25 N.Y.S. 657 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
In Andrews v. Keeler, 19 Hun, 87, the headnote reads : “A note, after the maturity thereof, runs at the rate of interest specified therein, until it is merged in a judgment thereon.” With reference to this, the court at General Term said: “Another item of the plaintiff’s claim was a promissory note, made by the defendant, dated April 17th, 1867, for $775.10, payable ten days after date, with interest at six per cent. The referee, after deducting all payments proved, allowed the plaintiff interest on the balance at the rate of seven per cent from the time of the maturity of the note. In this we think he erred, the true rule being that the interest is to be computed at six per cent, according to the rate prescribed by the contract, until it ceases to operate by being merged in the judgment. Citing eases.” It will be noticed .that this case was decided before the statute of 1879, changing the rate of interest iron seven to six per cent.
This decision seems to be a determination by our own -department of the question at issue, and by it I consider myself bound, unless it has been overruled, or unless there can be found dicta in the Court of Appeals which indicate to a moral certainty that it will be overruled when the question there arises.
It is not claimed on behalf of the plaintiff in this action, that this decision has been overruled by any case except so far as its authority may be considered impaired by what is said by the Court of Appeals in the case of O’Brien v. Young, 95 N. Y. 428, and in the case of Ferris v. Hard, 135 id. 365. In the case of O’Brien v. Young the question here at issue was not before the court for its decision. It was there deter
I have examined carefully the authorities cited by Judge Earl from the Hew York state courts, and they do not state to me the rule of law which he seems to derive therefrom. In none of those cases was the question squarely discussed and decided. This question was not before Judge Earl when the opinion was written, and his attention does not seem to have been called to the cases in this state holding a contrary doctrine, which I shall have occasion to refer to hereafter. In the case of Ferris v. Hard, 135 N. Y. 365, Judge Peckham seems to indicate that the interest would be at the statutory rate after the maturity of the contract. But in the case he was then discussing there was no rate specified in the contract. It seems to be settled beyond dispute, where the rate is not specified in the contract, that after maturity interest is to be reckoned at the statutory rate. In the case of Ferris v. Hard there was no occasion to present to the court the authorities which I think must control the construction of a contract wherein the rate of interest is specified, and those authorities are not discussed in the opinion. The same remarks apply to the case of Loos v. Wilkinson, 113 N. Y. 485. By referring to that case as reported below in 51 Hun, 74, it will
The United States Supreme Court has dealt with this question most unsatisfactorily. In the cases cited by Judge Earl, the doctrine contended for by the plaintiff would seem to have been held. But in the case of Holden v. Trust Co., 100 U. S. 74, the court say that: “ The question is always one of local law.” In Cromwell v. County of Sac., 96 U. S. 61, Justice Field, in writing for an unanimous court, says: “ There are, however, conflicting decisions, but the preponderance of. opinion is in favor of the doctrine that the stipulated rate of interest attends the contract until it is merged in the judgment.”
In Miller v. Burroughs, 4 Johns. Ch. 436, it is held: “On a bond conditioned to pay with interest at six per cent, for the security of which a mortgage has been taken, the plaintiffs, after a forfeiture, are not entitled to seven per cent, the lawful interest, but interest is to be paid according to the contract until it ceases to operate by being merged in the decree.” In Van Beuren v. Van Gaasbeck, 4 Cow. 497, the court, by Woodward, J., say: “The bond is conditioned for the payment of interest at the rate of six per cent per annum. The contract of the parties is not confined to the time limited for the payment of the principal, but is general and continues until the contract ceases to operate.” In Sullivan v. Fosdick, 10 Hun, 181, the first department has held that when a contract calls for interest at less than the lawful rate, the same rate of interest continues after the debt becomes due, and until judgment. In Association, etc., v. Eagleson, 60 How. 10, Judge Freedman, at Special Term in the Superior Court, approved" and followed the Andrews case cited above. In Patteson v. Graham, 16 N. Y. St. Repr. 703, the General Term of the Common Pleas of New York, with the case of O’Brien v. Young before them, held that the contract between the parties having provided for interest at a specified rate, that rate governed until payment, or until the contract was merged in judgment. In Genet v. Kissam, 53 N. Y. Super. Ct. 43, the General Term of the Superior Court, with
I am confronted, therefore, by seven cases in this state wherein this question has been considered and determined adversely to the plaintiff’s claim. One of those authorities is-the determination of our own department. I am asked to overrule these authorities upon the dicta in two cases in the-Court of Appeals, both of them in cases where the question to be determined in this case was not before the court, and presumably was not argued before the judges, and where it does not appear that the authorities that have been cited to me to sustain the defendant’s contention were presented to the court for their consideration. If the question were free from precedent I can see some strong reasons in support of the rule of law for which the plaintiff contends. But, the rule of staredecisis is firmly grounded in our jurisprudence. Whatever may- be my own opinion, to sustain the plaintiff’s claim in this, action would do violence to this salutary rule of decision. I cannot say that there is any reasonable certainty that these cases will finally be overruled and a contrary rule of law be held in this state. I am constrained, therefore, by the force of authority, to hold that the rate specified in this contract must determine the amount of plaintiff’s recovery.