Fifth Baptist Church v. Baltimore & Potomac Railroad

13 D.C. 458
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1883
DocketLaw. No. 17,470
StatusPublished

This text of 13 D.C. 458 (Fifth Baptist Church v. Baltimore & Potomac Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fifth Baptist Church v. Baltimore & Potomac Railroad, 13 D.C. 458 (D.C. 1883).

Opinion

Mr. Justice ITagner

delivered the opinion of the court.

In June, 1879, the plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant in the Circuit Court, in an action of tort, which was affirmed by this court in General Term. An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court of the United States, which, at the October Term, 1882, passed the following order :

“ Whereas, in the present term of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-two, the said cause came on to be heard before the said Supreme Court, on the said transcript of record, and was'argued by counsel. On consideration whereof : It is now here ordered and adjudged by this court, that the judgment of the said Supreme Court, in this cause, be, and the same is hereby affirmed with costs and interest, until paid, at the same rate per annum that similar judgments bear in the courts of the District of Columbia.”

Upon the reception of this mandate by the court of the District, the defendant tendered payment of the judgment and costs without interest, but the plaintiff refused to receive [459]*459this amount unless the defendant should also pay the interest fi’om the date of the recovery of the judgment in the Circuit •Court. The defendant thereupon filed a petition to the General Term, in which it offered to bring into court the amount •of the judgment and costs, and prayed that an order should be made entering the judgment satisfied upon the payment of the amount thus tendered.

It is contended upon the part of the defendant: First, that under the language of the mandate, the lower court is required to examine into the nature of the action and ascertain whether it is one in which a plaintiff is entitled to interest from the rendition of the judgment (as in such eases only can interest be added, according to the order of the Supreme Court); and, second, that according to the law and practice of the courts of the District of Columbia, interest is not •chargeable in an action of tort like the present.

In our opinion, the words relied on, “ at the same rate per annum that similar judgments bear in the courts of the District of Columbia,” are not to be taken as directing an inquiry into the character of the action in which the judgment below was rendered, but -merely as indicating that the rate per centum, at which the interest must be computed, shall be no higher or lower than the legal rate in the jurisdiction where the judgment was originally recovered.

And this sufficiently appears from the statutes and from ■the rules of the Supreme Court bearing upon the subject.

Nothing could be more obviously just than that something in the way of penalty or additional costs should be applied, in the discretion of the appellate court, to deter frivolous appeals. Unless such power existed, the losing party would have every motive for an appeal, and none for acquiescing in the judgment below. And this would be especially the ■case where the judgment grew out of a personal action founded in tort, where, at common law, the death of either party would cause an abatement of the action. Accordingly, .at a very early day in England (1486), the statute 3 Henry VII, ch. 10, v?as passed, in these words :

“Item, That where oftentimes plaintiff or demandant, [460]*460plaintiffs or demandants, that have judgment to recover, be delayed of execution, for that the defendant or tenant, defendants or tenants, against whom judgment is given, or other, that been bound by the said judgment, sueth a writ or writs of error to annul and reverse the said judgment, to the intent only to delay execution of the said judgment: It is enacted, &c., * * * that if any such defendant or tenant, defendants or tenants, or any other, that shall be bound by the said judgment, sue, afore execution had, any writ of error to reverse any such judgment, in delaying of execution, that then if the same judgment be affirmed good in the said writ of error, and not erroneous, or that the said writ of error be discontinued in the default of the party, or that any person or persons that sueth writ or writs of error, be non-sued in the same, that then the said person or persons, against whom the said writ of error is sued, shall recover his costs and damages for his delay and wrongful vexation in the same, by discretion of the justice afore whom the said writ of error is sued,”

At common law, no costs were allowable on a writ of error ; and as there could be no damages, strictly speaking, on a writ of error, but outy a reversal or affirmance of the judgment, it was evident that the expression costs and damages ” was intended to give new penalties not previously existing. The fact that all interest .was considered usurious and illegal until the reign following the passage of this act, explains the failure of the courts to carry into effect its provisions by allowing interest by way of damages. The unwillingness of the judges to enforce the recovery of the damages in any form, was very clearly evinced by the passage of a subsequent act, the 19' Henry VII, chap. 20, which recites at length the passage of the former statute, and then proceeds as follows : “ Which act or ordinance hath not been as yet duly put in execution, by reason whereof, as well plaintiffs as demandants, in divers actions by them sued sith the making of the said statute, have been oftentimes delayed of their execution, to their great and importable hurt, loss and charges; wherefore, the King, our sovereign lord, by the [461]*461advice of the lords spiritual and temporal, and the commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by authority of the same, ordaineth, establisheth and enaeteth, that the said act made the third year of his reign, concerning the premises, be good and effectual, and that from henceforth, it be duly put in execution.”

Both of these statutes were in force in Maryland. (Kilty, p. 228-30.)

Mr. Sellon, Vol. II, p. 446, says:

“It is observable that the statute of Henry VII particularly mentions costs and damages, clearly showing that the legislature intended something more than the mere costs. And indeed were it otherwise, it might often be advantageous to the party against whom judgment is obtained, to delay execution by writ of error, even upon payment of the costs, inasmuch as if the amount of such judgment were considerable, the very interest of the money, by delay of payment, might exceed the costs in the writ of error ; for this reason, therefore, interest from the time of signing the judgment until the affirmance thereof, is now generally allowed and added to the costs by way of damages.”

In 1781, in the case of Zinck vs. Lancton, Douglass, 749, Lord Mansfield said that the word “ damage,” in the statute, must mean something different from costs, as both words are used, and he determined that interest on the amount of the judgment ought to be the measure of such damages; and a rule was made absolute that the master should compute interest on the verdict from the day of signing final judgment below down to the time of the taxation of costs on the affirmance of the judgment.

And in Entwisle vs. Shepherd, 2d Term Rep., 78, which was an action brought on a judgment recovered in the Common Pleas, decided six years afterwards, Buller, J:, said : u

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13 D.C. 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fifth-baptist-church-v-baltimore-potomac-railroad-dc-1883.