Georgia Insurance & Trust Co. v. Oliver

1 Ga. 38
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 15, 1846
DocketNo. 9
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 Ga. 38 (Georgia Insurance & Trust Co. v. Oliver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Georgia Insurance & Trust Co. v. Oliver, 1 Ga. 38 (Ga. 1846).

Opinion

By the Court

Lumpkin, Judge.

The question of interest is not one of strict law, but of discretion, depending upon considerations of equity, growing out of the facts and cir[40]*40cumstances of each particular case. — Anonymous, 1 Johns. Rep., 315; Pease vs. Barber, 3 Caines Rep. 266. In the latter case, Chancellor, then Chief Justice Kent, remarks, “ there may be cases in which the defendant ought to refund the principal money only, and there may be other cases in which be ought, ex cequo et bono, to refund the principal .with interest.

The general proposition contended for by counsel for the company is correct, namely: that persons who are prevented from paying over money, by process of the court, as summons of Garnishment, Writs of Injunction and the like, are not liable for interest. — 2 Yeates, 280; 9 Wheat. Rep. 338; 4 Halst. 3; I Peters’ Rep. 524 ; 2 Dall. Rep. 102 ; 1 Call Rep. 115. It would be unreasonable for the law to forbid a thing being done, and then to mulct the party in damages, in the assessment of interest, for not doing it; in other words, for not disobeying its own precept. The law works no such injustice, is chargeable with no such absurdity. Indeed, the whole doctrine of interest is based upon the idea that it is a profit, or premium, properly payable, for the use which one man has of the money of another ; or else it is a penalty inflicted for its improper detention. Now, if he cannot pay it, nor employ it, not knowing when he may be called upon by the judgment of the court for its forthcoming, it would be oppressive in the extreme to exact interest. Mr. Jefferson, as Secretary of State, put the resistance to the payment of interest, during the war of thé Revolution, on our colonial debt, mainly upon the ground that the country, for want of tillage and trade, occasioned by the misconduct of the mother-country, our creditor, had produced nothing, and^consequently ought not to pay anything.

But how stands the equity of the present case ? Has there been no unjustifiable delay — no delinquency in the Insurance and Trust Company ? Has it occupied the attitude of an innocent stakeholder of the fund in controversy, ready and waiting to discharge the amount due, whenever it should be directed to do so in behalf of the attaching creditors ? And is it fairly to be inferred from the testimony, that the $10,000 lay idle in its vaults from February, 1845, when the first garnishments were served, up to January, 1846, when there was a confession of judgment for the whole amount of the policies ? The fire occurred the last of January, 1845, and the usual notice, it appears, was given immediately thereafter. It is true, they were not compelled by their charter to pay under ninety days from the time of furnishing proof of the loss, and interest did not run against them until the expiration of that period ; still there was nothing to prevent therp from meeting at once their liability.

The history of this transaction, as presented by the record, is this. For certain reasons which appeared satisfactory to the company, no doubt, they early determined to dispute their responsibility. Oliver commences suit on the several policies, to June term of Richmond Superior Court, ensuing the fire. The attachments issuing mostly in the month of April preceding, were returnable to the Inferior, Superior, and Court of Common Pleas. None of the garnishments were ever answered by the company. Had the company insisted on the special plea, filed in bar of the plaintiff’s action, to wit, the pendency of the attachments, and been sustained, it would have been forced to depose, either admitting or denying its liability. In the latter event, the affidavits would have been tra[41]*41versed and. a trial had thereon. ,In these issues, had the company been convicted of the payment of the §10,000, (and it is presumable that such would have been the finding, from the fact that it was finally admitted to be owing,) interest and cost both would have been recovered. Another and more convenient course seems, however, to have been adopted ; that is, to suffer the garnishments to abide the result of the proceeding instituted by Oliver himself against the company. That case under the 8th section of the charter stood for trial at the first term, June, 1845.— Prin. Dig., 410. At that time nothing was done ; nearly six months had transpired, and still the company delayed payment on the policies. At the end of another six months it comes forward, and without contest acknowledges its indebtedness for the $10,000, with interest thereon from the 31st of March previously, and cost: — provided the court, under the circumstances, should hold it liable for interest and cost. Well, what are these circumstances, demands the court below, under which you claim exemption from interest on a contract on which it legally attaches? — 2 Hall Rep., 589; 23 Wend. Rep., 525 ; Prin. Dig., 410. Why, that we were garnished, and could not have paid the principal if we would. Rut, replies the judge, that looks very much like an afterthought ; you have been strenuously resisting the recovery upon the ground that it was unjust. If you have been honest and in earnest in this matter, there never was a time when you would have paid, if you could. You could have discharged the demand or most of it, before the bulk of these garnishments were served : you could have answered these summonses almost a year ago, and tendered, or offered to tender the money in court. — 3 J. J. Marshall Rep., 68. You could have confessed judgment to the plaintiff' six months before you did. To the reverse of ail this, you have steadily and perseveringly denied owing him anything, down to the present momentinterest has been accumulating against him all this while in favor of the attaching creditors. It would be cruel to Oliver to exonerate you from the payment of interest to him, particularly as you have not shown that you have been prejudiced by the garnishments — that you had the money ready, and that it had been rendered unproductive by reason of the'garnishments. And as to the cost, resting, like the interest, in the sound discretion of the court, to be awarded upon full view of all the merits of the case, it would seem to be a necessary appendage to the confession of judgment. If the company was wrong in resisting the recovery, and that is admitted by the confession, the liability for cost would follow, of course. — 2 Hen. and Munf. 589 ; 2 Johns. Chan. Rep., 166; 1 Johns. Rep. 555. And this direction as to cost conforms to the usual practice in similar cases. — 1 Cox. (S. C.) Cases, 357 ; 3 Brown’s Chancery Reports, 297; Dickens, 291 ; 6 Ves., 418; 9 Ves., 107. Such was the opinion, in substance, given in the premises, by the circuit judge, in the exercise of the discretion which the law confides to him. It would require a flagrant abuse of that discretion to warrant the interference of this court. On the contrary, we believe that it has been used wisely and well.

the case of the Delaware Insurance Company vs. Delaunie, (3 Bin. Rep. 265,) Tilghman, C. J., says,“ Interest in all actions like the present is not a matter of course, but depends on the conduct of the parties. If the defendant has delayed payment improperly lie is chargeable with in [42]*42terest.” The ultimate and voluntary confession of the company is a virtual and most substantial admission that the payment of these policies was

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