Summary
In Nick v. Craig, 298 Pa. 411, 415, 148 A. 709 (1930), the award of interest by the equity court was due solely to the Court's conclusion that "under the circumstances of this case" interest should have been awarded.
Summary of this case from Sack v. FeinmanOpinion
November 26, 1929.
January 6, 1930.
Equity — Accounting — Interest — Failure to include interest in decree — Appeals — Remission to lower court.
1. In an equity case for accounting, where the court finds certain sums due plaintiffs, they are, as a rule, entitled to interest on the amounts found to be due to them from the time or times when the amounts should have been paid.
2. If the court inadvertently omits from the decree an allowance of interest and plaintiffs file exceptions to the decree on that account, but in order to save their rights to an appeal, take an appeal before the exceptions are disposed of, the appellate court will reverse the decree and direct that the record be remitted to the court below so that it may enter a decree nisi disposing of the question of interest, such decree nisi to be subject to exceptions filed by either party in accordance with the equity rules.
Appeals — Jurisdiction — Supreme Court — Superior Court — Amount in controversy — Acts of June 24, 1895, P. L. 212; May 5, 1899, P. L. 248, and March 2, 1923, P. L. 3 — Final decree.
3. The question of jurisdiction of an appeal from a decree for an accounting in equity is to be determined under section 1(c) of the Act of June 24, 1895, P. L. 212, as amended by the Acts of May 5, 1899, P. L. 248, and March 2, 1923, P. L. 3, providing that the amount of the judgment, decree or award is the controlling criterion as to whether a case should go to the Supreme or the Superior Court.
4. Where the award in such case is over $2,500 the fact that interest for less than that amount is the only matter involved, will not justify the Supreme Court in remitting the appeal to the Superior Court.
5. Where a decree on an accounting purports to dispose of all pending exceptions and orders distribution in accord with a schedule adopted by the court, the decree is a final and appealable order.
Before MOSCHZISKER, C. J., FRAZER, WALLING, SIMPSON, KEPHART, SADLER and SCHAFFER, JJ.
Appeals, Nos. 94-99, Jan. T., 1930, by plaintiffs, from decree of C. P. Erie Co., May T., 1923, No. 2, for plaintiffs, on bill in equity, in cases of E. W. Nick et al. v. J. Reed Craig, trustee, Andrews Land Co. et al.; Harper Smith et al. v. J. Reed Craig, trustee, Andrews Land Co. et al.; Henry L. Morse et al. v. J. Reed Craig, trustee, Andrews Land Co. et al.; R. W. Shepard et al. v. J. Reed Craig, trustee, Andrews Land Co.; Albert E. Rose et al. v. J. Reed Craig, trustee, Andrews Land Co. et al.; and Charles J. Schlipf et al. v. J. Reed Craig, trustee, Andrews Land Co. et al. Reversed.
Bill for accounting. Before COPELAND, P. J., specially presiding, and ROSSITER, P. J.
The opinion of the Supreme Court states the facts.
Decree for plaintiffs, omitting interest. Plaintiffs appealed.
Error assigned was (1) final decree, quoting it, and (2) in not computing interest on amount due plaintiffs, quoting record seriatim.
Charles H. English, of English, Quinn, Leemhuis Tayntor, for appellants.
W. P. Gifford, of Gunnison, Fish, Gifford Chapin, for appellees.
Argued November 26, 1929.
On March 8, 1923, the six plaintiffs in this case filed a bill in equity in the court below praying for an accounting by defendants, Andrews Land Co. and J. Reed Craig, trustee, of moneys received by them and alleged to have been wrongfully withheld from plaintiffs as members of a real-estate-owning syndicate, composed of plaintiffs and certain other persons, either designated as defendants or whose respresentatives are named in that capacity, for whom Craig was trustee and the land company selling agent. The matter came to a hearing on bill and answer, and the chancellor decreed an accounting.
An account was filed by the land company, and, on objections to its correctness, an assessor was appointed to state a new account, to be accompanied by a schedule of distribution; which course was duly pursued.
