A revivor to escape the statute of limitations adds no new
efficacy to judgment in respect of the power of the legislature to
stop the further running of interest. P.
249 U. S.
172.
A judgment of the United States Circuit Court, based on
noninterest-bearing county warrants, provided for interest at a
specified rate on the amount of the judgment until paid. A later
act of the legislature declared that thereafter judgments on such
warrants should bear no interest.
Held consistent with the
contract clause and due process.
Id., Morley v. Lake Shore
& Michigan Southern Ry. Co., 146 U.
S. 162.
Interest on judgments allowed by statute merely is not
contractual, but a penalty or liquidated damages. P.
249 U. S.
173.
Quaere: is this true of a judgment based on a contract
stipulating for interest?
Id.
Affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Article XVI, § 1, Constitution of Arkansas (1874),
declares: "Nor shall any county, city, town or other municipality
ever issue any interest-bearing evidences of indebtedness."
Page 249 U. S. 171
During 1889 (or about that time), Sebastian County, for the
benefit of Greenwood District, issued certain noninterest-bearing
warrants payable "out of any money in the treasury appropriated for
ordinary purposes" of which plaintiff in error became lawful holder
and owner. It sued upon them in the United States Circuit Court,
Western District of Arkansas, and obtained a judgment, January 26,
1891, for $13,703.29, "with interest at the rate of six percent per
annum from this date until paid together with all its costs in and
about this case laid out and expended." So far as not satisfied,
this was revived in 1900 and again in 1910, and at different dates
from 1896 to 1914 the county made payments thereon aggregating its
face value together with six percent interest reckoned to March 21,
1893, and all costs.
An act of the Arkansas Legislature approved March 21, 1893, Acts
Ark. 1893, p. 145, provides:
"No judgment rendered or to be rendered against any county in
the state on county warrants or other evidences of county
indebtedness shall bear any interest after the passage of this
act,"
and, relying upon this inhibition, the county claimed that the
above-mentioned payments fully discharged the judgment against it.
Thereupon, May 23, 1916, plaintiff in error petitioned the court
below for a mandamus to compel payment of alleged accrued interest.
Answering, the county denied further liability, and then asked for
an order requiring that the judgment be satisfied of record. The
trial court refused a mandamus and directed satisfaction as prayed.
Whether plaintiff in error's rights under the federal Constitution
would be violated by giving effect to the statute is the only
question presented for our consideration. The supreme court of the
state sustained its validity in
Read v. Mississippi
County, 69 Ark. 365, where the precise points here involved
were presented.
The two revivals in 1900 and 1910 kept the judgment
Page 249 U. S. 172
alive and permitted its enforcement beyond the periods fixed by
statutes of limitation. Their entry gave it no greater efficacy
than it possessed when first rendered.
Plaintiff in error maintains that the challenged act conflicts
with § 10, Art. I, of the Constitution, and also the
Fourteenth Amendment, forbidding a state from depriving any person
of property without due process of law, but we think the contrary
is settled by our opinion in
Morley v. Lake Shore &
Michigan Ry. Co., 146 U. S. 162,
146 U. S. 168,
146 U. S. 171.
There, the judgment directed that interest should accrue from its
entry without mentioning any rate, the statutory one then being
seven percentum; later another act fixed six percentum for the
future, and the debtor claimed benefit of it, while the creditor
maintained that to permit this would violate both the contract
clause and Fourteenth Amendment. Through Mr. Justice Shiras, we
said (p.
146 U. S.
168):
"After the cause of action, whether a tort or a broken contract,
not itself prescribing interest till payment, shall have been
merged into a judgment, whether interest shall accrue upon the
judgment is a matter not of contract between the parties, but of
legislative discretion, which is free, so far as the Constitution
of the United States is concerned, to provide for interest as a
penalty or liquidated damages for the nonpayment of the judgment,
or not to do so. When such provision is made by statute, the owner
of the judgment is, of course, entitled to the interest so
prescribed until payment is received, or until the state shall, in
the exercise of its discretion, declare that such interest shall be
changed or cease to accrue. Should the statutory damages for
nonpayment of a judgment be determined by a state, either in whole
or in part, the owner of a judgment will be entitled to receive and
have a vested right in the damages which shall have accrued up to
the date of the legislative change; but after that time his rights
as to interest as damages are, as when he first obtained his
judgment,
Page 249 U. S. 173
just what the legislature chooses to declare. He has no contract
whatever on the subject with the defendant in the judgment, and his
right is to receive, and the defendant's obligation is to pay, as
damages, just what the state chooses to prescribe. . . . The
discretion exercised by the legislature in prescribing what, if
any, damages shall be paid by way of compensation for delay in the
payment of judgments is based on reasons of public policy, and is
altogether outside the sphere of private contracts. . . . The
further contention of the plaintiff in error that he has been
deprived of his property without due process of law can be more
readily disposed of. If, as we have seen, the plaintiff has
actually received on account of his judgment all that he is
entitled to receive, he cannot be said to have been deprived of his
property."
See Barnitz v. Beverly, 163 U.
S. 118,
163 U. S.
129.
It is insisted that, as the judgment now under consideration
specified a definite interest rate, while the one in
Morley v.
Lake Shore Railway Co., supra, did not, the doctrine there
approved is inapplicable. To this we cannot assent; mere recital of
a particular rate does not change the nature of the charge as a
penalty or liquidated damages.
It should be noted that the county warrants upon which plaintiff
in error sued bore no interest; if the parties had lawfully
stipulated therefor, a different question would have been
presented.
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.