company is entitled to interest at the rate of 2 per cent, per annum from November 1, 1917, to December 28, 1917, and that from December 28, 1917, it is entitled to interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum. His theory evidently was that the Recording Company on December 28, 1917, was entitled to receive the $786,823.93, a final settlement having been arrived at, but as the defendant declined to pay .when the time for payment arrived on December 28, 1917, and stated that it would not pay except “pursuant to the judgment of a court,” it was from that time on in default, and therefore bound to pay interest at the legal rate of 6 per cent, per annum. We have no. doubt that the defendant would be' rightfully chargeable with that rate from the time of the default if the parties had not expressly agreed that the rate‘of interest should be 2 per cent, per annum “to the date of payment of the amount.” If those words mean to the date when the money should have been paid, the District Judge was right in charging the defendant with interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from December 28th. If the words, however, mean to the date when payment is made, he committed an error. If the parties meant the words to have the former meaning, they certainly did not say so; and the court is not at liberty to say so for them. In Ex parte Fewings, 25 Chan. Div. 338, Fry, T. J., said, “ ‘Paid’ refers to an actual receipt of money.” And we say that in the same way “to the date of payment of the amount” means to the date of the actual receipt of the money.
“I confess that I have considered this part of the case with every inciination to come to a conclusion in favor of the appellants * * * of giving them interest * * * for this reason: that I think that when money is owing from one party to another, and that other is driven to have recourse to legal proceedings in order to recover the amount due to him, the party who is wrongfully withholding the money from the other ought not in justice to benefit by having that money in his possession and enjoying the use of it, when the money ought to be in the possession of the other party,.who is entitled to its use. Therefore, if I could see iny way to do so, I should certainly be disposed to give the appellants, or anybody in a similar position, interest upon the amount withheld, from the time of action brought, at all events. But I have come to the conclusion, upon consideration of (he authorities, agreeing with the court below, that it is not possible to do so, although, no doubt, in early times the view was expressed that interest might be given under such circumstances by way of damages.”
The English and the American law on the subject of interest differ, or did differ, at the time Lord Herschell wrote. The courts of this country generally allow interest at the legal rate by way of damages from the time of the maturity of an obligation, where the parties have not made an express agreement for interest after maturity. We have not in this case that difficulty to encounter. The difficulty here is that wc do not see our way to sustaining the decree of the District Judge in allowing interest at the rate of 6 per cent, from December 28, 1917, on the. sum due the Recording Company. That interest we might have allowed, were it not for the express agreement of the parties that the fund should bear interest at the rate of 2 per cent, until payment.
Prior to St. 37 Hen. VIII, c. 9, the taking of interest for the use of money was unlawful in England. That statute authorized the taking of interest, and fixed the lawful rate at 10 per cent, per annum, and punished any one who received more with forfeiture and imprisonment. The history of the right to interest in England is a matter of curious interest until 1854, when St. 17 & 18 Viet. c. 90, abolished all usury laws and established “free trade in money,” largely through the influence of Jeremy Rentham. In this country the courts from the beginning viewed the allowance of interest with greater favor than the courts of England. There, was never any doubt with our courts about the right to interest when expressly contracted for, or where an undertaking to pay it might be implied from the usages of trade;
“5. Where one has received money for the use of another, and it was his duty to pay it over, interest is recoverable for the time of the delay; but if the holder of money for another is guilty of no neglect or delay, he will not be chargeable with interest.”
The principle that one who has not agreed to pay interest is nevertheless chargeable with it from the time of his default in making payment is undoubtedly the law in this country. In Chicago v. Tebbetts, 104 U. S. 120, 125, 26 L. Ed. 655, the principle was recognized and applied that a party guilty of unreasonable and vexatious delay in making payment is chargeable with interest from the time the debt became due, and is not relieved by offering to pay interest from the time when the delay began to be unreasonable and vexatious. In that case the delay was accompanied by litigation; as the court put it,, the city had litigated and contested the demand year after year and in court after court.
In 22 Cyc. 1498, it is said to be the rule that interest is allowed as damages where there has been unreasonable and vexatious delay in making payment.
We do not, however, have to consider what limitations, if any, attach to the doctrine above announced in so far as the Recording Company’s -claim -to interest is concerned; for we are dealing with an express agreement which the parties made as to the payment of interest. In 16 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, p. 1053, it is laid down that—
“As a matter of course, where tbe interest of tbe parties as to tbe rate after maturity is expressed, in tbe contract, sucb rate, if not illegal, will in-general control.”
