2 Port. 451 | Ala. | 1835
■ This was an action of assumpsit by the defendants in ei’ror against the plain tiffs for goods, wares and pier-chandise sold and delivered: the declaration contains the usual- common counts, to which the' defendant pleaded non assumpsit.
At the trial below, the plaintiffs proved the correct-, ness of four several accounts, ending on the first of' January 1829, 1830,1831 and 1832, in each year, for goods.sold and delivered to the defendant in each of the preceding years, and also proved that by an understanding with the defendant, each of the accounts was due on the first day of January next after the year in which the accounts were made: that the accounts for 1828 and 1829,- were placed in the defendants hands in the spring of 1830,, and that for 1830, in the spring of 1831; that soon after the account for 1831 was due, an attempt was made to collect them, when the defendant objected to pay interest upon any of them, It was finally agreed between them, that no interest should he charged for 1831, if the defen,-dant would pay the interest on the other three, by a bill on New Orleans, which he promised to draw in some short timo. The defendant -failed to draw the bill as he had promised, and this suit was brought.
The defendant moved the Court to instruct the jury, that the plaintiffs' were not entitled to interest on the accounts; which instruction the Court refused to give, but instructed the jury that they might in their discretion allow the plaintiffs interest on each of the accounts, from the time the evidence showed they became due, or refuse it: to this instruction, exception is taken, and the case has been brought here by writ of error; -and the above, instruction, of the Court is as-^ ¡signed for error.
In the case of Slack vs. Lowell,
In the case of Gordon vs. Swan,
In the case of Mountford vs. Willes,
In the case of Calton v. Bragg,
In the case of Marshall vs. Poole,
In the case of Eddowes vs. Hopkins,
Many more cases might be cited to shew, that there is no settled rule applicable to all cases : in some cases it has been allowed as incident to the contract, in others, as a breach of the contract, or as consequential damage. It is a rule founded in justice, that when a man has been kept out of his money, he should be allowed a reasonable compensation for its use: upon this principle it is, no doubt, that the Courts in this State have allowed juries, in actions of assumpsit, on the common counts, for goods sold, when no period of credit was proved, to give interest from the date of the writ.
In the case before us, the time for payment was fixed; the creditor had a 'right to expect payment at the expiration of that time. The sums actually due were not, it is true, ascertained and assented'to by the defendant on the daj^s they respectively fell due; but the accounts were presented afterwards, and no objections were made to them. From the- nature of the case, the precise amount of the debt to be due on the' first of Jánuary in each year could not be ascertained when the contract was made. The defendant wishing to purchase goods, from time to time during the year, stipulates for a credit to the first of January in each year, and agrees to pay, at that time, what shall
.The original contract was not extinguished by that promise; the delay of payment was a damage to the plaintiffs: the rate which the law has allowed for the use of money, was the proper measure of damage for this delay, and whether it be viewed as originating immediately in the contract, or be taken as due for a breach of it, or as growing out of the promise, we see no reason why it should not be allowed on the common counts.
We therefore think the Court did not err in leaving it to the discretion of the jury whether to give interest or not.
Let the judgment be affirmed.
2 Starkie, 419.
3Taunton,
12 East, 419.
3 Wils. 205.
2 B & P.337.
15 East, 224.
13 East, 98.
Douglas, 376.