Court Opinion

ID: 5645212
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 06:43:19.487409+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:38:20.775250
License: Public Domain

Carley, Presiding Judge.
Appellee-plaintiff brought suit to recover on a commercial account and, pursuant to OCGA § 7-4-16, sought pre-judgment interest on the unpaid balance at the rate of I-V2 percent per month. A jury-trial resulted in a verdict in favor of appellee. The judgment that was entered on the jury’s verdict contained no specific provision with regard to the rate at which post-judgment interest would accrue. In satisfaction of the judgment, appellant-defendant offered appellee an amount which, pursuant to OCGA § 7-4-12, reflected a post-judgment interest rate of 12 percent per year. Appellee refused appellant’s tender and filed a “Motion For Issuance of Fi.Fa. Earning Interest At [The] Specified Rate” of I-V2 percent per month. The trial court granted appellee’s motion and appellant appeals. See Nodvin v. West, 197 Ga. App. 92, 93 (1) (397 SE2d 581) (1990).
OCGA § 7-4-12 provides, in relevant part, that “[a]ll judgments in this state shall bear interest upon the principal amount recovered at the rate of 12 percent per year unless the judgment is rendered on a written contract or obligation providing for interest at a specified rate, in which case the judgment shall bear interest at the rate specified in such contract or obligation. . . .” (Emphasis supplied.) Appellee contends and the trial court found that, pursuant to OCGA § 7-4-16, a commercial account constitutes an “obligation” which provides for interest at a statutorily specified rate. However, this is an erroneous construction of OCGA § 7-4-16. “[T]he statute says merely that the commercial creditor may charge interest if the account is 30 days overdue at a rate not in excess of I-V2 % per month. Thus . . . , the creditor has an option to set whatever interest rate he wishes after default up to the limit specified. . . . [OCGA § 7-4-16 is properly construed] as permitting the creditor to charge an otherwise usurious rate of interest. . . .” (Emphasis in original.) Prince v. Lee Roofing Co., 161 Ga. App. 181, 183 (3) (288 SE2d 135) (1982). Compare Chilivis v. Rogers Oil Co., 135 Ga. App. 176, 177 (3) (217 SE2d 179) (1975) (construing the statutory specification of a definite pre-judgment interest rate in OCGA § 48-2-35 as mandating the equivalent post-judgment interest rate). It is the owner of the commercial account, acting unilaterally pursuant to the discretion granted him by OCGA § 7-4-16, and not any provision of OCGA § 7-4-16 itself, which controls both the recovery of pre-judgment interest and the rate thereof. Accordingly, a commercial account is not, by virtue of OCGA *120§ 7-4-16, transformed into such an “obligation” as would come within the exception to the standard post-judgment interest rate of 12 percent per year that is established by OCGA § 7-4-12.
Decided December 2, 1991.
Richard A. Gordon, for appellant.
L. A. Paulk, Ainsworth G. Dudley, Jr., for appellee.
“[W]e [are] bound by the explicit ‘all’ and the mandatory word ‘shall’ in [OCGA § 7-4-12]. . . .” Henley v. Mabry, 125 Ga. App. 293, 295 (187 SE2d 309) (1972). Once the unpaid balance of a commercial account has been reduced to judgment, the account owner assumes the new capacity of a judgment creditor. In that new capacity, he is authorized, pursuant to OCGA § 7-4-12, to recover post-judgment interest at the standard rate of 12 percent per year, regardless of whether, in the exercise of the discretion granted to him in his former capacity as an account owner, he had sought no pre-judgment interest or pre-judgment interest at some rate within the maximum limit authorized by OCGA § 7-4-16. The trial court erred in holding otherwise. OCGA § 7-4-16 does not authorize appellee to recover both prejudgment and post-judgment interest at the same rate. That statute would only permit appellee to recover pre-judgment interest at a rate which is “greater than the post-judgment rate” of 12 percent per year that “all judgments in this state shall bear” pursuant to OCGA § 7-4-12. (Emphasis supplied.) Prince v. Lee Roofing Co., supra at 183 (3).

Judgment reversed.

Beasley, J., and Judge Arnold Shulman, concur.