5 Denio 401 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
The question now to be considered is whether the state is bound or liable to pay interest on the amount due when the mandamus was served. The return sets up that neither the canal commissioners nor the commissioners of the canal fund, have ever in any case paid
In a case like the present, the withholding of the payment of the principal and a refusal to pay interest by the. state would almost ampunt to a violation of the constitution; at least it would be an evasion of its spirit. It is to be borne in mind that the present award is for the damages which a citizen has sustained for the taking of his private property for public use. The late constitution (Art. 7, §. 7,) declares that private property shall not be. taken for public" use. without just compensation. It has been judicially held that private property may be taken for public use before the compensation is, actually paid, so that provision for payment out of an adequate fund be made at the time. (Rogers v. Bradshaw, 20 John. Rep. 735; Bloodgood v. The Mohawk and Hudson R. R. Company, 18. Wend. 9.) It is apparent that if the state enter upon private property and at the time ascertain what is the just compensation, but refuse to pay such compensation for years, and do not pay interest on the amount ascertained, it will, at the time of payment, be far from the. just compensation required by the constitution to be made. Such a case would be an evasion of the spirit and meaning of the constitution.
I cannot doubt but that in a case like this, where the indebtedness is created, for private property taken and appropriated for public use, (and that is as far as the principle need be carried for the purposes of this case,) the state is liable to pay interest on the amount of such indebtedness, and that the courts should enforce it whenever through the medium of public officers it acquires jurisdiction to adjudicate upon it.
It is not however necessarily, to be inferred from this principle that the state must seek its creditor arid pay the debt as
As it is to be presumed that the state has funds in hand to meet tile demands of its public creditors as they become due, a creditor cannot be entitled to interest until he has demanded payment of his debt. If in a case like the present the creditor owning a debt demands payment of the state or the proper officer, and payment is refused either because the .claim is resisted or because the state is not in funds to pay, the creditor should be entitled, on the establishment of his debt, to interest thereon from the time of the demand. In this case there has been no demand of payment of the award so far as appears from the return other than that implied by the service of the mandamus, and the return states that the commissioners have not refused to pay any further sum upon such award, and have been always ready and willing to pay the amount justly due.
As there does not appear, so far as we know, to have been any demand made of payment of the award, the interest upon the award from íhé date thereof down to the time of the service of tile mandamus cannot be allowed to the relators. A peremptory mandamus must issue directing the payment of the amount due at the time of the service of the alternative writ, with interest from that lime.
Ordered accordingly.