Citizens National Bank v. Donnell

94 S.W. 516, 195 Mo. 564, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 272
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 516 (Citizens National Bank v. Donnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens National Bank v. Donnell, 94 S.W. 516, 195 Mo. 564, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 272 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

BRACE, C. J.

— This is the second appeal in this case. On the former appeal the judgment of the circuit court was reversed and the cause remanded to that court “for further proceedings to be had therein in conformity with the opinion of this court herein' delivered.” The opinion therein delivered is reported in 172 Mo. 384, and concludes as follows:

“Our conclusion is that the judgment should be reversed with direction to the trial court to enter up judgment for plaintiff upon the following bases:
“Dec. 29, 1893................ $15,000.00
Principal of overdraft on July 12, 1895 ...................... 474.24
Net credit on bank account on that day........................ 230.50
Credit on note of October 1, 1895.. 2,500.00
Principal of overdraft April 29, 1896 ...................... 874.81
Credit on account that date...... 2.42
Total amount loaned.... 19,081.97
Credit by proceeds of col. Jan. 25, 1898...................... 5,500.00”'

From the judgment of this court entered upon this opinion the plaintiff sued but a writ bf error, by which [568]*568the ease was carried to the Supreme Court of the United States, where the judgment of this court was affirmed, 195 U. S. 369.

Pending the appeal in the United States Supreme Court, the original mandate was withdrawn, and, after the decision of that court, the case was again remanded to the circuit court with the same directions as before; and, in due course, coming on for final judgment in the circuit court, under the mandate and opinion of this court, the plaintiff asked the court to declare the law to be that plaintiff is entitled' to interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the commencement of this suit on such sum as the court under the mandate and opinion of the Supreme Court may determine to be due and owing to plaintiff in this action, which the court refused to do, and entered judgment for the plaintiff for the sum of $13,581.97. To which action of the court, in refusing to allow it interest from the commencement of the suit, the plaintiff duly excepted, and appeals.

The case in hand and the judgment of this court therein could not he more clearly or tersely stated than it was by Mr. Justice Holmes, who delivered the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States, as follows:

“This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of Missouri on the ground that the plaintiff in error is denied the rights with regard to charging interest conferred upon it by the national banking act. [Rev. Stat: secs. 5197-5198.] The suit was brought by the plaintiff in error upon a promissory note for twenty thousand dollars, with interest at eight per cent, made on April 29,1892. The facts, shortly stated, are as follows: On October 29, 1892, the plaintiff bought the defendant’s note for $15,000, with interest at seven per cent. On July 12,1895, the defendant being behindhand with his payments of interest and also having overdrawn a hank account which he kept in the plaintiff’s hank, he gave the plaintiff a new note for $17,500, and interest at [569]*569seven per cent, in' satisfaction of both liabilities. The amount of this note included three semiannual interest charges, of $525 each, with a few days ’ further interest, on the former note, with interest on this interest from the time it was due, and charges of one per cent or more a month on the amount overdrawn each month. It left the defendant with a credit on his bant account of $230.50. On April 29,1896, the note in suit and another note for $2,000 were given in satisfaction of the last note for $17,500, and of another note for $2,500, of October 1, 1895, with interest accrued on both, and of an overdraft of $919.90, and a balance of $2.42. The overdraft item included, as before, charges of about one per cent a month on the amounts actually overdrawn.
“The Supreme Court of Missouri held that the plaintiff must forfeit all interest from the beginning of the above transaction, and could recover only the original fifteen thousand dollars, the actual overdraft on July 12, 1895, four hundred and seventy-four dollars and twenty-four cents, the bank credit of two hundred and thirty dollars given the same day, the note of October 1, 1895, for twenty-five hundred dollars, the overdraft of April 25, 1896, of eight hundred and seventy-four dollars and eighty-one cents and the bank credit of two dollars and forty-two cents — in all, nineteen thousand eighty-one dollars and ninety-seven cents, less fifty-five hundred dollars collected on account since the action was begun. [172 Mo. 384.] ”

I. The cause was remanded to the circuit court with direction to enter a particular judgment, and the circuit court “had no power to enter any other judgment, or to consider or determine other matters not included in the duty of entering the judgment as directed.” [Stump v. Hornback, 109 Mo. 272; Rees v. McDaniel, 131 Mo. 681; State ex rel. v. Edwards, 144 Mo. 467; Tourville v. Railroad, 148 Mo. 614; Riley v. Sherwood, 155 Mo. 37.]

[570]*570Tlie direction to enter np judgment for plaintiff for the sum of $13,581.97 was no less specific than if the sum of $5,500 had in the direction been in fact deducted from the sum of $19,081.97 and that balance again shown as had been done in a former part of the opinion and judgment had been directed to be entered up for that particular sum in so many words and figures.

The data of “bases” given in the opinion on which the judgment was to be rendered, required a judgment for that amount and for that amount only and did. not include interest from the commencement of the suit, and there is nothing in the opinion to indicate that in remanding the case it was the intention of this court that such interest should be included; but, on the contrary, as intended by the court, and as constructed by Supreme Court of the United States, it was distinctly held in the opinion that the “plaintiff must forfeit all interest from the beginning” of the transaction.

In other words, the plaintiff’s cause of action by reason of its taint of usury bore no interest from the beginning; from which it follows as a necessary and logical consequence that plaintiff’s note as long as it remained in action merely could bear no interest, and the commencement of a suit thereon to recover the whole amount of the principal and usurious interest could not in the very nature of things change its character and purge it of its intrinsic vice and thereafter make it an interest-bearing cause of action. Nothing but a judgment in which it might be merged could “wash its sins away.”

Manifestly, the circuit court conformed to the spirit as well as to the letter of the mandate of this court in entering the judgment it did, and, in so doing, committed no error. If error there is, it is in the decision of this and not in the judgment of that court. And this is really the main contention of the plaintiff, a contention that might summarily be disposed of under the general rule that matters adjudicated on a former ap[571]*571peal become the law of the case on a second appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 516, 195 Mo. 564, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-national-bank-v-donnell-mo-1906.