183 F. 289 | 4th Cir. | 1910
It appears from the agreed statement of facts that the Tredegar Company had an undisputed claim against the Seaboard Air Line Railway for supplies furnished, amounting to $8,980.47 for which it perfected a lien in accordance with section 2485 of the Code of Virginia within the- time required by section 2486 of said Code; that the said railroad company, some time after incurring this liability, was by the court below placed in the hands of receivers; that in July, 1908, the principal amount of this claim was paid, and a receipt given setting forth that such payment should in no way affect the question of payment of accrued interest on the account, which payment of interest was denied by the receivers, and that, when the question of interest had been finally passed on by the court, the Tredegar Company was to release its lien. The court below subsequently passed upon this question, and determined that the claimant was not entitled to interest, and to review this ruling is the sole purpose of this appeal.
In United States v. North Carolina, 136 U. S. 211, at page 216, 10 Sup. Ct. 920, at page 922, 34 L. Ed, 33, it is held that:
“Interest, when not stimulated for by contract, or authorized by statute, is allowed by the courts as damages for the detention of money or of property, or of compensation to which the plaintiff is entitled.”
And in Loudon v. Taxing District, 104 U. S. 771, 26 L. Ed. 923, it is held:
“lawful interest is the only damages to which a party is entitled for the nonpayment of money due upon contract. His right is limited to the recovery of the money so due and such interest”
In Brewster v. Wakefield, 22 How. 118, at page 127, 16 L. Ed. 301, it is held, where a contract is silent as to interest after debt due, the creditor is entitled to interest after that time by operation of law, and not by any provision of the contract.
In Young v. Godbe, 15 Wall. 562, 21 L. Ed. 250, it is held:
“In a case where interest as a general thing is due (as, ex. gr., in the case of an account stated), the fact that there may be no statute in the place where the account is settled and the transaction takes place does not prevent the recovery of interest. In such a case interest at a reasonable rate, and conforming to the custom which obtains in the community in dealings of the' same character, will be allowed 'by way of damages for unreasonably withholding an overdue account.”
In Cooper & Co. v. Coates & Co., 21 Wall. 105, at page 111, 22 L. Ed. 481, it is held:
“A sale of goods without a terln of credit given is liquidated when contracted, and after the account is presented, and impliedly admitted, the defendants are in default and chargeable with interest.”
This general rule, established by these and very many other authorities, is, however, subject to an exception where the property of an insolvent debtor passes into the hands of a receiver or an assignee -in
Under these authorities it appears from the record before us that this case comes under this exception to the general rule touching the payment of interest, and that the court below did not err in disallowing interest from and after the appointment of the receivers. It does appear, however, that the account of plaintiff was stated, due, and payable a considerable period of time before the receivers were appointed, and for such period interest should have been allowed.
It therefore follows that the decree of the court below should be modified, so as to allow plaintiff and appellant interest upon its account from the date it became due and payable up to the date of the appointment of the receivers, and the cause will he remanded, with directions to so modify the decree complained of.
Modified.
On Rehearing.
A very careful consideration of the petitions filed by both sides for rehearing and of the briefs and arguments of counsel had upon such rehearing has convinced us that the original conclusion reached by us is right. The appellant has insisted that it was wrong, in that it held this case to be “subject to an exception where the property of an insolvent debtor passes into the hands of a receiver or assignee in insolvency, in which case the delay in distribution is held to be the act of the law and a necessary incident to the settlement of the estate.” And this for two reasons: First, because the debtor, the railway company, is not insolvent; and, second, because appellant’s claim is a secured one.
