January 31, 1943, pursuant to the verdict of a jury, appellee was awarded a judgment against appellants in the sum of $6,-500.00 and costs. The judgment was silent on the question of interest.
April 9, 1943, this court affirmed the judgment (
*261 Appellants’ petition for rehearing is directed to the above order. They make two contentions: (1) That where the mandate of this court affirms a judgment for plaintiff which judgment is silent on the question of interest and the mandate likewise is silent, the district court has no power to allow interest on the judgment from the date of its entry under Court Rule ‘27, or under 28 U.S.C.A. § 811, R.S. § 966; (2) That this court lacked jurisdiction to enter the order of October 20, 1943.
Section 811 makes it mandatory that interest shall be allowed on judgments in civil causes recovered in a district court collectible as a part of the judgment by execution conformable to the law of the state in which the court rendering the judgment is held. The rate of interest shall be the same as the state rate on judgments and shall be calculated from the date of the judgment until payment. Section 1 of our Rule 27 is of similar import as Section 811 and for simplicity in its application provides “In all cases to which this rule applies the mandate shall be taken to direct the allowance of such interest.”
Under the laws of Tennessee, interest shall be computed on every judgment from the day on which it was entered of record (Williams’ Tenn. Code, Section 7308, 1934 Ed.), and upon affirmance in the appellate court, judgment will be rendered for the amount of judgment below with interest thereon from the date of the original judgment (Williams’ Tenn. Code, Sec. 9005).
Interest upon a judgment secured by positive law is as much a part of the judgment as if expressed in it. Amis v. Smith,
The reviewing courts under Section 878 have a discretion as to whether or not any damages or interest as a part thereof are to be allowed in cases of affirmance under the theory that interest for the time an appeal is pending is damages for delay. Schell v. Cochran,
The court, in the present case, had no discretion in the matter of withholding or awarding interest. Therefore, the fact that the judgment of the trial court and the mandate of this court made no specific award of interest, is immaterial. The allowance of the legal rate of interest under the laws of the State of Tennessee and for the period provided under 28 U.S.C.A. § 811, was mandatory.
Appellants insist that the order of which they complain was made and entered after the term at which the mandate was issued had expired and therefore the court was without jurisdiction. This contention
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must be denied. The power of the court to amend its records so as to make them speak the truth is not lost by the lapse of time where the errors or omissions in the court’s records do not arise from judicial acts of the court and the corrections are necessary to truly show the court’s past proceedings. In re Wight,
Petition for rehearing denied.
