City of Los Angeles v. City Bank

34 P. 510, 100 Cal. 18, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 742
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1893
DocketNo. 19090
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 34 P. 510 (City of Los Angeles v. City Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Los Angeles v. City Bank, 34 P. 510, 100 Cal. 18, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 742 (Cal. 1893).

Opinion

Searls, C.

The 44th section of the city charter of the city of Los Angeles provided a mode by which the funds of the citjr should be deposited in such bank of deposit of the city as would pay the highest rate of interest thereon, etc. (Statutes, 1889, p. 467.)

Pursuant to such section of the charter a contract was, after due notice, on the tenth day of March, 1890, entered into by and between the plaintiff and defendant by which the former appointed the latter the depository of the public money of said city, for the term of one year from the date of the agreement; the city agreed that the city treasurer should deposit with the bank, defendant, the public moneys then on hand and all that should come to his hands during the term. Defendant agreed to pay interest on the deposit at the rate of three-eighths of one per cent per month, interest to be paid monthly and to be computed on daily balances.

The contract was executed by the mayor on behalf of the city and by the defendant. On the same day a city ordinance Avas duly passed by the council and approved by the mayor, appointing the bank the depository of the public funds and directing the treasurer to deposit the same accordingly.

The public moneys were thereupon deposited with defendant until the interest thereon amounted to nine thousand seven hundred and twenty-one dollars and fifty-four cents, according to the contract. Before the expiration of the Amar section 44 of the city charter Avas, in the case of Yarnell v. City of Los Angeles, 87 Cal. 603, decided unconstitutional and void by this court.

Thereupon the money was withdraAvn from the bank, except the accrued interest, which was not paid, although afterward demanded. The defendant is a commercial bank, engaged in the transaction of a general banking business, and receives money upon deposit, upon which it pays no interest except in special cases and upon specific contracts therefor.

The cause was tried by the court Avithout the intervention of a jury, Avritten findings filed, and judgment [20]*20entered thereon in favor of plaintiff for $9,721.54, and interest thereon from April 24, 1891, at 7 per cent per annum, amounting in the aggregate to $10,165.74.

Defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order denying a motion for a new trial.

The complaint contained three causes of action: one upon the special contract; a second upon an account .stated, and the third for money had and received by ■defendant to plaintiff’s use. A demurrer was interposed by defendant to each of the causes of action, and sustained as to the first and overruled as to the other ' two.

The findings negative the right of plaintiff to recover upon the account stated, and the judgment is based upon the count for money had and received to the use. of plaintiff. The question as to whether or not there was an account stated between the parties, upon which respondent has dwelt in the brief on file, need not be considered. That question is foreclosed by the action of the court below, which found against respondent on that point, and from which no appeal has been taken.

The real question involved may be stated thus:

1. Plaintiff and defendant entered into a contract, which they in fact deemed valid, but which was illegal.
2. By that contract, defendant was to receive the public moneys and pay interest thereon for one year.
3. At the end of ten months plaintiff, on discovery of the illegality of the contract, demanded and received all the moneys deposited, but without any interest.
4. Can plaintiff under such circumstances recover the interest in an action for money had and received?

A special agreement to pay interest gives a right of action to recover the interest whenever, under the contract, it becomes due. It is a part of the contract and may be enforced either separately or in connection with other obligations of the same contract; but when it is not specially contracted for, it is but an incident of the contract or obligation upon which it depends, and cannot be recovered in a separate action after payment of [21]*21the principal. In such cases, except as provided by statute, it is recovered not as interest eo nomine but as damages for the detention of the principal debt or for failure to discharge the obligation. (American Bible Society v. Wells, 68 Me. 572; 28 Am. Rep. 82.) In that case it was said: “If, by the terms of a contract or a bequest, a party is entitled to interest, undoubtedly an action may be maintained to recover it, even after the principal has been paid. But when the contract or bequest is silent as to interest, so that, if it can be recovered at all, it can only be recovered as damages, an action to recover it cannot be maintained after payment of the principal.” In Tillotson v. Preston, 3 Johns. (N. Y.) 229, it was said in a case where interest was not specially contracted for, that “if the plaintiff has accepted the principal he cannot afterwards bring an action for the interest.” (Sedgwick on Damages, sec. 338, 8th ed.; Fake v. Eddy, 15 Wend. 76; Southern C. R. R. Co. v. Moravia, 61 Barb. 180; Tenth Nat. Bank v. New York, 4 Hun, 429.

Wherever the question of the application of payments is left in doubt the law will apply them first to the ex-tinguishment of interest due at the date of payment, and the rule we have mentioned has no application.

In the present instance no such doubt arises. It was stipulated at the trial that the first cause of action in the complaint states correctly the history of the transaction between the city and the city bank, but defendant objected to its relevancy; the objection was overruled and the statement admitted in evidence. That statement is in part as follows: “That there is now due said city of Los Angeles from said defendant, the city bank, for interest upon the public moneys deposited with said bank as aforesaid, the sum of nine thousand seven hundred and twenty-one dollars and fifty-four cents,” etc. Again, M. D. Johnson, the city treasurer, as a witness on behalf of plaintiff, testified as follows: “Witness received every cent that was claimed to be due the city, except these items of interest”: and further, “at the time the [22]*22witness withdrew all the money except the interest, the city had no claim against the city bank for anything except the interest that had accrued under the terms of that contract.”

There is other testimony in the record of like import, from all of which we think it clear that defendant paid and plaintiff received as such the entire amount of the principal sum deposited with it, and that the balance due, if any, was on account of the accrued interest, which, as we have attempted to show, cannot be recovered. We have spoken of the rule in reference to interest as defined by the courts, independent of statutory provisions.

The Civil Code, section 3290, would seem to apply a similar doctrine to express contracts for the payment of interest with that applied to implied contracts. It reads as follows: “Accepting payment of the whole principal, as such, waives all claim to interest.”

But was any interest due? That the attempted contract was void is conceded on all hands.

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Bluebook (online)
34 P. 510, 100 Cal. 18, 1893 Cal. LEXIS 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-los-angeles-v-city-bank-cal-1893.