41 N.J.L. 349 | N.J. | 1879
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The decision in the case of Mayor of Jersey City v. Riker, 9 Vroom 225, is an authority for the doctrine that if an assessment for benefits to land by means of a municipal improvement, has been paid, and such assessment has been subsequently set aside, the person making the payment can recover the sum so paid by an action at law. In the present instance the defendant in error paid, under such circumstances, the amount assessed against him, and such tax having been annulled by the Supreme Court, at the instance of the authorities of Jersey City, and by the authority of the statute, it is now insisted that as such payment was voluntary the present recovery should not be sanctioned. This position challenges the rule as established in the adjudged case, and consequently the grounds of that rule have been re-examined,
Nor do I find, as appears to be supposed in the brief of the •counsel of the plaintiffs in error, that the decision in the case reported in 9 Vroom is opposed to the adjudications of the ■Court of Appeals of the State of New York, but to the contrary, I perceive that in the case of Peyser v. Mayor, &c., 70 N. Y. 479, it was directly decided, as in the Riker case, and by the same course of reasoning, that when an assessment that had been paid was afterwards adjudged to be void, the reversal of the assessment was conclusive that the money had been obtained without right, and that it was recoverable by action. And this decision, so far as has been observed, has never been questioned or in anywise modified.
Nor is that doctrine to be affected, as is urged, by so slight a circumstance as the fact that this assessment was-not set aside by the action of the ¡¡arty seeking a return of the money, but by the action of the municipality itself. Such an incident cannot impair the land owner’s title to the money, for the city’s right to keep it has no other foundation than the assessment, and that failing, the right ceases, and the obligation to repay it becomes as well a legal as a moral duty. The cardinal consideration is that the public has lost all just claim to the money, it mattering not how such a state of affairs was brought about.
So, likewise, the plaintiff in error cannot prevail in its contention that the money recovered should not draw interest from the time of its receipt by the city, because by the judgment annulling the assessment, it is conclusively settled that such money was demanded and received by the public without right. Such a judgment puts the city in the wrong at the time of the receipt of the money, and also during the whole period of its detention, so that it was a constant duty to return the debt without waiting for it to be demanded. The verdict is therefore right in the feature that it embraces interest from the time of the payment of the assessment.
In the last place, the attention of the court was called to the measure of interest that was allowed as damages in this case, such measure being at the rate of seven per cent, from the time of the payment of the assessment to the 4th day of July, 1878, when the statutory rate was changed, and after that event at the rate of six per cent. As the question is one of considerable importance in the management of pecuniary affairs, it has been fully considered by the court, and the following results have been reached.
The subject is necessarily presented under two aspects— first, with regard to what may be called interest proper; and, second, when a rate of interest is taken as a measure of dam
Interest proper arises whenever money is lent or forborne with an understanding, express or implied, that an equivalent shall be given for its use, and in such ease the rate of interest agreed upon, or, if none such be agreed upon, the rate then existing by law, is, in the absence of any new agreement, the rate to be paid until the return of the money. And this rate prevails notwithstanding any statutory change of the rate of interest during the interim. Thus, for example, if at the time of a loan, or of an agreement to forbear the payment of money for interest, the rate of interest as stipulated, or, in the absence of stipulation, as -fixed by law, should be seven per cent., such percentage would be the rate payable until repayment of the principal sum, no matter when such principal sum might fall due, and notwithstanding any alteration in the legal rate before such repayment. It is quite understood that there is a contrariety of judicial decisions on this subject, but the rule just stated is considered to be justified by the inveterate and well-known practice with respect to the modes of loaning money in this state. Loans that are intended to run for long periods, and which are designed to stand as permanent investments, are usually, in form, made payable after short terms of forbearance, so that, as a question of intention, it is not a strained construction of such transactions to imply, after pay day has arrived, a renewal of the agreement with respect to interest, and that the loan is continued by mutual consent upon the original terms. Therefore, on loans and on forbearances, the original rate of interest will rule until the repayment of the money, unless the rate shall have been altered by a new agreement between the parties. In such cases, it is interest and not damages that is to be assessed.
But when agreements other than those for the loaning or forbearing of money on interest are broken, another and different rule obtains, for in such cases, as well as in cases for torts, damages, and not interest, are to be admeasured. When, for
Nevertheless, there is a mistake with respect to the admeasurement of damages in this case, that must lead to the reversal of this judgment. The city was entitled at the time of the original assessment to the sum of $420 for the beneficial work done to the property of the plaintiff below. The plaintiff has been in the enjoyment of the benefits so conferred from the date of the original assessment, and the consequence is this
Let the judgment be reversed.