delivered the opinion of the court:
This сase comes on appeal for a second time. Defendant, Michael O’Malley, appeals from a $379,000 judgment entered against him on remand from this court. In entering this judgment, the trial court followed our mandate to enter judgment for the plaintiff for $379,000. The trial court made the judgment effective from June 26,
O’Malley first appealed after the trial court entered judgment against him for $387,500 for breach of a real estate contract. We upheld the lower court’s finding that defendant breached a contract, but ruled the court erred in allowing plaintiffs’ expert to testify as to the market value of the properties subject to sаle because plaintiffs failed to comply with Supreme Court Rule 220. (Phelps v. O’Malley (1987),
On this appeal, defendant raises two issues: (1) whether this court exceeded its authority in setting a damage award; (2) whether the trial court erred when it made judgment on remand effective аs of the first judgment date, thus allowing for statutory interest from this date. Plaintiffs respond that defendant’s first issue is barred by law of the case. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.
The facts that brought about this lawsuit are outlined in our first decision and need not be set out again for this appeal. See Phelps,
Initially, we address plaintiffs’ motion on appeal asking this court to supplement the record with defendant’s petition for rehearing and petition for leave to appeal. Defendant objects to this motion; however, we find no merit to this objection. Both of these petitions are relevant to the issue on appeal. Under Supreme Court Rule 329 (107 Ill. 2d R. 329), this court may order any corrections in the record that will aid the presentation of the questions involved on appeal. Thus, plaintiffs’ motion is granted. Secondly, plaintiffs’ motion to strike from the record the testimony of Clarence Bruckner, which this court ruled should have been debarred, need not be decided in light of the disposition of this case.
Defendant’s first contention on appeal is that the appellate court exceeded its authority under Supreme Court Rule 366 (107 Ill. 2d R. 366) when we set damages against defendant based on evidence introduced by defendant of the sales prices of the properties which were to be sold under the contract. Plaintiffs correctly respond
Defendant contends the law of the case does not apply here because he has not had an opportunity to fully and fairly litigate the issue decided by the appellate court. Defendant states that the issue of whether retail sales prices were an adequate measure of fair market value was not raised at the trial level or in the appellate briefs. Since it was not until the appellate court set damages on this basis that this became an issue, defendant contends he should be given the opportunity to address this issue in this appeal. Defendant cites MidState Savings & Loan Association v. Illinois Insurance Exchange, Inc. (1988),
Defendant fаils to recognize that he has not been denied an opportunity to address his contentions to this court. This opportunity is provided to all parties of appeal through a petition for rehearing. Defendant filed a petition for rehearing and argued that striking plaintiffs’ expert’s testimony left the record without sufficient evidence to determine fair market vаlue of the property. Defendant also contended that he would not have introduced the evidence of the sales prices had the expert been debarred. Furthermore, he argued that evidence of the lots’ sales prices did not reveal the fair market value at the time of breach because the sales, with the exception of оne, occurred after the breach, some almost two years later. Defendant
In his reply brief, defendant cites two exceptions where an appellate court may disregard the law of the case: (1) where, subsequent to the first appeal, the supreme court makes a contrary ruling on the precise issues of law on which the appellate court based its decision; and (2) where the appellate court remands for a new trial on all the issues and the appellate court determines that its first decision was palpably erroneous. (Yonan v. Oak Park Federal Savings & Loan Association (1975),
• 6 Defendant does not argue for application of the first exception, but cites three cases that have applied the palpably erroneous exception and argues that these cases support applying it here. In Stallman v. Youngquist (1987),
These three cases are distinguishеd from the instant case. In each, the requirement for applying the palpably erroneous exception, that the appellate court remand for a new trial, was met. Here, the appellate court did not remand for a new determination, but instead set damages at a different amount and ordered the trial court to follow its mandate. Defеndant argues that adherence to the requirement that the appellate court remand for a new trial exalts form over substance. Defendant points out that in Stallman, there was no new trial on remand, but merely a new motion for summary judgment and an affidavit filed by defendant. (Stallman,
Defendant next challenges the trial court’s judgment on remand which the court purported to enter nunc pro tunc to June 26, 1986, the date of the trial court’s first judgment, and providing for statutory interest from Junе 26, 1986. We note that the trial court incorrectly termed the judgment on remand as a nunc pro tunc entry. This was not a nunc pro tunc entry. As stated in Black’s Law Dictionary, “nunc pro tunc” is “[a] phrase applied to acts allowed to be done after the time when they should be done, with a retroactive effect, i.e., with the same effect as if regularly done.” (Black’s Lаw Dictionary 964 (5th ed. 1979).) Here, the trial court was not allowing an act to be done that should have been done before. See Spears v. Spears (1977),
• 8 Defendant’s first contention concerning the trial court’s ruling is that in making the judgment effective from the first judgment
Defendant next contends that, where an appellаte court orders the trial court to enter judgment on remand, statutory interest does not begin to accrue until the trial court enters the latter judgment. Plaintiffs respond that section 2 — 1303 (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 110, par. 2 — 1303) provides for interest from the initial judgment; therefore, it was proper to make the judgment in this case effective from the original judgment date. Section 2 — 1303 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides in pertinent part:
“When judgment is entered upon any award, report or verdict, interest shall be computed at the above rate, from the time when made or rendered to the time of entering judgment upon the same, and included in the judgment. *** The judgment debtor may by tender of payment of judgment, costs and interest accrued to the date of tender, stop the further accrual of interest on such judgment notwithstanding the prosecution of an appeal, or other steps to reverse, vacate or modify the judgment.” Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 110, par. 2 — 1303.
It is clear that the filing of an appeal does not toll the accrual of statutory interest (see Pinkstaff v. Pennsylvania R.R. Co. (1964),
The above cases are distinguished from the instant case. In this case, the mandate by the appellate court did not leave damages undetermined. This court specifically provided that plaintiff should recover $379,000. Thus, the rationale for not applying statutory interest in Rosenbaum and Presbyterian does not apply to this case. Defendant was never denied an opportunity to halt the accrual of statutory intеrest.
The majority of States have held that where a money award has been modified on appeal and the only action necessary in the trial court is compliance with the mandate of the appellate court, interest on the award should accrue from the original judgment date. (See Annot.,
“Obviously a judgment debtor who terminates the accrual of interest in the manner provided in the statute runs the risk that even though he prevails in his appeal, the appellee will have dissipated the funds and he will be unable to effect recoveryof the sums paid. There is nothing in the statute to prevent an appellee from taking the same risk and we find no arbitrary, unreasonable or discriminatory classification which renders the statute invalid.” Proctor, 50 Ill. 2d at 9 .
Applying statutory interest from the date of the original judgment where the appellate court lowers the judgment is also fundamentally consistent with the approach taken in cases where the appellate court has increased the award. In Toro Petroleum Corp. v. Newell (1974),
Finally, plaintiffs have moved this court to dismiss the first issue of defendant’s appeal and to award plaintiffs costs and attorney fees for raising a frivolous issue of appeal. This motion is denied. Defendant’s first issue of appeal is not totally frivolous given the existence of case law which has applied exceptions to the law of the case doctrine.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
INGLIS and LINDBERG, JJ., concur.
