1. A depositor in a national bank, when it suspends payment and
a receiver is appointed, is entitled, from the date of his demand,
to interest upon his deposit.
2. The interest being a liquidated sum at the time of the
payment of the deposit, an action lies to recover it and interest
thereon.
3. The claims of depositors in a national bank at the time of
its suspension for the amount of their deposits are, when proved to
the satisfaction of the Comptroller of the Currency, placed upon
the same footing as if they were reduced to judgments.
MR. JUSTICE SWAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by the defendant in error as an original
claimant, and as the assignee of other parties.
All the claims have a common origin and involve the same
principle.
On the 22d of November, 1873, the Bank of the Commonwealth
refused to pay its circulating notes on demand and became in
default. The Comptroller of the Currency appointed a receiver, and
the bank has since been in his hands. The Mechanics' Bank and its
assignors had funds on deposit. On the 24th of September, 1873, all
the parties demanded payment. Nothing was paid. Installments on
account of the principal debts were subsequently paid from time to
time to each of the parties. On the 20th of November, 1874, the
last installment was paid in each case and the principal debts were
thereby extinguished. At each payment, interest from the 24th
of
Page 94 U. S. 438
September, 1873, on the amount so paid, was demanded and
refused. The other parties assigned to the defendant in error their
claims respectively for such interest. The Mechanics' Bank
instituted this suit. The declaration demands the payment of this
interest in all the cases, with interest upon the aggregate amount
from the 20th of November, 1874. The Bank of the Commonwealth
demurred. Judgment was given against it, and this writ of error was
thereupon prosecuted.
Two errors are assigned.
1. That the plaintiff below was not entitled to recover any
interest.
2. If interest was recoverable as demanded on each installment
when paid, the plaintiff was not entitled to interest on the gross
amount of such interest from the 20th of November, 1874, the time
when the last installments of the principal were paid.
There is but one demurrer, and that is to the whole declaration.
The point is therefore well taken by the counsel for the defendant
in error that if any part of the declaration be good and divisible
in its nature from the residue, the demurrer must be overruled. 1
Chitty's Plead. 664. But the view which we take of the case renders
it unnecessary to apply this rule.
By the common law, interest could in no case be recovered. As
early as the reign of King Alfred in the ninth century, it was held
in detestation. Churchmen and laymen alike denounced it. Glanville,
Fleta, and Bracton all speak of it in terms of abhorrence. The
first English statute upon the subject was the 37 Hen. VIII c.
9.
This statute fixed the lawful rate of interest at ten percent
per annum, and visited receiving more with forfeiture and
imprisonment. Other statutes regulating the subject were passed in
later reigns from time to time, until finally an act of Parliament
in 1854, 17 & 18 Vict. c. 90, swept all the usury laws in the
English statute books out of existence, and established "free trade
in money." The first impulse to public opinion in this direction
was given by Bentham near the close of the last century. The final
result was doubtless largely due to his labors.
The fiftieth section of the National Banking Act, 13 Stat.
Page 94 U. S. 439
113, requires the Comptroller of the Currency to apply the
moneys paid over to him by the receiver "on all such claims as may
have been proved to his satisfaction, or adjudicated in a court of
competent jurisdiction." The act is silent as to interest upon the
claims before or after proof or judgment. Can it be doubted that a
judgment, if taken, would include interest down to the time of its
rendition? Sec. 996 of the Rev.Stat., p. 182, declares that all
judgments in the courts of the United States shall bear the same
rate of interest as judgments in the courts of the states
respectively where they are rendered. Interest is allowed by the
law of New York upon judgments from the time they are perfected.
Rev.Code of N.Y. (ed. 1859), vol. iii, p. 637.
If these claims had been put in judgment, whether in a court of
the United States or in a state court of that state, the result as
to interest upon the judgment would have been the same. It was
unnecessary to reduce them to judgment, because they were proved to
the satisfaction of the comptroller. After they were so proved,
they were of the same efficacy as judgments, and occupied the same
legal ground. Hence they are within the equity, if not the letter,
of these statutes, and bear interest as judgments would have done.
