Kluender v. City of Milwaukee

57 Wis. 636 | Wis. | 1883

LvoN, J.

It is maintained on behalf of the city of Milwaukee, the appellant, that the court erred in rendering a money judgment against it, and if that position is not correct, that it was error to allow interest on the award. The claim that no judgment for the award could properly go against the city is based upon an alleged clause in the city charter, requiring the claimant for money so awarded to furnish an abstract of title, showing he is entitled thereto, before it shall be paid to him. This provision is for the protection of the city, and doubtless the city may waive it. The answer of the city, which asserts that it has the money, and is ready and willing to pay it to the person who shall be adjudged entitled to it, and which fails to assert the right to an abstract, or to notice the omission from the complaint of *638an averment that one had been furnished, is, we think, am effectual waiver of suck right. A better answer to the claim is that an abstract of the record title (and we suppose that is what the provision means) would have been entirely ineffectual to show the plaintiff’s right to the money awarded. Until the judgment in this case was entered they had no-record title, and an abstract would have been useless. It is. manifest that the charter provision concerning an abstract, could not have been intended to apply to a case like this. The judgment of the circuit court, in this case, fully informs, the city that the plaintiffs are entitled to the money which it holds in trust for the former owner of lot 5. That is. sufficient.

On the question of the right of the plaintiffs to recover interest from the commencement of the action but-little need be said. The city had the money in its treasury at or about the time the action was commenced, and has retained com-trol thereof ever since, unless (as stated by counsel for plaint iffs in his argument and tacitly admitted by counsel for the-city) it paid the money over to its co-defendant, Louise-Eenske, a short time after the commencement of the action. The city was justified in withholding the money from the plaintiffs until they established their right to it. But the judgment demonstrates that the plaintiffs were always entitled to the money. Whether they should recover interest, on it depends entirely upon the manner in which the city has dealt with the fund, pendente lite. If the city had! brought the money into court with its answer, no interest would be allowable. In that case the city would have been discharged from any liability to either party, and would have-had no further concern with the action. The practice is indicated in R. S., 715, sec. 2610, although here it was unnecessary to bring in any new parties. This course was-adopted by the insurance company in the case of Foster v. Gile, 50 Wis.3 603, which was originally brought against the *639company on a policy of insurance, and there were conflicting claimants for the money. The defendant Louise Eenske has not appealed. She is content that the award for lot 5 be paid to the plaintiffs. Had the city paid the money into' court the plaintiffs could have drawn it out as soon as the' judgment was entered, and the whole litigation would then have ended. But instead of paying the money into court and thus relieving itself .from any further responsibility in the matter, the city has seen fit to retain the money, or to-pay it over to the party not entitled to it, and has brought this appeal. What other delays and controversies may be in store for the plaintiffs before they get their money cannot be predicted. It is sufficient to know that they have already suffered delay and expense, and are in peril of further delay and expense before they can enforce payment of their judgment, and that all this would have been avoided had the city brought the money into court.

Under these circumstances, we think it just and equitable that the city should pay interest on the money awarded from the commencement of the action.

By the Court.— Judgment affirmed.