Dudley v. Reynolds

1 Kan. 285
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1 Kan. 285 (Dudley v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dudley v. Reynolds, 1 Kan. 285 (kan 1863).

Opinion

By the Court,

Kingman, J.

On the 10th day of April, 1861, the defendant in error commenced his action in the district court of Shawnee county, upon the following note : “$225. Seven months after date for valve received, .1 promise to pay G. A. Reynolds or order, the sum of two hundred and twenty-five dollars, with interest at the rate of five per’cent, per month until paid. _ Guru? ntn Dudlia.

“ Lawrence, February 9th, 1859.”

There was a credit on the note of one húndVed .¡nd seventy-five dollars, paid October 19th, 1859, which W;as after the elite became payable. Dudley, in his answer, set forth twó grufúíds of defense:

First. A general denial.
Second. That on the 19th day of October, 1859, Reynolds agreed that if Dudley would then pay one hundred and seventy-five dollars on the note, that the remaining sum should draw but two p§r centum per month thereafter, instead of five per cent, per month, as stipulated in the note, and that he. the [288]*288defendant, did then and there pay the said sum of one hundred and seventy-five dollars on the note, in pursuance of the said agreement.

To the second clause of the answer Reynolds demurred. The court sustained the demarrer, to which ruling Dudley excepted.

The issue of fact made by the first part of the answer was tried by the court and judgment rendered for Reynolds. Dudley, after the issue of fact was found by the court, moved the court to compute the interest from the maturity of the note, at the rate of six per centum per annum.

The court overruled the motion and computed the interest at the rate of five per cent, per month from date until the time judgment was rendered, and gave judgment accordingly, to which Dudley excepted.

The first error complained of is the sustaining the demurrer to the second clause of the answer. We can see no error in this. There was no consideration moving from Dudley to Reynolds for the pretended agreement. Dudley did not do or promise to do anything more than he had already promised and agreed to do, than what he was already bound in law and good conscience to do. Therefore there was no consideration for a promise that was in itself of inferior character to the agreement already made by him. This principle has been too long and too well settled to receive any new light from us, or require the citation of any authorities to support it.

The second error complained of is the computation of interest at the rate of five per cent, per month after the note became due and payable. When the note was made, the statute as to interest was as follows :

“The parties may agree in writing for the payment of any rate of interest on money due or to become due on any contract.” (Laws 1855, p. 433.)

It seems impossible to make the law clearer or more specific, allowing the parties to agree in writing, on any rate of interest on m.oney due or to become due.

[289]*289It is not any part of tli'e duty of a court to determine whether a law is a good or bad one, or whether its effects and consequences are beneficial or pernicious, if its terms are clear and undoubted. It is only when all other means of ascertaining the legislative intention fail, that as some guide, in applying so uncertain a law, a court may look to the effect of a law, and then their interpretation becomes a sort of Judicial legislation.

But when the terms of a law are clear and precise, the only duty of a court is to declare the applicability of the law to any given case. When the legislature has expressed its will in plain and unambiguous language, courts are bound to say they meant what they have clearly expressed. And however obnoxuous the interest law may be, and whatever may be its effects, it is clear, definite and explicit, that any rate of interest, however extortionate, whether the money for which such vate is paid be due or to become due, may be agreed on by the parties in writing, and their contract has the sanction of law and the court must so decide it, and apply it to the caso under consideration.

Counsel for plaintiff in error insists that there is no agreement in the note sued on for the payment of interest on it after it became due, and sustain their view' with reasoning very ingenious. Wc have examined the arguement so ably presented and the authorities cited with great care and anxiety, and have not been able to see that what parties have declared was their contract, was not what they agreed upon.

The argument of counsel is that there is no agreement for vhe payment of interest on the money after it became due. That on the first day after its maturity, Reynolds had an absolute right to the amount due for principal and interest, at the rate stipulated in the note, and nothing more. That there was no agreement that Dudley should have the money for..a day longer, and the non-payment of it on the day after it became payable, gave Reynolds an undoubted right of action for [290]*290the money and interest, and his right of recovery, if he delayed his suit, would be only the amount of the note and the stipulated rate of interest till it became due. That by the nonpayment of the note at maturity, the contract became broken, 'forfeited, and gone, and nothing remained to the party but his right of action against Dudley to recover damages for the nonperformance of .the contract.

It would give us great pleasure to see the case in the light in which the counsel presents it, but when the law allows ary rate of interest to be agreed on in writing on money dub or to become due, the only duty of the court is to see if the parties have so contracted.

If the construction fee as is claimed by the plaintiff in error, the words in the note, “until paid,” have no meaning. The note would have the exact legal effect claimed by the counsel1 if the words, until paid, were left out. The payee of the note would have the right to recover the face thereof, and five per cent, per month till clue, and the six per cent, per annum •thereafter, as a matter of law, but these words are in the note, and have a meaning; they declare for how long, whether before or after due, interest shall pe paid, at the rate of five per cent, per-month, and that declaration is uutü paid.

To give to them the effect claimed, would fee not to continue the words, but arbitrarily to declare that “until paid” means until payable.

The former means the discharge of a debt, the latter the time when it becomes due. Until paid means strictly until the discharge of the debt, while until payable means till the money is due. The meaning of these two phrases is, then, not only widely different, but absolutely inconsistent, each with the other. A debt cannot, at the same time, ho paid and payable. The moment it becomes due it is payable, if at the •same moment it is paid it ceases to be payable'.

■Shall we presume that the parties used the language-of the note in any other than its correct and general meaning? "Uu[291]*291fortunately, few persons know better the difference between payable and paid, tlian the borrower and lender, the debtor and the creditor. If the debtor could, by construction of language, convert payable into paid, he would never he trubled about his debts.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Kan. 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dudley-v-reynolds-kan-1863.