Court Opinion

ID: 5457161
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 19:25:10.570769+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:42.539805
License: Public Domain

By the Court, Parker, J.
The rule is well settled that interest is not recoverable on running or unliquidated accounts, unless there is an agreement, either express or implied, to pay interest. (Newall v. Griswold, 6 John. Ch. Rep. 45. Trotter v. Grant, 2 Wend. 413. Wood v. Hickock, 2 Id. 501.) If it appears that it was the uniform practice of the merchant to charge interest after a certain túne, and that such practice was known to the debtor, an agreement to pay interest in accordance with it is implied. (Reab v. McAlister, 8 Wend. 109.) In the report of that case in the supreme court, (4 Wend. 483,) the reporter has stated the decision in the syllabus as follows: “A merchant or manufacturer whose uniform custom it is to charge interest, after ninety days, upon articles sold or manufactured by him, is allowed to charge interest accordingly to those who are in the habit of dealing with him, they being presumed to know such custom, and to act in reference thereto.”
The language of Justice Marcy does not warrant the statement of such a rule; nor can it, thus broadly stated, be main*237tained, by authority, or on principle. The dealers are not presumed to know the existence of such a custom. Whether the custom is known to the dealer, is a question of fact, depending either on positive evidence, or on circumstances from which knowledge may be inferred. The existence of such a custom, therefore, and the dealer’s knowledge of it, are facts to be decided by the jury, or, as in this case, by the referees.
In the case now before us, witnesses were examined on both sides on each of these points. On the part of the plaintiffs, there was evidence to show it was their uniform custom to charge interest on such accounts, after six months. Tan Orden, one of the witnesses called by the defendant to disprove such a custom, stated that his account never stood six months without settlement. Stewart testified that the balance which stood against him over six months, and on which the plaintiffs did not charge interest, was only four or five dollars. Gregory testified that he had kept about even with the plaintiffs, and there was not much difference in the accounts. Fowler said, that though when he was dealing with the plaintiffs, he was ignorant that they had a custom of charging interest, yet when he came to settle his account, he found it included—“ a heavy bill for interest.” The referees probably considered the omission to charge interest on the balance of four or five dollars an exception to their general custom, made on account of the smallness of the sum, and regarded the evidence of Fowler as tending to sustain the alleged custom of the plaintiffs, by showing that they charged him interest.
It was conceded that eight more witnesses would have testified to the same effect as Gregory and Fowler; but such testimony would have added little if any thing to the strength of the defence, and the referees must have come to the conclusion ¡ that the custom of the plaintiffs to charge interest was satisfac-j torily proved.
There were also circumstances proved tending to show that the defendant knew of the existence of this custom. He had settled with Ostrander, who kept the store next before the *238plaintiffs, and to whose business the plaintiffs succeeded, and had paid him interest after six months, on a similar account.
There was also evidence to shew that it was the general custom of the merchants in that neighborhood to charge interest after six months; and we think this testimony competent, as tending to establish the defendant’s knowledge of this custom. The plaintiffs were the tenants of the defendant in the occupation of the store, and the defendant was a member of the legal profession residing in the vicinity. The referees were much more competent than we are to judge from all these circumstances whether the custom, as alleged to exist, was known to the defendant.
The referees have found against the defendant on both these questions of fact, and such finding is as conclusive upon this court as the verdict of a jury. (Eaton v. Benton, 2 Hill, 576.) The evidence was conflicting; and there is no such decided preponderance of proof in favor of the defendant as will justify the setting aside of the report. (Keeler v. Fireman's Insurance Company, 3 Hill, 250. Douglass v. Tousey, 2 Wend. 352.)
The motion to set aside the report of the referees must therefore be denied.