This is аn appeal from a judgment ordering appellant-beneficiaries under a will to reimburse other beneficiaries for the appellants’ pro rata share of estate tax and to pay 10% per annum prejudgment interest on the judgment pursuant to T.C.A. § 47-14-123 on the theory of unjust enrichment. Apрellants do not appeal the amount of the judgment pertaining to their share of the estаte tax, but raise as error the award of pre-judgment interest.
The facts, briefly, ?4re as follows. In 1979, Susie Porter Cooper died leaving certain realty and personalty to the appellants in her will. She also bequeathed personal property to others and left a residuary estate to her only surviving heirs, of whom the only one was a brother, Arthur R. Porter. Her administrator paid a total of $58,470.00 in Tennessee Inheritance Tax and $210,351.16 in United States Estate Tax. These amounts were paid out оf the residuary estate and from the proceeds of the sale of certain specifiсally bequeathed stocks. The appellants failed to contribute to the payment of these taxes, even after demand. In 1981 after the death of the residuary legatee, Arthur R. Porter, his administrаtor filed a petition to establish apportionment of these estate and inheritance taxes and to require contribution by appellants. At the conclusion of the hearing on the рetition, the Judge referred certain issues to a special master. Among those was a determination of whether interest should be charged appellants on their share of the taxes аnd, if so, a calculation of the amount. In his report, the special master ruled that the appellants should be required to pay their share of the taxes plus 10% annual interest. The appellants filed objections to the special master’s report, specifically to the intеrest award. However, the Trial Judge overruled their objections and confirmed the special master’s report.
Appellants contend that the award of prejudgment interest was error because T.C.A. § 47-14-123 is inapplicable to the case. That section provides in part that “Pre-judgment interest, ... as permitted by the statutory and common laws of the state as of April 1, 1979 may be awardеd by courts or juries in accordance with the principles of equity at any rate not in excess of a maximum effective rate of ten percent (10%) per annum....” (Emphasis ours) Appellants contend that neither the statutory nor common laws of Tennessee as of April 1, 1979 provided for the award of prejudgment interest in cases of reimbursement of beneficiaries and that, therefore, the prejudgment interest statute does not apply to the instant case. Long prior to April 1, 1979 it has been the law of this state that prejudgment interest is allowable when based upon equitable principles. Chancellor Gibson observed that “where the debt is for property sold or services rendered or money loaned to the defendant,
The award of prejudgment interest is within the discretion of the Trial Court, B.F. Myers & Son of Goodlettsville v. Evans, (1980 Tenn.App.M.S.)
The judgment is affirmed. Costs are assessed against the appellants.
Done at Jacksоn in the two hundred and ninth year of our Independence and in the one hundred and eighty-ninth year of our Stаtehood.
Notes
. To this writer’s certain knowledge that quotation is found in all editions commencing at least with the 1929 3rd Edition of Gibson's Suits in Chancery through Inman’s 6th Edition. Not having in my possession the 1907 or 1916 editions, I cannot speak with absolute certainty as to them.
