2 Fla. 445 | Fla. | 1849
delivered the following opinion :
This suit is founded upon a promissory note, upon which several payments were made after it fell due, leaving, however, a balance unpaid, for which a judgment was rendered against the defendant— from which he appealed to this Court.
No errors have been assigned, and the only one alleged by the counsel for the appellant in the argument of the case, was as to the calculation of interest, and the application of the partial payments. How that was done is not stated in the record ; but we understand, from the course of the argument, that the payments were applied in the first place to the interest, and it appears from the record that they all exceeded it, unless it was one of nineteen dollars and eighty-two cents, by bill rendered. But it was insisted by the attorney for the appellant, that the interest should have been calculated upon the principal of an account stated, according to mercantile usage, and it is said in a note to Fonb. Equity, 2 vols. in one, Ed. 1831, page 664, (side 440,) that “ it is usual amongst merchants, in stating their accounts; to let the principal continue upon interest, and to compute the interest upon the payments as they are successively madebut the
The interest was calculated, and the payments were applied, as we understand, according to this rule, in the case now under consideration ; and we do not perceive how it gives compound interest. It is believed that there is nothing peculiar in the provision of our statute relating to interest, as the counsel for the appellant seemed to suppose ; nothing which would make this mode of calculation of interest, and applying partial payments under it, give usurious inteiest;
Per curiam.