Baker v. Baker

28 N.J.L. 13
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 28 N.J.L. 13 (Baker v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Baker, 28 N.J.L. 13 (N.J. 1859).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Whelpley, J.

On the first day of April, 1836, the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $1150, for lands sold and conveyed by the plaintiff to defendant. In March, 1852, a settlement and adjustment of the amount due was made by William Lytle and Dr. Ferdinand S. Schenck, chosen by the parties for the purpose. Yarious payments had been made upon the $1Y50, at different, times, between 1st April, 1836, and March, 1852. These gentlemen were called not to arbitrate; but to calculate the true amount due after allowing the payments by the correct mode of computation. They mistook the rule; calculated the interest on the whole sum for the whole tíme ; added to it the principal; calculated the interest on the payments from the time they were made ; added that to the sum of the .payments, and subtracted that amount from the amount of the principal and interest first found. The balance was $1234.94. Eor this amount Baker, the defendant, gave his bond, which he afterwards paid. The plaintiff’s action is brought to recover the difference between this and the true amount due.

The correct mode of calculation was stated to the jury by the judge at the trial. They were instructed to cast [15]*15the interest on the principal to the time of the first payment;, and if the payment equalled, or was greater than the i itorost, to deduct the payment; if the payment did not equal die interest, it was not to be credited until, with the future payments, the interest was equalled or exceeded. Meredith v. Banks, 1 Halst. 408.

The intention of the computants was to ascertain the correct balance by the true rule ; they mistook it, and the result was erroneous. The court instructed the jury that if the amount was found by mistake incorrectly it would be corrected, and they might render a verdict for the balance not included in the bond. They found for the plaintiff 0373.

The plaintiff now insists that the real mistake was $750, the defendant that it was $340.

The defendant insists that the verdict should be set aside for throe reasons.

1. Because the mistake was of law, not of fact, and is such as cannot bo corrected.

2. That the plaintiff’s claim became merged in the bond.

3. That certain exceptions filed by the defendant in the Orphans Court were improperly admitted in evidence.

It is admitted that the plaintiff did not intend, at the time of settlement, to give up any part of the debt; nor did the defendant suppose he was not settling the whole amount due by him when he gave his bond for the assumed amount. Is there no relief in a case of this kind ? The evidence shows that the mode of computation was a disputed question between the parties, and that the witnesses, Dr. Schenck and Mr. Lytle, were called on to settle that question; that both modes were considered by them, and the erroneous mode deliberately adopted with the knowledge and sanction of the parties. They were ignorant of the proper arithmetical rule by which to determine the amount due: the principal was known; the payments were known; there were no circumstances of fraud, surprise, or [16]*16imbecility of either of the parties to modify or in any way distinguish the case from that of a simple mistake. Wliat was the character of that mistake ? Was it one of fact or of law, or of a mixed character, partly of law and partly of fact?

The parties, at the time of the settlement, were ignorant of no pure fact involved in the settlement; they knew the rule adopted' to find the balance. They did not know that rule to be erroneous; and, as a consequence, the result reached by its application to be erroneous also. The wrong mode was adopted ignorantly. The proper mode of applying payments to the liquidation of a debt drawing interest has always been treated by the courts as a question of law, to be controlled by the court. That it is the duty of juries to apply the rule laid down by the court to the facts of each case has never been doubted. The court declares the rule, the jury apply it. The mistake made by the q>arties in this case was in the mode of applying the payments—in the rule of calculation, not in the calculation itself—-the application of the rule ; the latter would be a mistake of fact, the former of the law.

This was so held by the Supreme Court of Now York in the case of Boyer v. Pack, 2 Den. 107, which was an actio:i to recover back an overpayment. In that case the parties did not know that an ei’roneous rale of calculatioi had been adopted. The court held it an error in fact because they did not know that the rule had been adopted; •but said, that if they had,' thei'e could have been no relief, as it then would have been an error in law. To the same effect arc the following cases. New York Firemans Insurance Co. v. Ely, 2 Cow. 678; Maine Bank v. Butts, 9 Mass. 55 ; Sussex Bank v. Baldwin, 2 Harr. 487.

The mistake in this case was occasioned by sheer ignorance of an arbitrary rule adopted by the courts to prevent compounding interest. No satisfactory reason can be assigned why the creditor should not have interest upon the 'interest expressly reserved, and payable by the term of his [17]*17contract after it becomes cine, except that it compounds so rapidly as to become Oppressive in fact. In all cases of broach of contract, except that of paying interest compensation to the creditor is the measure of damages; in this, the debtor is suffered to reap a benefit by Ms own breach of contract. If he delay the payment of $1000 interest money one year he is the gainer by $60, and the creditor a loser to that amount. The rule which prohibits a contract in advance, that unpaid interest shall be con-' verted into principal, but recognises the validity of a contract, if made after it becomes due, to pay interest upon it, and the rule which permits a party to include the interest as principal in the instalment, and gives interest on the whole instalment as damages, are, like the one now under consideration arbitrary rules of law adopted from mixed considerations of law, policy, and convenience. I have made these remarks not for the purpose of impugning the wisdom of these rules, or disturbing their authority, but to show that the whole law upon the subject of compound interest does not rest upon the statute alone, but lias its support upon other grounds. There is no such rule as, that compound interest under all circumstances is illegal, and cannot be taken. The law prescribes under' what circumstances it may be taken, and in this ease of the application of payments, now before the court, that it cannot be taken.

The defendant gave Ms bond for the amount reached by the adoption of the erroneous rule. The plaintiffs, with full knowledge of the rule adopted, accepted the bond as payment of the debt, and afterwards deliberately collected the money secured by it.

The defendant now admits that the whole debt was not included in the bond, but insists that the bond was taken in satisfaction of the debt, and that thereby the whole debt was merged in the bond, and extinguished by operation of law; that the extinguishment was complete, final, and, In a court of law at least, conclusive.

[18]*18The doctrine of extinguishment, as ajoplied to cases of this description, is that a security of a higher nature extinguishes those of an inferior degree for the same debt. o _ <->

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Related

The BANK OF COLUMBIA v. PATTERSON’S Adm’r
11 U.S. 299 (Supreme Court, 1813)
New York Firemen Insurance v. Ely
2 Cow. 678 (New York Supreme Court, 1824)
Boyer v. Pack
2 Denio 107 (New York Supreme Court, 1846)
Miller v. Covert
1 Wend. 487 (New York Supreme Court, 1828)
Welland Canal Co. v. Hathaway
8 Wend. 480 (New York Supreme Court, 1832)
Andrews v. Smith
9 Wend. 53 (New York Supreme Court, 1832)
Butler v. Miller
1 Denio 407 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1845)
Storer v. Logan
9 Mass. 55 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1812)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 N.J.L. 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-baker-nj-1859.