Winsted Savings Bank v. Town of New Hartford

62 A. 81, 78 Conn. 319, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 86
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 7, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 62 A. 81 (Winsted Savings Bank v. Town of New Hartford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winsted Savings Bank v. Town of New Hartford, 62 A. 81, 78 Conn. 319, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 86 (Colo. 1905).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

The plaintiff complains that the amount of its judgment is too small, in that interest upon the principal sum was computed at four per cent, and no more, for the whole period of time from November 15th, 1898, the date to which interest had been paid, down to the date of judgment. It contends that interest at the rate of six per cent, should have been allowed as damages from either said November 15th or the date of the service of the writ.

As no time of payment is stated in the orders they were in legal effect payable on demand. Bacon v. Page, 1 Conn. 404; Raymond v. Sellick, 10 id. 480. As demand obligations they were, as between the parties, due and payable *323 immediately. Curtis v. Smith, 75 Conn. 429. The date fixed in the instrument for payment may not, however, he that when payment is in fact intended. Hubbard v. Callahan, 42 Conn. 524. The intent governs and creates the real contract. Seymour v. Continental Life Ins. Co., 44 Conn. 300. In this case the intent of the parties—that the loans evidenced by these orders should be carried by the plaintiff as 'continuing ones, and that the collateral agreement which was made as to the interest should continue to fix the interest rate until such time as one of the parties should exercise its right to terminate that contractual situation by demand or suit, on the one hand, or payment on the other— is apparent. The contract must therefore be regarded as one to that effect. To hold otherwise and permit the plaintiff to'receive a higher rate of interest, whether in the form of damages or of interest proper, for any period prior to the time when it took appropriate steps to put an end to the relation it had by express agreement created, would be to violate the plain intent of the parties. There is no rule of law which compels such violation. Seymour v. Continental Life Ins. Co., 44 Conn. 300; Hubbard v. Callahan, 42 id. 524. The first act to which the finding fixes a date by which the plaintiff, through appropriate action, sought to declare its termination of the long existing status, was the commencement of the present suit. The court therefore did not err in computing interest at the agreed rate of four per cent, for the time preceding the date of the service therein. Jencks v. Phelps, 4 Conn. 149.

With respect to the time subsequent to the beginning of the action, different considerations in part control. The recovery for this period is in the nature of damages for the breach of contract. Selleck v. French, 1 Conn. 32, 33. Parties may, in the absence of a statute to the contrary, agree as to the basis upon which the assessment shall be made. Hubbard v. Callahan, 42 Conn. 524. As to what the rule should be in the absence of such an agreement or controlling statutes, the decisions in different jurisdictions differ. Unfortunately those in our own do not leave some *324 aspects of the subject free from doubt. It seems to have been well settled that where the agreed rate of interest was higher than the legal rate, the agreed rate would be used as the measure of damage after breach. Beckwith v. Hartford, P. & F. Railroad, 29 Conn. 268; Adams v. Way, 33 id. 419; Hubbard v. Callahan, 42 id. 524. With respect to a reverse situation the cases are by no means explicit or satisfactory. Some quite plainly indicate the conclusion that the legal rate would be used. Fisher v. Bidwell, 27 Conn. 363; First Ecel. Soc. v. Loomis, 42 id. 570. Others, reference being had especially to the first two cited,—to the proposition that the conventional rate would be adopted where it is higher than the legal—are susceptible of a contrary inference. They may, however, be readily distinguished by limiting their doctrine, as Judge Loomis in Hubbard v. Callahan, supra, stated it, as intended to be applied to cases of the kind then under consideration. The reason for the position assumed in these cases is forcibly suggested in the first of them, where it is urged that the borrowers could not have been expected to derive a benefit in the rate of compensation from their breach of contract. The court was not disposed to lay down a doctrine which would result in a reward to wrong-doers for their wrong-doing. Beckwith v. Hartford, P. F. Railroad, 29 Conn. 268, 271. A reversal of the conditions puts a changed aspect upon the situation. Justice and equity no longer call for a continuance of the agreed rate after breach. On the contrary they call for some rule which will not permit one, after the dishonor of his contract, to compel its unwilling continuance until judgment can be obtained at a rate lower than what the law regards as the ordinarily fair one, and as low as the obligee was satisfied with before the dishonor. The aim of the law is to award as damages what will be fair compensation. The legal rate of interest is under ordinary circumstances chosen as the measure of this compensation for the wrongful detention of money, as furnishing a convenient and presumably fair and equitable rule. Beckwith v. Hartford, P. F. Railroad, 29 Conn. 268 ; Fisher v. Bidwell, 27 id. 363. A *325 lesser rate, which one might be willing to accept under favorable conditions, could scarcely be presumed to be a just one to force upon him ad invitum and under changed conditions which he could not be assumed to have contemplated when his agreement was made. We are of the opinion that reason and justice alike support the view, that one who is unlawfully deprived of money which is his due, should, statutory provisions to the contrary aside, be entitled to recover, as damages for the unlawful detention, interest at not less than the legal rate, unless he has otherwise agreed.

Section 4600 of the General Statutes, following an Act first passed in 1873, provides that “ interest at the rate of six per cent, a year, and no more, may be recovered and allowed in civil actions, including actions to recover money loaned at a greater rate, as damages for the detention of money after it becomes payable.” It is unnecessary to determine the full scope and effect of this provision. It is sufficient for the purposes of this case to observe not only that nothing in it can be held to militate against the plaintiff’s right to recover at the rate of six per cent, since action brought, but also that its terms comport with such recovery even if they do not expressly sanction it.

The court therefore erred in not including, in the damages awarded the plaintiff, interest upon the principal sum at the rate of six per cent, from the date of the commencement of the action to the date of judgment.

The defendant town complains of the judgment rendered against it in favor of the defendant district, for the recovery of the amount of the interest for the five years during which the vote of consolidation was in force.

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Bluebook (online)
62 A. 81, 78 Conn. 319, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winsted-savings-bank-v-town-of-new-hartford-conn-1905.