Campbell v. Campbell

2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 256
CourtButler Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 256 (Campbell v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Butler Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Campbell, 2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 256 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

StáiTit,- G. J.

The petition of the plaintiff alleges, substantially, that on the 1st day of .June, 1859, W. H. H-. Campbell, the 'defendant, commenced in the court of "common pleas ■of Butler-county, Ohio, an action against Lewis D. Campbell, on two promissory notes- made by him to said W. H. H. Campbell, one for $2,658.00, dated August 1, 1854, due one day after date, and bearing ten per cent, interest from date until paid, and on which n’o payments had' been made — and the other dated November 28, 1854, due one day after date, calling for $287.06, with ten per cent, interest until paid, and which was credited, November 27, 1854, Mth $183.40. That the petition in said cause claimed a judgment "on said two notes ate follows; On the first, $2,658.21, with interest at ten per cent, from August 1, 1854, and on the second the sum of $103.66, with ten per cent, from November 28, 1854. That said Le — ic D. Campbell was duly summoned in said action June 10, 1859, and on the [257]*25729th of October, 1859, judgment was taken by default against him for $4,208.60, the amount found due on said notes, and for costs, and it was ordered by said court “that said judgment bear ten per cent, interest per annum until paid.” The plaintiff in this case further alleges, that after the rendition of said judgment said Lewis D. Campbell made fifteen different payments thereon, commencing February 3, 1860, and ending December 22, 1875, in all over the sum of $5,000. That said Campbell having died, and said judgment, by reason thereof, having become dormant, on the 7th of March, 1885, it was revived against the plaintiff, as the administratrix of his estate, but said order of revivor provided, that nothing therein was to prevent the said administratrix, or the heirs of said Campbell, from showing payments on the said judgment since its rendition.

The petition further alleges that the costs on said judgments have been paid, and that on December 26,1886, she, as the administratrix of Campbell, tendered to the defendant $2,431.04 in payment of the balance of said judgment, but that he refused to accept it, claiming that a much larger sum was due thereon. She says no more was due thereon, and offers to bring-the sum into court for the defendant. She further states that there was a “clerical inaccuracy” in the entry of said judgment, in this: that it recites that the judgment should bear ten per cent, interest per annum until paid, whereas it should have recited that the interest should only bear six per cent, per annum from the date of. said judgment, and which clerical inaccuracy ought to be disregarded, or if necessary, corrected. That the entry furnisned was in the handwriting of Judge Hume, then the attorney of W. H. H. Campbell in said action. That the recitals in the petition of said Campbell, and the copies of the notes set out therein, show that the interest should only bear six per cent, interest. That when she tendered the said sum to Campbell, she requested him to cancel said judgment,’ which he refused to do. The prayer of her petition is, that he be required to accept the said tender and cancel said judgment, and that on his default the court will order satisfaction thereof.

The answer of the defendant admits the allegations of the petition as to the recovery and revivor of the judgment, the character and amounts of the notes sued on, and the tender by the plaintiff of .the amount named, and the refusal of the defendant to accept the same in full payment of the judgment; but it denies some of the payments claimed by plaintiff, and the time of payment of others. It admits that the original judgment entry was prepared by Judge Hume, then attorney for the defendant, and denies the other allegations of the petition.

The parties have now agreed as to what payments have been made upon the judgment, and when they were made, and the questions which are submitted for our decision are, first, whether the judgment of the court of common pleas in the original case, that the whole judgment (which included both the principal and the interest then due on the note), should bear,interest at the rate of ten per pent, per annum, was in accordance with law. And; second, if not, whether the court can now, on the pleadings, find and adjudicate that said order is to be disregarded, or the “clerical inaccuracy,” as it is called in the petition, can now be corrected by us.

The debt on which the judgment was founded was contracted while the law of March 14, 1850, was in force — -2 Curwen, 1569. The first section of this act .authorized parties to contract in writing for any rate of interest, not exceeding ten per cent. Section 2 provided, “that upon all judgments or decrees rendered upon .any bond, bill, promissory note or other instrument aforesaid, interest shall be computed until payment, at the rate specified in such bond, bill, note, or other instrument, not exceeding ten per centum, as aforesaid, but in case no rate of interest be specified, at six per centum yearly.”

On the 25th day of February, 1859, and March 31, 1859, two acts were passed —the first repealing the act of March 14; 1850, which was to take effect April 1, 1859, and the other which was to take effect on its passage (March 31, 1859), “limited the operation of the repealing act, so that it should “not apply to any contracts then existing, or that may be made before the taking effect qf said act,” and [258]*258providing that “said contracts shall be and remain in full force and effect, and upon all judgments rendered upon any of the aforesaid contracts, interest shall be computed until payment, at the rate specified therein, not exceeding ten per centum per annum, as though said act passed February 25, 1859, had not been passed.” 1 S. & C. 744-745.

This last law was in force at the time of the rendition of the judgment in the .'.ase under consideration, and whether the judgment was right or wrong in the 1-ioint referred to, depends on the construction to be placed upon these two statutes, ' he original ten per cent, law, and the act limiting the act repealing it.

We think it entirely clear that the legislature had the right to enact a law, that the whole judgment rendered on a note given under the ten per cent, law, including both principal and the accrued interest up to the date of the judgment, should bear the same rate of interest, say ten per cent. — for if the statute so provides, it in effect becomes a part of the contract between the parties.

We think, too, that such was the meaning of these statutes. The language is express, that “upon all judgments rendered upon such contracts, interest shall be computed until payment at the rate specified in the instrument.” The only rate specified in the Campbell notes was ten per cent., and certainly there is no language in the statute which in terms, or even by fair implication, limits that rate to the principal sum brought into the judgment, which is a unit.

It is true, ás claimed by the counsel for the plaintiff, that under such a construction of the statutes, there will be cases in which the interest on a ten or eight per cent, note (as when the interest is made payable annually, and no rate fixed thereon) will bear a higher rate of interest after the judgment than it did before. But if the statute allows it, this is the end of it and it is binding on the courts as well as on the parties.

That such is the true meaning of these laws we think is shown by -the nearly uniform practice of courts and lawyers, under them, and under the eight per cent, law, which is substantially similar in its provisions.

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2 Ohio Cir. Dec. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-campbell-ohcirctbutler-1888.