53 A. 902 | Conn. | 1903
This is an action for the foreclosure of a mortgage. The note, to secure the payment of which the mortgage was given, is as follows: —
"$880.00. October 27th, 1885.
"On demand I promise to pay to the order of Helen A. Curtis eight hundred and eighty dollars at
"Value received. HANNAH E. WILCOXSON. "SARAH WILCOXSON."
In the condition of the mortgage deed the debt of the grantors is described as $880, and "as evidenced by their promissory note of even date herewith, payable to said grantee or order with interest," and the deed is conditioned upon the payment of said note "according to its tenor." No demand of payment has been made, nor has any interest been paid upon the note.
The plaintiff claimed interest from the date of the note; that the language of the condition of the mortgage should be considered as showing the intent of the parties as to the payment of interest; and that parol evidence was also admissible for that purpose.
The court overruled the plaintiff's claims, and allowed interest only from the date of the service of the complaint, in August, 1901.
Section 2942 of the General Statutes (Rev. 1902, § 4600), which was in force when this note was executed, provides that "interest at the rate of six per cent a year, and no more, may be recovered and allowed in civil actions, . . . as damages for the detention of money after it becomes payable." Such interest, even when allowed as damages, becomes a *431
part of the mortgage debt which the defendants must pay in order to redeem; Smith v. Read,
The statute referred to not only provides for the allowance of interest as damages, but fixes the amount of the damages to be allowed as interest at the rate of six per cent a year, upon the money detained, from the time it becomes payable. The interest to be allowed the plaintiff is therefore determined by ascertaining when the mortgage note became payable.
In this State a demand note is not, as it is held to be in some jurisdictions, payable according to the literal terms of the note itself, even as between the maker and payee. Such a note, as to third parties and for purposes of negotiation was, by our common law, regarded as overdue and dishonored after the lapse of a reasonable time from its date TomlinsonCarriage Co. v. Kinsella,
In the Revision of Swift's Digest, Vol. 1, p. 715, it is said that the words "without interest," in a demand note, only prevent interest from running before demand, and that "if a promissory note is payable on demand, and nothing is said about interest, it will be recoverable from the date of the note." The principle of such rule is the same as that of the seventh rule in Selleck v. French,
While it is undoubtedly true that in some jurisdictions it has been held that the statute of limitations does not commence to run against a demand note, nor a cause of action accrue upon it, until a demand is made or until after a reasonable time from the date of the note (Randolph on Commercial Paper, § 1040 and note), we are of opinion that by the terms of the note in suit the sum named therein was, within the meaning of our statute and under the decisions in *433
this State above cited, payable at the date of the note. Other decisions to the same effect as to the allowance of interest, some of which are based upon statutes similar to our own, are Darling v. Wooster,
Interest should have been computed from the date of the note. It is unnecessary to decide the other questions raised by the plaintiff.
There is error, and the case is remanded for the entry of a judgment in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.