16 Fla. 510 | Fla. | 1878
delivered the opinion of the court.
It is true that while a debtor is prevented by an injunction or other order of a court from paying his debt at maturity, he is not liable for interest thereon, because he lawfully withholds the money. But is this a case in which the •debtor has been so prevented ? An injunction was issued which restrained the conveyance of certain real estate to the •defendant. The effect of the injunction was obviated by the parties by an agreement, whereby the conveyance was consented to upon condition that certain notes, ^secured by mortgage on the property, (given for the purchase price ■thereof,) should be deposited with one Hutchinson as trustee, to be held by him subject to the determination of the suit in which the injunction was issued. One of these notes was ■payable one day after date, without mentioning interest, and the two other notes were payable at a future day with inter
The defendant was ready to pay each of the notes at maturity, and held the money apart from his other money, and’ from other employment. When the note first due matured, - the money was not tendered; when the next note fell due no tender was made, and when the third note matured the defendant offered to pay the trustee the principal of all the notes, with interest up to maturity, less four hundred dollars which he had advanced to Chandler on account of the notes’ while they were in the hands of the trustee; but the trustee refused to receive it in discharge of the notes, because it did not cover the whole amount of principal and interest to the time of the offer. When the suit in which the injunction had issued was settled, the defendant renewed the offer to the trustee, who again refused to receive the money, for the reason that defendant declined to pay interest beyond' the maturity of the notes.
We find no unconditional tender by the. defendant of the principal of the notes or either of them, nor even notice to the-trustee or to the parties that the money was set apart and held' in readiness to pay the notes, or either of them. So far as the injunction is concerned, its force was spent when all the parties to it by contract put in its place another security. It is not apparent that a payment of the money to the mortgagee, and the surrender by the trustee of the notes and mortgage, however it might have put the plaintiff in the injunction suit to inconvenience,-would have been in anywise a violation of the injunction. The trustee and the parties to the transaction may have become liable to certain-proceedings for a violation of the contract of trust and confi
The decree of the Circuit Court is reversed in so far as it denies, or fails to allow, the computation of interest on the notes from their maturity to the time of payment or tender of the amount due thereon according to their import, and a further decree will be made by the Circuit Court in accordance with this order and the opinion of this court in the premises.