98 Ga. 284 | Ga. | 1896
The Georgia Southern and Florida Railroad was placed in the hands of a receiver by the superior court of Bibb county, and during the years 1891,1892 and 1893, while in the hands of the receiver, taxes accrued upon the property of the railroad company in Lowndes county, and executions, dated Dec. 21, 1891, Dec. 20, 1892, and Dec. 20, 1893, were issued for taxes due the county for each of these years respectively, with interest from date at seven per cent, per annum. After the property in the receiver's hands was sold and the proceeds brought into court, a petition by the comptroller-general, for the use of Lowndes county, was filed, in which he alleged that the principal sum of these executions had been paid by the receiver under an order of the court, but that the- interest was still unpaid; that there was still in the hands of the receiver a large sum to be used in discharge of liens against the property, and that the claim for interest due on these tax executions constituted a first lien upon this fund; and the petitioner prayed for an order directing the receiver to pay the same. The receiver demurred to the petition and moved to dismiss, it, upon the ground that the fund in his hands as receiver was not liable for interest upon taxes. The demurrer was overruled, and to this ruling he excepted.
The act approved November 11,1889 (Acts 1889, p. 31), declares that “all executions issued for taxes due the State or any county thereof, or any municipal corporation therein, . . shall bear interest at the rate of seven per cent, per annum from the time fixed by law for issuing the same.” It was contended by counsel .for the plaintiff in error, that
It was contended by counsel for the plaintiff in error, that this interest was in the nature of a penalty, and inasmuch as the default of payment of the taxes was not attributable to the railroad company, but to the court or its receiver, a court of equity should not enforce the penalty. We do not think the interest provided for by the act of 1889, supra, is to be regarded as a penalty. A penalty is a punishment, and interest is merely a compensation for the use or forbearance of money. (11 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, Interest, 379.) In the case of Atlanta & Florida R. Co. v. Wright, comptroller-general, 87 Ga. 487, relied on by counsel for plaintiff in error, there was a penalty of $500. That was a penalty pure and simple. In the other case cited by cousel for the plaintiff in error on this subject (Litchfield v. County of Webster, 101 U. S. 773), the statute prescribed that delinquent taxpayers should be charged one per cent, per month for each month during which the tax remained unpaid. This was more than the legal rate of interest, and in the statute itself it was expressly stated to be a “penalty for non-payment.” In the statute now under consideration, the seven per cent, required to be paid upon the execution is described as interest, and not as a penalty, and is simply the legal rate of interest ' which governs in all cases in which another rate is not expressly agreed upon. It follows from what has been said, that the court below did not err in overruling the demurrer.
Judgment affirmed.