The answer to the first contention is complete, when attention is called to the undisputed facts that the decree complained of was entered by the court below on the 28th of June, 1909, at which time the allegations of the original hill filed by the railway company and of the cross-bill filed by the Continental Trust Company, trustee in the first mortgage, for foreclosure, alleging the railway company to be insolvent, were wholly undenied, and upon the record stood for confessed. In fact the trustee in the mortgage had expressly admitted the insolvency in its answer to the original bill, and the original cause and that arising upon its cross-bill had been consolidated. IJnder such circumstances this court cannot consider the fact that after this decree was entered the railway company, by a fortunate train of circumstances subsequently arising, was enabled to adjust its financial difficulties and resume possession “of its property in a solvent condition, if such result had been anticipated, or if it desired to run the risk of such fortunate outcome arising, the appellant might well have delayed asking for the adjustment of its claim until such contingency had arisen. It did not, hut, on the contrary, asked for and secured' its adjustment at a
As to the second contention relied upon by the appellant, the Supreme Court, as stated in our original opinion, has held that:
“Interest when not stipulated for by the contract, or authorized by statute, is allowed by the courts as damages for the detention of money or of property, or of compensation to which the plaintiff is entitled.”
In other words, when a debtor withholds his money or property from his creditor, he injures his creditor by so depriving him of his due, and damages at a fixed rate, ascertained by law to be the value of the use of money, is‘awarded him for the period his debtor has deprived him- of its use. But this presumes that the debtor has the money or property in his possession and is securing the profit arising from its use. On the other hand, when the debtor becomes insolvent aqd, at the instance of his creditors, his money and property are taken from him by the law, appealed to by creditors for the purpose of ascertaining their rights and priorities to such money and property, it would seem to be unjust to both debtor and to his unsecured creditors to award to secured creditors interest as damages for the law’s delays made necessary in the ascertainment and adjustment of the creditors’ rights. In such case the debtor is deprived of the use of his property from which he might well secure in profit the damages so assessed against him, while the unsecured creditor may lose a part or the whole of his debt by reason of the absorption of the assets in the awarding of such damages .to the secured creditors. It therefore seems to us to be entirely equitable that, while the custody of the law continues in such case, such interest in the nature of damages should not be awarded.
And this seems peculiarly to be so in regard to insolvent corporations. In Griffith v. Blackwater Boom & L. Co., 46 W. Va. 56, 33 S. E. 125, the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia, following the New York decisions, has held that when a corporation is forced into involuntary liquidation its executory contracts become nugatory, and that a contractor having a “supply contract” entitling him to a lien is not entitled, under such conditions, to recover damages for the breach of his contract, but only to a just compensation for the actual expenditure of labor and money by him in fulfillment of his contract, subject to a deduction of all sums paid him thereunder. This ruling was affirmed by the same court, in the same case, upon second appeal (Griffith v. Blackwater Boom & L. Co., 55 W. Va. 604, 48 S. E. 442, 69 L. R. A. 124), and in Tennis Bros. Co. v. Wetzel & Tyler. Ry. Co. (C. C.) 140 Fed. 193, it is cited and followed, and upon appeal this court affirmed the lower court’s action in so doing (Wetzel & Tyler Ry. Co. v. Tennis Bros. Co., 75 C. C. A. 266, 145 Fed. 458).
If, under conditions of insolvency, the contract of the corporation becomes nugatory, and damages will not be awarded for its breach to
Finally, it is urged by appellee railway company that it was error on our part to modify the decree of the court below, and not affirm in toto'; and this for the. reason that appellant, by acceptance of the principal of its debt, extinguished the debt itself, and thereby barred recovery of interest. We do not controvert the soundness of this rule when applied to parties dealing with each other. It is well settled in. Stewart v. Barnes, 153 U. S. 456. 14 Sup. Ct. 819, 38 L. Ed. 781. But in this case the parties were not dealing with each other, but appellant, was dealing with the receivers, and with the express agreement that payment of the principal of its debt should in “nowise affect the question of the payment of interest,” which question was to be submitted and determined by the court. These receivers were the appointees and agents of the court, to conduct the affairs of the railway corporation to a final liquidation or settlement, subject always to the court’s direction and approval of their acts. This agreement was therefore in effect that of the court itself. Under such circumstances this rule cannot apply, for in equity arrd good conscience no court could refuse 1o redeem its obligation to determine the right of appellant to demand such interest.
The decree complained of must be modified and affirmed, as directed in the original opinion.