Paradise Homes, Inc. v. Central Surety and Ins. Corp.

437 P.2d 78, 84 Nev. 109, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 317
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1968
Docket5343
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 437 P.2d 78 (Paradise Homes, Inc. v. Central Surety and Ins. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paradise Homes, Inc. v. Central Surety and Ins. Corp., 437 P.2d 78, 84 Nev. 109, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 317 (Neb. 1968).

Opinion

*111 OPINION

By the Court,

Collins, J.:

This is a contract action. The only issue with which we are concerned on appeal involves the question of interest. The trial court limited the recovery of interest to the time of judgment. We conclude that to be error, reverse the order and remand with direction.

Paradise Homes entered into a subcontract with Jamieson Drywall and Paint Company, a partnership, wherein Jamieson agreed to perform labor and supply material to Paradise valued at $133,800. Central Surety provided a performance bond for Jamieson.

Jamieson experienced difficulty in performing its contract with Paradise. Another contract was entered into between Paradise, Central Surety and Jamieson, which allowed Paradise to complete Jamieson’s work if it defaulted, in which event Central Surety would pay Paradise “all costs incurred in the completion thereof, including a reasonable cost for overhead, together with all labor paid for and materials purchased * * Jamieson defaulted on its contract.

Paradise completed Jamieson’s subcontract work and sued Central Surety under the latter contract and upon the performance bond. After extensive hearings before a master, during which many of the items claimed by Paradise were contested, the court ordered judgment for Paradise 1 in the amount of $60,039.47 with costs. The court also found Central Surety was entitled to an offset in the amount of $3,109.50 for extra work done by Jamieson under the subcontract.

The trial judge directed that interest commence to run from the date of the judgment at the statutory rate of 7 percent per *112 annum. Appellant urges that interest should have been allowed from the time of the filing of the suit.

Allowance of interest incident to civil litigation is a vexatious question not only in Nevada, but everywhere. There seems to be little uniformity on the matter in either the statutes, the cases, or the law of the several jurisdictions in this country.

Nevada has dealt with this question both by statute and decisions of this court. The first legislative enactment was in 1861, 2 which provided:

“When there is no express contract, in writing, fixing a different rate of interest, interest shall be allowed at the rate of ten per cent, [sic] per annum, for all moneys after they become due on any bond, bill, or promissory note, or other instrument of writing, on any judgment recovered before any court in this territory, for money lent, for money due on the settlement of accounts, from the day on which the balance is ascertained, and for money received to the use of another.”

The 1861 statute was amended in 1887 3 reducing the rate of interest from ten to seven percent.

In 1917 the statute was further amended 4 to its present form. It read: “* * * When there is no express contract in writing fixing a different rate of interest, interest shall be allowed at the rate of seven per cent per annum upon all money from the time it becomes due, in the following cases:

“(a) Upon contracts, express or implied, other than book accounts.” See also 1919 RL § 2499; NCL § 4322; NRS 99.040.

This court has construed these statutes in many cases, allowing pre-judgment interest on occasions but generally allowing interest only from the date of judgment.

The initial construction of Nevada’s interest statute was in Flannery v. Anderson, 4 Nev. 437 (1868), a suit upon an open account wherein after concluding the trial court improperly allowed interest prior to judgment, the court observed: “* * * [T]his statute does not allow interest on money due on an open account; and it is a legal presumption that it was not the intention of the Legislature to allow it in any cases save those mentioned in the Act. The account here sued on was open and unsettled — hence under this statute no interest is recoverable on it. We know of no good reason why it should not be allowed on all money due on account from the time it *113 becomes payable, except that the Legislature has provided otherwise.” Id. at 443.

In Skinker v. Clute, 9 Nev. 342 (1874), this court concluded interest prior to judgment was a proper allowance in a suit upon an open account where plaintiff’s demand was admitted and the issue at the trial was the correctness of defendant’s counterclaim. This court held: “The complainant prays for interest upon $314.30, from June 6, 1873. It would seem that this interest was not allowed, since the verdict is for $312.93. In the case of Flannery v. Anderson, 4 Nev. 437, it was decided under Sec. 32 (Comp. Laws) that in the absence of an express contract thereto in writing, interest was not recoverable upon money due upon an open account. The same statute declares that interest shall be allowed upon money due on the settlement of accounts from the day on which the balance is ascertained.

“In our view of this case the account was liquidated and the balance ascertained by the admissions of the answer, and interest upon the balance was, therefore, allowable.” Id. at 345.

In Vietti v. Nesbitt, 22 Nev. 390, 41 P. 151 (1895), this court construed the 1887 statute, concluded the trial court had erroneously allowed interest prior to judgment and said: “Although interest is frequently allowed in actions involving torts to property, it is simply by way of damages, and in actions where the amount of damages is more or less in the discretion of the court or jury. In such cases, in the absence of special circumstances of fraud or oppression, the legal rate of interest from the time of the commission of the wrong is a safe and uniform measure of damages. (Glass Factory v. Reid, 5 Cow. 587, 609.) But this is not that kind of a case, and interest was not included as a part of the plaintiff’s damages, but as an incident to the amount due him under the contract, and allowed as a matter of law. As such, it does not come within the terms of our statute (Gen. Stats., sec. 4903, as amended, Stats. 1887, p. 82) and consequently was improper.” Id. at 399.

In Hobart Estate Co. v. Jones, 51 Nev. 315, 274 P. 921 (1929), the lower court’s allowance of interest prior to judgment was upheld by this court when it said: “The first contention we will consider is that the court erred in giving judgment for interest on the amount due for supplies furnished. * * * [I]n view of the fact that there is no evidence before us, every presumption must be indulged that there was a showing in the lower court that the claim in question was not an unliquidated *114 claim as of the date from which the court ordered that it draw interest.

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Bluebook (online)
437 P.2d 78, 84 Nev. 109, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paradise-homes-inc-v-central-surety-and-ins-corp-nev-1968.