delivered the opinion of the court.
Article XVT, § 1, Constitution of Arkansas (1874), declares: “Nor shall any county, city, town or other municipality ever issue any interest-bearing evidences of in *171 debtedness.” During 1889 (or about that time) Sebastian County, for the benefit of Greenwood District, issued certain non-interest-bearing warrants payable "out of any money in the Treasury appropriated for ordinary purposes” of which plaintiff in error became lawful holder and owner. It sued upon them in the United States Circuit Court, Western District of Arkansas, and obtained a judgment, January 26, 1891, for 813,703.29, "with interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum from this date, until paid together with all its costs in and about this case laid out and expended.” So far as not satisfied, this was revived in 1900 and Again in 1910; and at different dates from 1896 to 1914 the county made payments thereon aggregating its face value together with six per. cent, interest reckoned to March 21, 1893, and all costs.
. An act of the Arkansas legislature, approved March 21, 1893, [Acts Ark. 1893, p. 145] provides: "No judgment rendered or to .be rendered against any county in. the. State on county warrants or other evidence of county indebtedness shall bear any interest after the passage of this act”; and relying upon this inhibition the county claimed that the above-mentioned payments fully discharged the judgment against it. Thereupon, May 23, 1916, plaintiff in error petitioned the court below for a mandamus to compel payment of alleged accrued interest. Answering, the county denied further liability and then asked for an order requiring that the judgment be satisfied of record. The trial court refused a mandamus and directed satisfaction as prayed. Whether plaintiff in error’s rights under the Federal Constitution would be violated by giving effect to the statute is the only question presented for our consideration. The Supreme Court of the State sustained its validity in Read v. Mississippi County, 69 Arkansas, 365, where the precise points here involved were presented.
The two revivals in 1900 and 191Q kept the judgment *172 alive and permitted its enforcement beyond the periods fixed by statutes of limitation. ■ Their entry gave it no greater efficacy than it possessed when first rendered.
Plaintiff in error maintains that the challenged act conflicts with § 10, Art. I, of the Constitution and also the Fourteenth Amendment forbidding a State from depriving any person of property without due process of law; but we think the contrary is settled by our opinion in
Morley
v.
Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry. Co.,
It is insisted that as the judgment now under consideration specified a definite interest rate while the one in Morley v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry. Co., supra, did not, the doctrine there approved is . inapplicable. To this we cannot assent; mere recital of a particular rate does not change the nature of the charge as a penalty or liquidated damages.
It should be noted that the county warrants, upon which plaintiff in error sued, bore no interest; if the parties had lawfully stipulated therefor, a different question would have been presented.
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.
