People ex rel. Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Co. v. Miller

173 Misc. 397, 17 N.Y.S.2d 202, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2662
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 173 Misc. 397 (People ex rel. Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Co. v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Co. v. Miller, 173 Misc. 397, 17 N.Y.S.2d 202, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2662 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

Lockwood, J.

These certiorari proceedings to review and correct assessments made for the purpose of taxation, years 1933 to 1939 (first half), inclusive, were tried before an official referee on April 10, 11 and 14, 1939.

Thereafter, the report of the referee was confirmed and on his findings orders were made on July 6, 1939, reducing each of the assessments and providing that the defendants refund to the relator any excess of taxes paid plus interest thereon at the rate of six per centum per annum from the date of payment.

The defendants, the tax board, now move in each proceeding to resettle the orders so as to provide that interest be payable at the rate of four per cent instead of six per cent per annum on the amount of the refunds from the date of payment to the date of the repayment by the city.

The motions are based upon section 3-a of the General Municipal Law, as added by chapter 594 of the Laws of 1939, effective July 1, 1939, providing that the rate of interest to be paid by a municipal corporation upon any judgment or accrued claim against the municipal corporation shall not exceed four per centum per annum,” and upon the decision in People ex rel. Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank v. Miller (173 Misc. 538), holding that only four per cent interest is payable on the amount of tax refunds fixed by decision of June 27, 1939, but where the final order was entered after July 1, 1939.

The relator contends that interest must be paid at the rate of six per cent up to July 1, 1939, and at the rate of four per cent thereafter.

It is not disputed that in the absence of the statute above mentioned relator would be entitled to six per cent interest on the amount of the refunds from the date of payment.

The question is whether the statute is effective to deprive relator of the two per cent interest on the amount of the refunds up to July 1, 1939, the effective date of the statute.

By chapter 538 of the Laws of 1879 the Legislature reduced the lawful rate of interest from seven per cent to six per cent, effective January 1,1880. The act contained a proviso that “ nothing herein [399]*399contained shall be so construed as to .in any way affect any contract or obligation made before the passage of the act.”

Thereafter, in Salter v. Utica & Black River R. R. Co. (86 N. Y. 401), an action to recover damages for the death of plaintiff’s intestate because of the negligence of defendant, it was held that the rate of interest on the recovery was governed by the statute in force when the damages were ascertained by verdict. The statute under which the action was brought (Laws of 1870, chap. 78) provided that the damages recovered “ shall draw interest from the time of the death of such deceased person, which interest shall be added to the verdict and inserted in the entry of judgment in such action.”

The court noted the distinction between that action, a tort created by the statute, and an action brought upon a liability based upon a contract express or implied, and stated that the language of the proviso excepting an obligation made before the passage of the act, was inappropriate to designate a liability for tort created by law, and not the agreement of parties express or implied (p. 403).

In Sanders v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern R. Co. (94 N. Y. 641), an action brought to compel the declaration and payment of corporate dividends, it was held that the interest on the recovery was allowed, not by virtue of any contract to pay interest, but simply as damages because the defendant was in default in the discharge of its obligation and wrongfully withheld money due to the plaintiff. The dividends were payable prior to January 1, 1880, upon which date the legal rate of interest was changed. Interest was allowed at the rate of seven per cent from the time payment was due up to January 1,1880, and at six per cent thereafter.

Reese v. Rutherfurd (90 N. Y. 644) was an action by stockbrokers to recover the amount of the deficit in defendant’s account, for the period October 3, 1870, to December 1, 1871. The court allowed interest on the sum recovered at the rate of seven per cent up to January 1, 1880, and at the rate of six per cent thereafter, stating: By the law as it existed prior to 1880, the rate of interest to be allowed as damages in such a case was seven per cent, and on the first day of January the plaintiffs had a vested right to so much of the interest as had accrued prior to that date, and of that vested right the law reducing the rate of interest did not attempt to deprive them, and it could not have deprived them of it even if the Legislature had attempted so to do.”

O’Brien v. Young (95 N. Y. 428) involved the rate of interest payable on a judgment. It was held (two judges dissenting) that a judgment recovered prior to the change of the lawful interest rate bore interest at seven per cent to January 1,1880, and at six per cent [400]*400thereafter. After holding that a judgment was not a contract, the court said, by Eabl, J. (at p. 432):

“ Suppose a statute gives a penalty to an aggrieved party, with interest, what interest could he recover? The interest allowed by law when the penalty accrued, if the statutory rate has since been altered? Clearly not. He would be entitled to the interest prescribed by law during the time of the defendant’s default in payment. There would, in such a case, be no contract to pay interest, and the statutory rate of interest at the time the penalty accrued would become part of no contract. If, therefore, a subsequent law should change the rate of interest, no vested right would be interfered with, and no contract obligation would be impaired.

The same principles apply to all implied contracts. When one makes a valid agreement to pay interest at any stipulated rate for any time, he is bound to pay it, and no legislative enactment can , release him from his obligation. But in all cases where the obligation to pay interest is one merely implied by the law or is imposed by law, and there is no contract to pay except the fictitious one which the law implies, then the rate of interest must at all times be the statutory rate.

The rate existing at the time the obligation accrued did not become part of any contract, and hence the law which created the obligation could change or alter it for the future without taking away a vested right or impairing a contract.

“ In the case of all matured contracts which contain no provision for interest after they are past due, as I have before said, interest is allowed, not by virtue of the contract, but as damages for the breach thereof. In such cases what would be the effect of a statute declaring that no interest should be recovered? As to the interest which had accrued as damages before the date of the law, the law could have no effect because that had become a vested right of property which could not be taken away. But the law could have effect as to the subsequent interest, and in stopping that from running would impair no contract. A law could be passed providing that in all cases of unliquidated claims which now draw no interest, interest should thereafter be allowed as damages; and thus there is ample legislative power in such cases to regulate the future rate of interest without invading any constitutional right.

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Bluebook (online)
173 Misc. 397, 17 N.Y.S.2d 202, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-atlantic-gulf-pacific-co-v-miller-nysupct-1939.