On Mаrch 31, 1938, the city of New York instituted this proceeding pursuant to a resolution of its Board of Estimate to acquire title to certain properties owned by the сlaimants for park purposes. Under an order of condemnation in the proceeding, title vested in the city on April 25, 1938. The award of compensation was made the 29th day of December, 1939. The final order of the Special Term declared the interest on the amount *53 of the award should be at the rate of fоur per centum per annum from the date of the vesting of title. The provision as to the rate of interest was dependent upon the statute of the State оf New York which became effective on the 1st day of July, 1939 (Laws of 1939, ch. 594, adding to the General Municipal Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 24], section 3-a). The pertinent part of thе statute is as follows: “ Rate of interest on judgments and accrued claims against municipal corporations. The rate of interest to be paid by a municipal corporation upon any judgment or accrued claim against the municipal corporation shall not exceed four per centum per annum.” On appeal by the claimants to the Appellate Division, the order was modified to provide that interest on the award should be at the rate of six per centum per annum from the day that title was taken by the city to the 1st day of July, 1939, and at the rate of four per centum thereafter.
Both the city and the property owners have appealed to this court. The latter contend that interest should have been allowed at the rate of six per centum from the dаte on which title vested in the city to the date of payment of the award. The former claims, on the other hand, that the interest rate should be four per cеntum for the entire period as declared by the final order of the Special Term. Some questions here raised are the same as those before us in thе case of
People ex rel. Emigrant Industrial Sav. Bank
v.
Sexton,
*54
The claimants contend that the 1939 statute denies them the equal protection of the laws inasmuch as the general interest rate in the State of New York is six per centum (Gen. Business Law, § 370 [Cons. Laws, ch. 20]), while the statute provides a lower interest rate for obligations of municipal corporations. (Another statute contains a similar рrovision as to State obligations. Laws of 1939, ch. 586.) We are called upon to say whether the Legislature indulged in an unreasonable and palpably arbitrary classification when it provided for this differentiation.
(People ex rel. Bryant
v.
Zimmerman,
There is here no contract protected against impairment.
(Crane
v.
Hahlo,
Claimants would have us construe the word “ claims ” in section 3-a of the General Municipal Law as applicable *56 only to demands adjudicated in cases where the city is the defendant. Here, it is true, no proceeding or action has been instituted by a claimant. The city, the obligor, is the moving party in the litigation. Nevertheless, the talсing of the property, which is the end and aim of the proceeding, gives rise to an obligation on the part of the city of which the property owners are the beneficiaries. It would be a narrow construction, indeed, to hold that a claim within the meaning of the 1939 statute occurs only when litigation to enforce the claim is solely within the hands of the owner of the claim; but, even if a narrow construction is given to the word “ claim,” to enforce payment of the compеnsation under the language of the Administrative Code just quoted in this instance, there must be afiirmative action on the part of the property owner. An action hаs to be brought by the claimant to secure a judgment against the city. All the elements of a claim are here present and the right of the property owners is within the content of the word “ claim ” as used in the 1939 statute.
The conclusion follows that the order should be affirmed, without costs. (See
Lehman, Ch. J., Loughran, Finch, Rippey, Lewis and Conway, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed.
