15 F. Cas. 849 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Ohio | 1839
OPINION OF THE COURT.
This case was continued from the last term, with leave to the plaintiffs, to make Carneal the as-signee of a part of the equity set up in the complainant’s bill, a party. The merits of the controversy were fully considered and decided at that term; except a question reserved, whether ten per cent, interest under the agreement should be decreed as the balance due of the purchase money. The bill having been amended by making Carneal a co-complainant, the defendant’s counsel object to proceeding in the cause, as no subpoena has been issued since the amendment, or notice served on the defendant. And that the defendant being a resident of the state of Kentucky, no process can be served on him, so as to give jurisdiction to the court, of the new matter inserted by the amendment. The bill in this case was designed to be an injunction bill. An injunction was prayed for and allowed, and was not issued because the writ of possession, which was intended to be injoined, was executed before
The case [Pratt v. Carroll] 8 Cranch [12 U. S.] 477, relied on by the defendant's counsel, is where the party contracted to pay one hundred pounds damages for every lot not built upon, and the court decreed this sum. Now that was not where an illegal rate of interest was. agreed to be paid on a certain contingency, but a fixed sum as damages for a failure to build. If this sum had been named as a penalty, its payment would not have been enforced in equity. But it was stipulated damages, fixed by the parties, as a sum to be paid on a breach of the contract. A contract thus made is binding on the parties, as well in a court of equity as at law.
The court direct that the legal rate of interest shall be calculated on the balance of the purchase money; and that the annual rents, from the time the defendant entered into the possession of the premises, be deducted therefrom. That the sum which the annual rents shall amount to, after discharging the purchase money and interest, shall be paid by the defendant to the complainant; and that the defendant shall convey to the complainant by a deed of general warranty the premises in question. The costs to be divided between the parties, on the ground that the complainant has, on various occasions, been permitted to amend his bill, &c.