Woodbury v. District of Columbia

19 D.C. 157
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 9, 1890
DocketNos. 23,172 and 25,023
StatusPublished

This text of 19 D.C. 157 (Woodbury v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodbury v. District of Columbia, 19 D.C. 157 (D.C. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hagner

delivered the opinion of the Court :

. In each of these cases a judgment upon verdict was entered in the special term in favor of the plaintiff, and sustained by the General Term. On writ of error these rulings were affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States, and' on the 19th of May, 1890, a mandate in each case was transmitted to this court reciting that the judgment had been affirmed with costs, and in the usual phraseology, [158]*158•commanding that, “ such execution and proceedings be had in said cause as, according to right and justice and the laws of the United States, ought to be had, the said writ of •error notwithstanding.”

After the mandates had been filed, the plaintiff in each case, by his counsel, made application to this court in General Term, representing that he had applied to the clerk to •enter the affirmance of the judgment with interest thereon and costs; but that the clerk, in consequence of the objection made by the defendants in said judgment, had declined to enter the judgment with interest, without the order of the court, and requesting that an order should be given to that effect. The motion was opposed by the counsel ‘of the defendants, who insisted the judgments should be entered without interest; first, because the mandates were silent on the subject of interest; and, second, because interest should never be allowed upon judgments rendered in actions founded on torts like those in the cases before us ; McDade’s recovery having been for damages sustained by him while working in the shops of the Washington and Georgetown Railroad Company, in consequence of its alleged failure to provide safe machinery; and Woodbury having recovered judgment against the District of Columbia for injuries received from falling into an unprotected hole in one of the sidewalks of Washington City.

This court has heretofore expressed its opinion upon' the general subject.of interest upon judgments as it was presented to us on several occasions. It is proper to state the points presented and the rulings made in four reported cases in which the question was considered in different phases.

In District of Columbia vs. The Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company, 1 Mackey, 327, the plaintiff sued to recover the amount it had been compelled to pay to one Barnes on a judgment recovered by him against the municipality for injuries sustained by falling into an unprotected [159]*159tunnel in process of construction by the railroad company. After affirmance by the Supreme Court, the District settled the judgment. In turn the District sued the company for re-imbursement of the amount so paid, and recovered a verdict for that sum, which was composed of the principal of the Barnes judgment, with costs and interest upon that judgment. On appeal the General Term held this interest was properly recoverable by the District; which must have been on the assumption that interest was properly chargeable upon the judgment in tort recovered by Barnes against the District.

In October, 1882, the Supreme Court sent down its mandate in the case of The Fifth Baptist Church vs. The Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company (an action in tort) affirming the rulings of the General Term. The mandate declared it was “adjudged and ordered by the Supreme Court that the judgment of the General Term should be affirmed, with costs and interest until paid, at thé same rate per annum that similar judgments bear in the courts of the District of Columbia.” The defendant tendered payment of the judgment and costs without interest, which was refused by the plaintiff; and, thereupon, the railroad company prayed the General Term to order the judgment to be entered satisfied upon payment of the principal of the judgment and costs, without interest. The court in 2 Mackey, 458, held the words in the mandate requiring interest to be paid on the judgment “ at the same rate per annum that similar judgments bear in the courts of the District of Columbia,” were not to be understood as indicating a difference in the rule as to giving interest on judgments in tort and - judgments on contract, but merely as declaring that the interest in that case was to be at no higher or lower rate than was by law given on judgments in this District. The justice who “delivered the opinion of the court proceeded to express his individual opinion that a judgment in tort in this District bears interest from its rendition to its satisfaction.

[160]*160In 3 Mackey, 501, Railroad vs. Hetzel, an action sounding in tort, the General Term had entered judgment upon a mandate affirming the ruling of this court, with interest from the date of the original judgment. The mandate was silent in that case as to interest. After the entry of the-judgment here the railroad company made a motion to strike out the entry of interest upon the same grounds relied on in the present application; and also filed a bill in equity substantially presenting the same objections. The-General Term overruled the application, Chief Justice Cartter delivering the opinion, which concluded as follows:

“We do not have to decide in this hearing whether a judgment in tort carries interest in this District. Ordinarily, a judgment in tort does not carry interest; still there are indications in our statutes that it does. We had that subject under consideration in Baptist Church vs. B. & P. RR. Co., 2 Mackey, 458, and though it was not necessary to decide it, and we'made no decision, we were all of the opinion that such ought to be the law. It certainly is justice in the present case that interest should follow. The question came up when we entered the judgment on the mandate. There was nothing irregular about the entry of judgment, and it is now too late to reverse or alter it.”

In Hellen vs. Metropolitan Railroad Company, 4 Mackey, 519, which was an action in tort for injury to the plaintiff from having been run over by one of the defendant’s cars, judgment was rendered in the Circuit Court for $1,500, with interest from the date of its rendition. The defendant objected to the allowance upon the ground that judgments in tort do not bear interest in this District, and the question was certified to the court in General Term to be heard in the first instance. The foregoing cases and the provisions of the Revised Statutes were cited, and after-argument by both sides the opinion of the court was announced in these words: “We do not doubt that judgments founded in tort, like those based on actions ex con[161]*161tradu, bear interest in this jurisdiction from the date of rendition. The objection is therefore overruled.” In these cases six of the justices of the court have participated, viz., Chief Justice Cartter, and Justices Wylie, Cox, James, Merrick, and myself. The result of these decisions appeared to have settled the practice of this.court in favor of the contention of the plaintiff; but we have proceeded, nevertheless, to re-examiné the question, and will give the reasons why we think those decisions were correct, and should be sustained.

In 1879, Congress undertook to legislate upon a subject at that time much agitated,namely, whether persons should be allowed by law to contract for a higher rate of interest than that then in existence in the District; and the Act of April 29 of that year, Chap. 59, was passed as a comprehensive statute disposing definitely of the entire subject. Some of its provisions were new, and the others expressed the existing law.

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19 D.C. 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodbury-v-district-of-columbia-dc-1890.