21 Conn. 388 | Conn. | 1851
All the counts of the declaration in this case, are in general indebitatus assumpsit; the two first being for money lent and advanced, and paid, laid out and expended, and the other for money had and received.
By the terms of the note offered in evidence by the plaintiff, on the trial, in support of this declaration, the principal sum mentioned in it had not become payable when this suit was commenced; but the interest thereon was made payable half-yearly from the date of the note, and the two first semiannual instalments had become due, and were unpaid. The principal of the note, not being, at the commencement of this suit, due, by the terms of the contract, evidenced by it, it is properly conceded, that it was not then recoverable, either in this, or any other, form of declaring.
But it was claimed, by the plaintiff, on the trial below, and decided by the court, that, although the principal of the note was not recoverable, by reason of its not being payable until after the commencement of this action, the plaintiff was entitled, under this declaration, to recover the amount of the two instalments of interest which were then due, by the terms of the note, and a verdict was rendered for such amount; and the present motion is brought to review the decision.
The only point made before us, is, whether the recovery
This case does not require us to consider in what cases interest is recoverable, as damages, in the absence of an express or implied agreement to pay it; nor from what circumstances a promise to pay interest will be inferred or implied; nor under what form of declaration it is recoverable, where there is such express or implied promise, and the principal to which it is attached has become payable. It is material to observe, in the present case, that interest is not sought to be recovered, as incidental to a debt due, nor by way of damages for the unlawful detention of a debt; nor on the ground of an implied promise to pay such interest. The principal debt here is not due; and is not, therefore, yet recoverable; and for that reason, there is no circumstance from which an implied promise to pay the interest on it can be inferred. A recovery of interest, in this case must therefore rest on, and can only be claimed by virtue of the express contract to pay it, contained in the note adduced by the plaintiff. That the semi-annual instalments of the interest which had accrued by the terms of that note, before the commencement of this suit, were recoverable, although the time stipulated in the note for the payment of the principal had not then arrived, under a count framed upon the promise contained in the note itself, is unquestionable, because such is the express agreement between the parties, as evidenced by the terms of the note itself. Perhaps also it might be recovered, as has been conceded in the argument, under a general indebitatus count for interest. The question therefore before us, is not, whether interest, as such, due by express contract, on a debt not yet payable, can be recovered, in an appropriate form of declaration, but whether a general indebitatus count in assumpsit for money had and received, is an appropriate form of declaring for its recovery.
It is well settled, that it is not sufficient, in the indebitatus count in assumpsit, to declare generally, that the defendant, being indebted to the plaintiff, promised to pay him, without shewing for what the defendant was so indebted; but that the nature of the indebtedness must be alleged, although it
The question then arises, whether the indebtedness existing in this case, is truly stated in the latter count of the declaration; in other words, whether an indebtedness for interest due to the plaintiff by the defendant, is money of the plaintiff received by and in the hands of the defendant. It would seem, that a mere statement of this question would suggest the inevitable answer, unless some artificial principle of law has been adopted, by which these totally different things are held to be imported by the same terms. A mere indebtedness, on whatever account, from one person to another, is a mere chose in action, and creates a liability, which may be enforced by suit, but is not and cannot, while it remains in the shape of a mere indebtedness, in any just sense be considered as money of the creditor in the hands of the debtor. The debtor owes the amount due, but owes it only as a debt; and an indebtedness for interest, which as defined by Lord Ellenborough, (3 Campb. 296.) is, properly speaking, a compensation agreed to be paid for the use of money, forborne by the lender, at the borrower’s request, no more constitutes the amount so due, money of the creditor in the hands of the debtor, than if it were an indebtedness for the use of any other thing, or on any other account; and as well might a debt due for the use of any personal property, or for goods sold, or for services rendered, be deemed money of the creditor, to the amount of such debt, in the hands of th
And the promise contained in the note in this case, is divisible, as between the principal sum and the interest on it, and is applicable to them severally and distinctively, as is obvious from the circumstance that a suit may be brought upon that promise, so far as it respects the interest, when the principal is not yet payable, and none can be sustained on it, as it respects the principal. And the purport of that promise is, that the defendant will pay the principal sum originally received by him of the plaintiff, and also the interest, that is, the accustomed legal compensation for its use or forbearance at the times respectively stipulated in that instrument; but it would be inappropriate to call such compensation, so agreed to be paid, money of the plaintiff had and received by the defendant, in the same sense as the money for
The distinction, in this respect, will be presented more broadly and clearly, if an example be taken of the lending of a personal chattel other than money, with a promise of return and compensation for its use, payable from time to time, before the period stipulated for its return; which is precisely analogous in principle to the present case; and where it is quite obvious, that the price stipulated for its use, accruing before its return, would be recovered in general assumpsit, only under a count for its use; the use of it being the ground of the indebtedness on which the law would imply a promise to pay such compensation.
It thus appears, that the interest recovered in this case, was not, in any true sense, money of the plaintiff received by the defendant. Nor does it fall within the principle of any of the comparatively few exceptions to the general rule, that, in order to sustain the count in assumpsit for money had and received, it must be shewn, that the defendant had received money of the plaintiff, or for his use. The cases establishing the rule, as well as the exceptions, are very fully stated in Chitty on Contracts, in chap. 3, sect. 5, under the title of money had and received, (pp. 601. & seq.) to the last American edition of which by Mr. Perkins, it is deemed sufficient to refer.
The claim of the plaintiff to recover, in this case, derives no support from any authority to which we have been referred. In England, the recovery of interest, under a general count in assumpsit for money had and received, has been perseveringly resisted previous to the enactment of the recent statute of 34 W. 4. c. 42. although it had been allowed, in some cases, under the other money counts; but in those cases, the action was brought after the money which was sought to be recovered had become payable, and interest on it was permitted to be recovered, not as such, but only in the shape of damages for the improper retention of the money by the defendant; on which ground no claim to it can of course be set up, in the present case, as the principal sum is not payable. And even where interest was agreed to be paid for money lent, it was not allowed to be recovered, in connexion with the principal sum, under a count for money had and
Hence it is obvious, that the plaintiff derives no aid in his claim, to recover the interest in this suit, from the argument
For these reasons, the court are of opinion that the note offered in evidence, by the plaintiff, in the trial, was improperly admitted, and that there should be a new trial.
New trial granted.