Sedgw. on Constr. 311, 315. This is conclusive upon the first
assignment of error.
The rule settled by this Court as to the application of payment
is that the debtor or party paying the money may, if he chooses to
do so, direct its appropriation; if he fail, the right devolves
upon the creditor; if he fail, the law will make the application
according to its own notions of justice. Neither of the parties can
make it after a controversy upon the subject has arisen between
them, and
a fortiori not at the trial.
United
States v. Kirkpatrick, 9 Wheat. 720;
United States v.
January, 7 Cranch 572;
Field v.
Holland, 6 Cranch 8. In the present case, the
appropriation was made unequivocally by the party from whom the
money was received. How it would have been applied by the law if
neither of the parties had given any direction is a question which
we need not, therefore, consider.
The interest lawfully accruing upon each of the claims was as
much a part of it as the original debt. The creditor had the
same
Page 94 U. S. 440
right to the payment of the one as of the other. If there had
been a judgment and the full amount due upon it had not been paid,
an action of debt might have been brought upon it to recover the
balance. 1 Chitty's Plead. 111.
Such balance would have been adjudged to the plaintiff with
interest in the shape of damages for the detention of the debt. If,
in that case, the judgment debtor had chosen to pay only the
principal of the judgment, leaving the interest unsatisfied, and
the suit had been for the balance, consisting of interest only, the
same result would have followed.
We have shown that the claims, when proved to the satisfaction
of the comptroller, were upon the same footing as if they had been
in judgment. The amount in arrear was liquidated, and as certain as
if it consisted wholly of principal instead of interest. This
action was therefore well brought. If it had been in debt, damages
would have been awarded for the detention of the debt sued for. The
action not being in debt, the same amount was properly included in
the mass of the damages for which the judgment was rendered.
The compounding of interest, so far as it has occurred, was due
entirely to the fault of the agent of the plaintiff in error. The
principle of estoppel
in pais applies. No exception can be
taken upon that ground.
The plaintiff in this action was entitled,
ex aequo et
bono, to the money sought to be recovered. Where the right to
recover exists in this class of cases, it includes interest as well
as principal unless there is something which would render the
payment of the former inequitable.
Kent, C.J., said upon this subject: "Each case will depend upon
the justice and equity arising out of its peculiar circumstances,
to be disclosed at the trial."
Pearce v. Barbour, 3 Caines
265.
See also Robinson v. Bland, 2 Burr. 1087.
In the latter case, Lord Mansfield said:
"The interest is an accessory to the principal, and the
plaintiff cannot bring a new action for any interest grown due
between the commencement of his action and the judgment in it. . .
. I don't know of any court in any country (and I have looked into
the matter) which don't carry interest down to the last act by
which the sum is liquidated. "
Page 94 U. S. 441
The Treasury authority fell into an error. There should have
been no discrimination between principal and interest in making the
payments. The creditor had the same right with respect to both as
if he had been pursuing the defaulting debtor under other
circumstances. The Comptroller should have done just what the law
would have done if the case had not come under his cognizance.
Numerous cases both English and American are to be found in
which compound interest, under special circumstances, was
recovered. It is sufficient to refer to a few of them.
Ex parte
Beavans, 9 Ves.Jr. 223;
Coliot v. Walker, 2 Anstr.
495;
Hamilton v. Le Grange, 2 H.Black. 145;
Kellog v.
Hickock, 1 Wend. (N.Y.) 521;
Tyler v. Yates, 3 Barb.
(N.Y.) 222;
Aurora City v.
West, 7 Wall. 82;
Town of Genoa v.
Woodruff, 92 U. S. 502.
The demand for the interest was properly made upon the plaintiff
in error.
Judgment affirmed.