delivered the opinion of the court.
These writs of error were brought to review a judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York, Oct. 14, 1882, nunc pro tunc as of Oct. 7, 1882, in favor of Thomas Cochran and William Barber, surviving partners of S. Cochran & Co., against Am gustus Schell, late collector of customs, for the sum of $1,892.83, composed of $1,734.80 damages and $158.03 costs. The damages were for excessive fees exacted at the custom-house on entries, and the writ of error brought by Schell was brought to review the judgment in respect to the recovery for such fees. The writ of error brought by S. Cochran & Co. was based on their failure to recover in the suit for duties paid under protest. The writs of error were heard together at this term and the judgment was affirmed, the recovery for the fees and the failure to recover for the duties being both of them sustained. The judgment of this court, as set forth in the mandate, was rendered March 19, and covered both writs of error, and directed that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed, “ with interest until paid, at the same rate per annum that similar judgments bear in the courts of the State of New *626 York.” The mandate was sent'to the court below on the 4th of April, and now the Solicitor-General, representing the United States, moves, on behalf of Schell, to correct the judgment and the mandate by striking but the direction as to interest, so that the judgment rendered Oct. 14,1882, shall not carry interest up to the time a new judgment is rendered by the court below on the mandate. 0
' This application appears to be based on the construction given to a decision made by the Circuit Court for the Southern District of New York, in January, 1882,' in
White
v. Arthur,
This court has never made any decision on the points thus ruled on in
White
v.
Arthur.
The case of
Erskine
v.
Van
Arsdale,
In
United States
v.
Sherman,
It is provided by sect. 1010 of the Revised Statutes, that ♦‘where, upon a. writ of error, judgment is affirmed, in the Supreme Court, or a Circuit Court, the court shall adjudge to the respondent in error just damages for his delay.” Rule 23 of this court provides that where a judgment is affirmed on a writ of error, “the interest shall be calculated and levied from the date of the judgment below, until the same is paid, at the same rate that similar judgments bear interest in the courts of the State where such judgment is rendered.” This statute and rule, and the practice under them, followed in the mandate in the present case, of allowing interest on the affirmance of a judgment where a collector is plaintiff in error, were urged by the counsel for the defendant in White v. Arthur, as showing that iu that case interest on the judgment should be paid; but the court held that such practice could not affect the question there raised, because the allowance of such interest belonged solely to the putting the judgment in shape, as one in a private suit.
The interest allowed in the present case, in the judgment of this court, was allowed under rule 23, which, in its provisions as to interest, is in harmony with sect. 966 of the Revised *628 Statutes, originally enacted as sect. 8 of the act of Aug. 23, 1842, c. 188. Such interest, for the time a writ of error is pending, is really damages for delay. When the mandate of this court goes to the court below, it is necessary that that court, with a view to execution, should enter a further judgment in accordance with the mandate, covering the direction-of this court as to interest and as to costs in this court on the writ of error. A writ of error in a case of this kind, being brought by direction of a department of the government, operates as a supersedeas, under sects. 1000 and 1001 of the Revised Statutes, without any bond to answer in damages being given. The plaintiff in the judgment being stayed as to execution while the case is in this court, and there being a new judgment rendered by this court in the suit, “ the final judgment” referred to in sect. 989 is the judgment as it stands after its affirmance by this court, and after the court below has rendered such judgment as the mandate of this court requires. Therefore, the interest allowed in this case is interest before final judgment, and is of the same, character as the interest allowed before judgment in a suit against a collector where there is no writ of error. In both cases, when there is a final judgment, the principle applies, declared by this court in Erskine v. Van Arsdale, ubi supra, that it is to be presumed the government is always ready and willing to pay its ordinary debts. But, where there is a judgment and a certificate of probable cause, and thus a case for payment out of the treasury under sect. 989, and then, by direction of the government, a writ of error is taken which operates as a stay, interest on the judgment during the stay ought to be allowed, and the statutes not only do not forbid such allowance, but permit it.' The expression “ interest and costs in judgment cases,” in the appropriation bills before referred to, clearly includes the interest in the present case, it being interest before final judgment.
Application denied.
