Genin v. Ingersoll

11 W. Va. 549, 1877 W. Va. LEXIS 52
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 11 W. Va. 549 (Genin v. Ingersoll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Genin v. Ingersoll, 11 W. Va. 549, 1877 W. Va. LEXIS 52 (W. Va. 1877).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court delivered by

Johnsok, Judge :

It is claimed by appellees, that if there was any error in the court, as to the amount of purchase money due, as found by the decree, based upon the commissioner’s report, that such error under sections 5 and 6 of chapter 134 of the Code should be corrected: and that until such motion to correct was made in the court below, and overruled, no appeal would lie. Section 5 of chapter 134 of the Code applies, where there is a clerical error, but not, where there is error in judgment, or the decision is founded on an erroneous view of the law: otherwise there could be no appeal, until the court below had refused to review its decree, or had reviewed and affirmed it.

It is claimed also, that the exception was not as to the statement number two of commissioner, on which the court founded its decree, but as to statement number one; and that appellant cannot except here,

A commissioner’s report, if erroneous upon its face, may be objected to on the hearing of a cause, though no exception be previously filed; and such objection maybe [555]*555made in the appellate court, though no exception appears to have been taken in the court below: Hyman, Moses & Co. v. Bradley, Kyle & Co., 10 W. Va.

The objection here made by the appellant would be considered, had he made no exception to the report in the court below, as all the objections urged appear upon the face of the report.

There were exceptions filed to the commissioner’s report in the court below, to which the appellant will not be confined. It is clear from the commissioner’s report, that interest upon interest was charged, in making his statement number two, and that the court decreed for such interest so charged; was this right ?

In several cases where the payment of the principal, or a part of it, has been postponed to a more distant day than the interest, which by argeement was to be paid at certain specified times, as annually, or at the end of every year, before the principal is due, it has been held that interest is chargable on each installment of interest, and some cases have held generally, that where there is an express stipulation, that interest shall be paid at certain fixed times, as annually, or at the end of each year, even if the principal be due at or before the first installment, if interest is due, interest is to be charged upon the interest, from the time that it is payable. But in other states it is established as a general principle, without reference to the distinction respecting the postponement of the payment of the principal, that though there be an express agreement in a note or bond to pay interest at a specified time, as annually or semiannually from the date, yet interest upon interest from the time when it fell due, will not be allowed; but it will be considered that the holder, by neglecting to call for his interest when it fell due, waived his right to have it converted into capital, yet it is agreed that the claim to interest on such interest is an equitable one, and a note or other security given for it after it is due, will be sustained and enforced as on a good and sufficient consider[556]*556ation: 1 Am. Lead. Cases, 650, and cases there cited. In Gibbs v. Chisholm. 2 N. & M. (S. C.), it was held, that “a bond, with a condition that the lawful interest on the whole principal sum shall be paid annually, together with one-third part of the said principal sum, at the end of each year, until the whole be paid off, is not usurous; and the obligee is entitled to interest on the aggregate amount of principal and interest of each installment, as it becomes due.” In this case, two of the five judges dissented, and Johnson, Judge, in the dissenting opinion, it seems to me, gives better reasons than are given by Judge Bay, who delivered the opinion of the Court. In Doig, adm'r v. Barkley & Cathcart, 3 Rich. 125, it was held, that “where a party contracts to pay a sum of money, with interest thereon, on a given day, when the day arrives the interest becomes principal; and if the debt be not paid, the aggregate of principal and interest then due bears interest for the future.” Wright v. Eaves, 10 S. C. Eq. 594; O’Neall v. Sims, 1 Strobh. 115; Pierce v. Rowe, 1 N. H. 179.

In Mann v. Cross, 9 Iowa. 327, it was held, that “when by the terms of the note, interest thereon is payable annually, the interest on the principal, after it becomes due, constitutes an indebtedness to the payee upon which interest should be computed.” Other cases might be cited, but this will suffice. On the other hand, in Connecticut v. Jackson, 1 Johns. Ch. 14, Chancellor Kent said: “This allowance of compound interest is inadmissible, and the report must be sent back to the master for correction. There are cases in which interest is considered as changed into principal, and permitted to carry interest; as where a settlement of accounts takes place after interest has became due, or an agreement is then made that the interest due shall carry interest, or the principal and interest are computed in a master’s report, and the same is confirmed. But except in some such special case, interest upon interest is not allowed, and the uniform course of the de[557]*557cisions is against it, as being a bard and oppressive exaction, and tending to usury. Even an original agree-' ment, at the time of the loan or contract, that if interest be not paid at the end of the year, it shall be deemed principal and carry interest, will not be recognized as valid. Such a provision would not amount to usury so as to render the contract connected with it illegal and void, but this court certainly, and perhaps a court of law, would not, give effect to such a provision.” Van Benschuten v. Lawson, 6 Johns. Ch. 313. In Hastings v. Wisnall, 8 Mass. 455, the court held that upon a note payable in a certain number of years, with interest annually, judgment can only be received for simple interest on the principal sum,” for the reason that the plaintiff might have brought his action for the interest at the end of each year, and that by neglecting this he might be considered as waiving his claim to compound interest. Von Hemort v. Porter, 11 Metc. 210. Ferry v. Ferry, 2 Cush. 92.

In Pindall’s Ex’or. &c. v. Bank of Marietta, 10 Leigh 481, Judge Cabell, in delivering the opinion of the court said: “ A debtor owing a debt consisting of principal and interest, and making a partial payment, has a right to direct its application to so much of the principal in exclusion of the interest; and the creditor, if he re-receives it, is bound to apply it accordingly. And it is the general rule of law, that interest shall not bear interest. This rule of law will however yield to the agreement of the parties express or implied; if therefore a debtor in consideration of forbearance agrees with the creditor, that he will pay interest on interest heretofore accrued, that agreement will be enforced. So also I apprehend, if a debtor in consideration of forbearance agrees that he will on a future day pay the interest heretofore accrued, and fails to pay it on the day, a jury or a court of chancery will give interest on the amount of that interest after the expiration of the day. This however is on the ground that the contract of the parties has convertedThe interest into a debt.”

[558]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 W. Va. 549, 1877 W. Va. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/genin-v-ingersoll-wva-1877.