158 N.Y.S. 932 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
This appeal is from an order directing the Commissioners of the Palisades Interstate Park to pay to the respondent interest on the principal sum of an award amounting to $210,000, from the date when the order confirming the report of the condemnation commissioners was entered to the date of the payment of" the principal sum, and directing that the Commissioners pay to Henry W. Hardon interest on the disbursements and costs which had been allowed to him, at the rate of six per centum per annum. Considerable time elapsed between the time when the awards were made and the date when they were paid, which was excusable, and is of no consequence in determining the issue presented by this appeal.
The learned court at Special Term held, First, that the respondent was entitled to interest as matter of law, under the provisions of section 1211 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which, so far as material, provides that “a judgment for a sum of money, rendered in a court of record, or not of record, or a judgment rendered in a court of record, directing the payment of money, bears interest from the time when it is entered; ” and second, that it was entitled to the interest as a matter of justice and equity. I am unable to find any provision of statute under which interest may be paid on an award, and no time is
It is the general rule, in law and in equity, that interest is recoverable only when there is a contract or statute providing for its payment. In the case at bar there is no contract or statutory provision for interest upon the award. If the recovery of interest is to be sustained it must be upon the ground that it was allowable as damages for default in payment of the award, and this presents the crucial question, when did the legal duty to pay the award to the respondent arise as an absolute present enforcible duty, for until such time the Commissioners were not in default for its non-payment, and from such time only could interest he allowed as damages. The court reached the conclusion that it was payable upon the day the report was confirmed and payment directed, and that respondent was entitled to interest under section 1211 of the Code of Civil Procedure. It is argued that the Palisades Park statute not providing for a judgment, no judgment other than the order of confirmation is possible, and our attention is directed to Matter of Lexington Avenue, No. 2 (30 App. Div. 609); Matter of East River Land Co. (206 N. Y. 545); Donnelly v. City of Brooklyn (121 id. 9); Matter of Rhinebeck & Connecticut R. R. Co. (67 id. 242) and Stafford v. Mayor, etc., of Albany (7 Johns. 541), as authorities sustaining the conclusion of the learned court at Special Term. In Matter of Lexington Avenue the question involved was whether a final order in a proceeding to condemn land could be made the basis
The conclusion of the learned court that the award to the respondent bore interest from the date of the order of confirmation, as matter of law, under the provisions of section 1211 of the Code, and allowance of interest in accordance with such conclusion, was erroneous. As has been pointed out, neither title nor right of possession passed to the appellants until the awards were paid, which was on December 29, 1915. Until that time the respondent’s possession was undisturbed. It seems grossly inequitable that it should possess and enjoy the benefits arising from such possession and, in addition, be given interest on the value of the property. It is not equitably entitled to both the use of its interest in the land and interest upon the award.
It further appears that during the two years between the date of the entry of the order of confirmation (January 16, 1914) and the payment of the award (December 29, 1915), the respondent was in the undisturbed possession of the property covered by its leases, and conducted .its business to some extent thereon, and although it is claimed that because of the difficulties of procuring skilled labor and the inability to make the usual preparation for operation in the early part of the year, the cost of operation exceeded the return from the sales, this is not shown to have resulted from any act of the appellants. No act of theirs interfered with the respondent’s posses ■ sion, or prevented its enjoyment and user of its plant and business to their fullest capacity, and to the greatest extent they could have used it if this proceeding had never been instituted. The reasoning of the Court of Appeals in Hamersley v. Mayor, etc., (56 N. Y. 533) and Matter of Trustees, etc. (supra), in discussing the right to interest upon awards, is applicable to the facts and equities presented by the case under consideration. It further appears that all parties interested, including the owners of the fee, appealed from the order of confirmation.
The order must be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the respondent’s motion to compel the payment of interest denied, with ten dollars costs.
Thomas and Carr, JJ., concurred; Putnam, J., votéd to modify the order by requiring that interest be paid from March 5, 1915; Jenks, P. J., not voting.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and respondent’s motion to compel the payment of interest denied, with ten dollars costs.
Since repealed by Laws of 1915, chap. 606. See Greater N. Y. Charter, § 992, as added by Laws of 1915, chap. 606.— [Ref.