OPINION
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Merrill and Carmen McGahan purchased a motorhome from Tookalook Sales and Service on August 28, 1985 for $39,950. They borrowed $28,100 from Chemical Finance, at an annual interest rate of 13.5%, to help finance their purchase.
Due to their dissatisfaction with the mo-torhome, the McGahans filed suit in 1989 against Tookalook and the manufacturer of the motorhome, Sportscoach Corporation of America. After a trial conducted by Judge Jonathan Link, the jury found in favor of the McGahans on the theory of “revocation of acceptance.” The jury awarded $44,-405.18 in damages to the McGahans. This award included $28,070 in actual damages, and $16,335.18 to compensate the McGa-hans for their interest payments to Chemical Finance. 1
Upon entering judgment in the amount set forth in the jury verdict, Judge Link requested the McGahans submit a calculation of the prejudgment interest which should be awarded. The McGahans requested prejudgment interest upon the entire jury award at the annual rate of 15.5%.
Tookalook and Sportscoach opposed the McGahans’ request for prejudgment interest. They argued that an award of prejudgment interest would constitute an inappropriate “double recovery” because the jury award included the finance and interest charges paid by the McGahans. Tooka-look and Sportscoach also argued that, in the event that prejudgment interest was awarded, the court should employ the normal statutory rate because the offer of judgment was invalid since “it did not specify a definite sum.”
Judge Link awarded the McGahans $22,-210.61 in prejudgment interest. This figure includes $15,665.37 as interest on the jury’s actual damage award of $28,070, accruing at the statutory rate of 10.5% from September 28, 1985, the date of purchase, to January 22, 1991, the last day of trial. The prejudgment interest award also included $6,545.24 as interest on the finance charges which plaintiffs paid Chemical Finance, calculated at 10.5% from the date of each payment.
Tookalook and Sportscoach appeal Judge Link’s decision to award prejudgment interest.
II. DISCUSSION
Tookalook and Sportscoach argue that awarding prejudgment interest on the basic damage and third-party finance charge portions of the jury damage award to the McGahans constituted a double recovery of interest. They assert that in cases such as this, where the plaintiff partially financed the transaction at issue via a third-party loan, the correct measure of damages should include only one interest award. The appropriate interest rate should be the greater of the statutory or contractual interest rates.
An award of prejudgment interest should be denied only to avoid an injustice.
Farnsworth v. Steiner,
In
State v. Phillips,
The purpose of awarding prejudgment interest is not to penalize the losing party, but rather to compensate the successful claimant for losing the use of the money between the date he or she was entitled to it and the date of judgment. A corollary purpose is to prevent the judgment debtor from being unjustly enriched by the use of that money. Farnsworth v. Steiner,638 P.2d 181 , 184 (Alaska 1981); Anchorage Asphalt Paving Co. v. Lewis,629 P.2d 65 , 69 (Alaska 1981). Prejudgment interest should not be awarded, however, when it is unjust to do so. Anchorage Asphalt,629 P.2d at 70 .
We have concluded that the superi- or court’s award of prejudgment interest in the total amount of $22,210.61 was erroneous because the McGahans were compensated for interest on the amount they borrowed by the jury’s damage award in which the jury awarded the McGahans damages equivalent to the interest payments paid on the loan from Chemical Finance.
Sebring v. Colver,
In support of their contention that the prejudgment interest award was proper, the McGahans cite several cases which state that third-party finance charges are generally awardable as consequential damages.
See Spreader Specialists v. Monroc, Inc.,
Accordingly, this matter is REVERSED and REMANDED for further proceedings
Notes
. During the trial, the parties stipulated that the McGahans had paid $16,335.18 in interest on the amount borrowed to finance their purchase of the motorhome. The jury was instructed to include this amount in its award if it found that the plaintiffs effectively revoked their acceptance of the motorhome.
Based upon this jury instruction, the parties have been able to determine the components of the jury’s award:
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<16,335.18 > Stipulated Consequential Damage Award
$28,070.00 Actual Damage Award After Deduction for Usage of the Motorhome ($39,950 purchase price, less $28,070 award = $11,880 usage deduction)
. We realize the borrower is not returned to exactly the same position because the borrower loses the use of the money paid as interest. We refuse to allow prejudgment interest on the interest payments to prevent the borrower from being returned to a better position than one who purchases using personal funds. Under Alaska law, prejudgment interest is not compounded.
State v. Doyle,
. Citing 47 CJ.S. Interest & Usury § 24 (1982), the McGahans argue that, “it has generally been held that a judgment bears interest on the whole amount thereof although such amount is made up partly of interest on the original obligation." That section of Corpus Juris Secundum refers to post judgment interest upon judgments, not prejudgment interest. As such, that section is not instructive in the present case.
.The record does not indicate whether the $11,-880 usage charge was the present value, as of the verdict date, of the McGahans’ use of the motorhome, or a composite figure consisting of a monthly charge multiplied by the number of months of use. If it is a composite figure, Tookalook and Sportscoach are entitled to interest on each month’s charge at the statutory rate, thereby decreasing the McGahans’ recovery.
