Court Opinion

ID: 6641055
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:45:16.376175+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:59:14.557810
License: Public Domain

ME. COMMISSIONEE POOEMAN
prepared the opinion for the court.
In this action judgment was entered for the plaintiff and against the defendants on the 3d day of December, 1898. On the 24th day of March, 1902, the defendant Coram paid to the plaintiff on account of said judgment the full amount of the principal sum thereof, with interest thereon at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum until the 28th day of February, 1899, and at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from that date until the date of payment.- The plaintiff acknowledged partial satisfaction of the judgment, and the appellant proceeded by motion as provided by Section 1201, Code of Civil Procedure, for an *291order requiring tbe plaintiff to satisfy tbe judgment in full. It was stipulated that, if tbe plaintiff was only entitled to collect ii’terest on said judgment at tbe rate of 8 per cent, per annum from tbe 28tb day of February, 1899, said judgment was paid in full; otherwise there was a balance due. This motion was overruled. Tbe appeal is from tbe order of the court overruling tbe motion.
Tbe error assigned in this case is that tbe court erred in deciding that tbe judgment bad not been paid in full and in overruling defendant’s motion. It appears from tbe statement and tbe stipulation that tbe full amount of tbe judgment, with interest thereon at tbe rate of 10 per cent., until tbe 28th of February, 1899, and at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum thereafter has been paid. • Tbe question presented is whether tbe Act of tbe legislature approved February 28, 1899, reducing tbe rate of interest from 10 per cent, per annum to 8 per cent, per annum, relates to and affects tbe interest due on this judgment. Section 2588, Civil Code, in force at tbe time this judgment was rendered, provided that “interest is payable on judgments recovered in tbe courts of this state at tbe rate of ten per cent, per annum, and no greater rate, but such interest must not be compounded in any manner or form.” This section of tbe statute was amended by an Act approved February 28, 1899 (Laws of 1899, p. 125), so as to read as follows: “Interest is payable on judgments recovered in tbe courts of this state at tbe rate of eight per cent, per annum, and no greater rate, but such interest must not be compounded in any manner or form.” This amendatory Act further provides: “Sec. 2. All Acts and parts of Acts in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.” “Sec. 3. This Act shall take effect and be in full force from and after its approval.”
A judgment in a civil case is a judicial determination of rights existing between parties, or by one party and against tbe other. It does not create any new rights. It only defines and determines what rights already exist. Tbe right to have a judgment enforced is not inherent in tbe judgment itself. This *292right and authority coma fromi other provisions of law. The judgement is itself a creation of law. It bears no interest unless granted by legislative enactment. It is in the nature of a contract, but is not a contract within the meaning of Section 10, Article I, of the Constitution of the United States, and Section 11, Article HI, of the Constitution of the State of Montana. It lacks the element of consent necessary to a contract. It is in inviiwm as to the losing party. The contract between the parties is voluntarily surrendered and canceled by merger in the judgment, and ceases to exist. It is no longer looked to for any purpose except as evidence supporting the judgment. There is no longer any contract for the payment of either principal or interest. A party is not entitled to interest merely because he has a judgment, but solely because the legislature, in its discretion, has said he may charge interest. It is an arbitrary right. Parties appealing to the law can take only what the law awards them. It may be true that parties entering into contracts or appealing to the courts, have in mind the fact that any judgment obtained will draw interest at the rate then fixed by the legislature. It is likewise true that they have notice of the inherent power of the legislature to change this rate, or to annul it altogether, and such enactments are not retroactive or retrospective so long as they do. not interfere with the collection of interest already accrued. Laws changing the rate of interest apply to accounts with respect to which no agreement exists as to interest. Then why do they not apply to judgments when a judgment is not a contract, and the interest thereon is not the result of agreement between the parties ? The rate of interest is fixed by the legislature without reference to the contract on which the action is founded, and without regard to the will or assent of the parties to the action. The judgment creditor is entitled to the interest prescribed by law during the judgment debtor’s default in payment. “Where the transaction is not based upon any assent of parties, it cannot be said that any faith is pledged with respect to it, and no cause arises for the operation of the constitutional prohibition.” This law now *293•under consideration is a general law. A citizen can have no vested right in a general law which can preclude its amendment or repeal, and there is no implied promise on the part of. the state to protect its citizens against incidental injury occasioned by changes in the law. (Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations (6th Ed.), 343.)
In the case of Morley v. Lake Shore Railway Co., 146 U. S. on page 169, 13 Sup. Ct. 57, 36 L. Ed. 925, the Supreme Court of the United States* following the decision in O’Brien v. Young el at., 95 N. Y. 428, 47 Am. Rep. 64, in considering the same question here under discussion, uses this language: “It is contended * * * that the judgment is itself a contract, and includes within the scope of its obligation the duty to pay interest thereon. As we have seen, it is doubtless the duty of the defendant to pay the interest that shall accrue on the judgment if such interest be prescribed by statute ; but such duty is created by the statute, and not by the agreement of the parties* and the judgment ismot itself a contract within the meaning of the constitutional provision invoked by the plaintiff in error. The most important elements of a contract are wanting. There is no aggregatio mentium. The defendant has not voluntarily assented or promised to pay. ‘A judgment is in no sense a contract or agreement between the parties.’ ” The court then holds that a legislative enactment reducing interest on- all judgments applied to a judgment then existing.
The Supreme Court of Wyoming, in the case of Wyoming National Bank v. Brown, 7 Wyoming, on page 502 (53 Pac. on page 292, 61 Pac. 465, 75 Am. St. Rep. on page 939), says: “An act reducing the rate of interest which judgments shall bear, passed after the rendition of the judgment, is a conclusive determination by the legislature that the damages accruing to the judgment creditor by being deprived of the use of the amount due are measured by a lower rate of interest during the period subsequent to the taking effect of the act than from the rendition of the judgment up to that time. If this view is correct, the plaintiff in this case has received all damages which *294accrued while its judgment remained unpaid, and none of its rights have been destroyed or interfered with by legislation. The defendants’ obligation to pay interest being simply that which the law imposed, they discharged that obligation by paying what the law exacted.”
In the case of Palmer et al. v. Laberee et al., 23 Wash. 409, 63 Pac. 220, the supreme court holds that a law reducing the rate of interest on judgments applies to judgments rendered prior to the passage of the Act and then existing.
Where the contract between the parties provides that interest shall be computed at a certain rate until payment is made, a question might arise not presented by the record in this case, and on which no opinion is here expressed.
We have examined the cases cited by respondent as modifying the decision in the Morley Case, and find that the same are not inconsistent with the doctrine announced in that case.
The principles involved in this case are so thoroughly discussed in the cases cited that further comment here is unnecessary. We are of the opinion that the Act of the legislature of February 28, 1899, reducing interest on all judgments, applies from the date of its approval to this judgment, and that the court erred in overruling defendant’s motion; and that, inasmuch as the stipulation and record show that the full amount due on this judgment has been paid, this cause should be remanded to the district court, with directions to set. aside the order made overruling defendant’s motion, and to enter an order sustaining said motion.
Pee Curiam. — For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, it is ordered that this cause be remanded to the district court, with directions to that court to set aside the order heretofore made overruling the defendant’s motion for an order requiring the plaintiff to satisfy the judgment' in full, and to enter an order sustaining said motion.