This is the law of New York; the courts holding that, when a contract provides that interest shall be paid at a specified rate until the principal is paid, the contract rate governs until the payment of the principal, or until the contract is merged in a judgment. Taylor v. Wing, 84 N. Y. 471; O’Brien v. Young, 95 N. Y. 428, 47 Am. Rep. 64.
In Holden v. Trust Co., 100 U. S. 72, 25 L. Ed. 567, the maker of a note agreed to pay it, with 10 per cent, interest. The court held that interest should be computed at that rate up to the maturity of the note, and thereafter at 6 per cent. After calling attention to the fact that the agreement of the parties extended no further than to the time fixed for the payment of the principal and was silent as to everything beyond that, the court said:
“If payment be not made wben tbe money becomes due, there is a breach of the contract, and the creditor is entitled to damages. Where none has*373 been agreed upon, the law fixes the amount according to the standard applied in all such cases. It is the legal rate of interest where the parties have agreed upon none. If the parties meant that the contract rate should continue, it would have been easy to say so. In the absence of a stipulation, such an intendment cannot be inferred.”
And see Brewster v. Wakefield, 22 How. 118, 16 L. Ed. 301; Bernhisel v. Firman, 22 Wall. 170, 22 L. Ed. 766. If the local law is different, the federal courts will follow it. Cromwell v. County of Sac, 96 U. S. 51, 61, 24 L. Ed. 681; Ohio v. Frank, 103 U. S. 697, 26 L. Ed. 631. In New Orleans v. Warner, 175 U. S. 120, 147, 20 Sup. Ct. 44, 44 L. Ed. 96, the agreement was that if the warrants were not paid upon the date fixed for presentation they should bear interest at the rate of 8 per cent, until paid. The court, after referring to Holden v. Trust Co., supra, and the other cases cited, said:
“These very cases, however, recognize the principle that, if the parties themselves have fixed a rate to be paid up to the lime of payment, that rate will be respected. In this case both the statute and the warrants provided that such warrants shall bear interest at the rate of 8 per cent, ‘until paid,’ and we are therefore of opinion that complainant is entitled to that rate from November 26, 1894, the date of filing the bill and issuing the subpcena.”
The commencement of the suit was a sufficient demand to charge the defendant with interest from that day.
When the agreement is for the, payment of interest at a certain rate until the note is paid the parties have agreed upon the amount of the damages to be paid because of the nonpayment of the principal at maturity. Reeves v. Stipp, 91 Ill. 609. In Browne v. Steck, 2 Colo. 70, the note sued on provided for interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per month from maturity until paid. The court regarded the rate specified as prima facie sufficient to establish the measure of damages for the breach of the contract. This was followed in Buckingham v. Orr, 6 Colo. 587, 591, 592. In Daniel on Negotiable Instruments (6th Ed.) vol. 2, § 1458, that authority says:
. “And if the note runs with a certain rate of interest nntil paid that rate, if legal, runs after maturity as before.”
And see Augusta National Bank v. Hewins, 90 Me. 255, 38 Atl. 156; Jennings v. Moore, 189 Mass. 197, 75 N. E. 214; Seymour v. Continental Life Ins. Co., 44 Conn. 300, 26 Am. Rep. 469. We conclude therefore that in an action at law if the parties agree upon the rate of interest until the money is paid, or until date of payment, that agreement is controlling and fixes the measure of damages upon default.
But this is not an action at law. It is a suit in equity, and the question arises whether the same rule is to be applied that would be applicable if the action had been at law. The courts of equity have long had certain rules which they applied to certain classes of cases. If a trustee was guilty of unreasonable delay in investing the trust fund or in transferring it to those destined to receive it he was compelled to pay interest to the cestui que trustent even where it was not prayed by the bill. An executor or administrator whose duty it was to pay the testator’s obligations as soon as he had assets collected which were
We are not aware that equity will construe such an agreement differently from the construction placed upon it at law. The construction to be' placed on the language of contracts is the same both at law and in equity. Jersey City v. Flynn, 74 N. J. Eq. 104, 70 Atl. 497; 13 C. J. 521. And contracts for interest are governed by the same rules of construction and interpretation as are other contracts. 16 Am. & Encyc. of Law, p. 1001. In 22 Cyc. 1475, it is said:
“The courts of equity, in decreeing or refusing interest, generally follow the law; but interest is sometimes allowed by courts of equity, in the exercise of a sound discretion, when it would not be recoverable at law.”
We find no reason and no authority for saying that equity will not follow the law in giving effect to the agreement of the parties as to the rate of interest with which the defendant was to be charged “tó date of payment.'” In Ex parte Fewings, supra, the agreement was to pay at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum so long as the principal or any part thereof remained'unpaid. The claim-was reduced to judgment, and in England judgments carry interest at the rate of 4 per cent. The Chief Judge in Bankruptcy held that, where the parties had expressly agreed that the rate should be 5 per cent, until paid, the creditor would be entitled to that'rate after judgment and until paid. The Lords Justices of the Court of Appeal reversed the holding, and held-that the true construction was that interest at the rafe of 5 per cent, should be paid so long as any part of the principal remained due under the contract, so long as the contract for payment remained in force,’ but that the contract came to an end when judgment was entered and the liability under it was gone, being merged in the judgment, so that it could not therefore be said that there was an agreement to pay 5 per cent. So in the case now under discussion the rate of 2 per cent, continues until the decree is entered.
We must conclude from what has been said that the decree was-
The District Judge held that the Agency Company was not entitled to interest on its $713,176.07 until after the December settlement and the Agency Company’s demand on December 28, 1917. From that date he held the Agency Company entitled to interest from the defendant on.its $713,176.07 at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum. He also held that it was entitled, in pursuance of the terms of the agreement of December 22, 1917, between the Agency Company and the Recording Company to one-half of the interest on the Recording Company’s $786,823.93 from November 1, 1917, to December 28, 1917, which defendant was under obligation to pay to the Recording Company at the rate of 2 per cent, per annum, and the decree so provided. Neither of the plaintiffs have appealed, but the defendant in its appeal disputes the allowance of interest.
From what has been said it appears that the Agency Company was entitled to one-half of the interest which the Recording Company is to receive on $786,823.93 from November 1, 1917, to the entry of the decree, instead of to December 28, 1917, as the lower court directed. But with that question determined there remains to he settled the question concerning the interest on $713,176.07, which we have seen is due to the Agency Company out of the $1,500,000 retained by the
We have pointed out in an earlier part of this opinion that tire High Court of Chancery from early days compelled trustees to pay interest when they withheld the trust fund. That practice our equity courts followed. In Gray v. Thompson, 1 Johns. Ch. 82, Chancellor Kent charged a trustee with interest on a trust fund which he had failed to distribute, because he rendered no sufficient excuse for not distributing it as it was his duty to have done. Other cases in equity might readily be cited. And in this country our courts have applied the principle in actions at law. The general rule is stated in 22 Cyc. 1505* where the authorities are collected. It is there said:
“Where money belonging to another is not paid over to the person entitled to receive it at the time it should be paid over, interest is generally allowed as damages for such wrongful withholding thereof.”
And in 22 Cyc. 1514, it is also said, citing the authorities, that:
“Where the amount of the demand is sufficiently certain to justify the allowance of interest thereon the existence of a set-off or counterclaim which is itself unliquidated will not prevent the recovery of interest on the balance of the demand found due from the time it became due.”
And where the amount of a demand is definitely agreed upon by the parties, interest will be allowed from the date of such liquidation. Thomas v. Wells, 140 Mass. 517, 5 N. E. 485; Clark v. Dutton, 69 Ill. 521; Hoagland v. Segur, 38 N. J. Law, 230.
We do not overlook the fact that, where the amount demanded is disputed on reasonable grounds and in, good faith, interest will not be allowed on the demand until the right thereto is authoritatively determined. We think, however, that it was the duty of the defendant to pay when it was properly informed that the parties “had arrived at a final settlement” and' demand of payment was made on December 28, 1917. The defendant’s refusal to pay without a lawsuit is not to be excused by any of the circumstances of the case. We therefore agree with the court below that the Agency Company is also entitled to interest on its $713,176.07 at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from December 28, 1917.
As the Agency Company did not appeal, it is strictly entitled to claim only one-half of the 2 per cent, interest which the Recording Company will receive from the defendant on $786,823.93 from November 1, 1917, to December 28, 1917; that being the amount awarded to it under the decree below. But the counsel of each complainant has asked the court to settle the question of interest as between the two complainants as though each had appealed. In compliance with that suggestion the Recording Company must be directed to pay over to the Agency Company one-half of the 2 per cent, interest to be received from defendant on $786,823.93 from November 1, 1917, to the entry of the decree.
The case is remanded to the District Court, which is directed to proceed in accordance with this opinion.