Exceptions to the report of the assessor were filed and argued before the court below in banc, which disposed of them in a second elaborate opinion.
Both before the assessor and on argument of the exceptions to his report, plaintiffs insisted that they were entitled to interest on moneys found to be due them respectively by the land company from the sale of lots and the wrongful charging against plaintiffs of certain items which the court below found should, under the contract with the land company, have been borne by it. The court, however, decreed a distribution without determining the question of interest. Plaintiffs, conceiving the omission to pass on this point to be a judicial inadvertence, filed formal exceptions to the decree last entered, whereby they attempted again to raise the question of interest. Defendants also objected to the decree in question.
When almost three months, the time fixed for the entry of an appeal in such a case, had passed without further action by the court below, plaintiffs, viewing the decree last entered as a final order, and fearing that, unless an appeal was entered, they would lose that privilege, entered an appeal, thus removing the record from the court below to the Supreme Court.
Later, when the last mentioned exceptions came on for argument before the court below, that tribunal held that its last order was in fact and law a final decree; but, in so holding, the court certified that, when it allowed the exceptions to be filed, it was of opinion that the decree "would not become final until the disposition of those exceptions." The court further certified as follows: "We are also of opinion that the appeal [by plaintiffs] transferred to the appellate court all proceedings __________ and we now have no jurisdiction whatever in the case. We are, however, of opinion that interest is a legal right __________, [and] that it was an oversight by the court in banc in not charging interest in the final decree __________" Then the court certified its conviction that the attorney for defendants was misled by it into the error of supposing that the last decree entered would not become final until the exceptions the court had allowed to be filed thereto were disposed of, and that this error had "precluded him [the attorney for defendants] from his opportunity to take an appeal and be heard upon the errors that he avers were made in the findings [and] conclusions reached by the court in banc."
The next move in the case was a petition to the Supreme Court by defendants for the return of the record to the court below, and that they be allowed to appeal nunc pro tunc. On this petition, the Supreme Court allowed a rule "to show cause why the record should not be returned to the court below with leave to open its last decree and dispose of the case as in its opinion right and equity may require." On the return day of the above quoted rule, the Supreme Court, after considering an answer filed by plaintiffs, concluded that the whole matter had better proceed to argument before it, and so ordered in dismissing the rule.
When plaintiff's appeal came on for argument, defendants filed a motion to remit it to the Superior Court, on the ground that the interest claimed by plaintiffs would, in the aggregate, amount to less than $2,500, and for that reason the Supreme Court did not have jurisdiction. Plaintiffs correctly answered that the question of jurisdiction in such a case is to be determined under section 1(c) of the Act of June 24, 1895, P. L. 212, as amended by the Acts of May 5, 1899, P. L. 248, and March 2, 1923, P. L. 3, providing that the amount of the judgment, decree or award is the controlling criterion as to whether a case shall go to the Supreme or the Superior Court (Prentice v. Hancock, 204 Pa. 128, 131; Sharp v. Keiser, 292 Pa. 142, 145; Mahoney v. Collman, 293 Pa. 478, 482, 483), and, on this answer, the motion to remit was denied.
Defendants also moved to quash the appeal, on the ground that, under the peculiar circumstances involved, the decree appealed from should not be considered as final. This motion, also, was refused; for the decree in question purports to dispose of all pending exceptions, and orders distribution in accord with a schedule in "the assessor's supplemental account," formally adopted by the court below, thus constituting, under our authorities, a final and appealable order. See Henry's Est., 290 Pa. 537; Graham's Est., 294 Pa. 493; Constable's Est., 297 Pa. 212, 214.
Now, to dispose of the particular question stated by appellants for determination on this appeal: "In an equity case for an accounting, in which the court finds certain sums due to the plaintiffs, are the plantiffs entitled to interest on the amounts found to be due from the time or times when said amounts should have been paid?" We agree with appellants that, under the circumstances of this case, they are entitled to interest on any amount which may be legally due and awarded to them, but the calculation of this interest is a matter to be disposed of by the court below, not by us. The order we are about to enter will put all parties concerned in a position where they may appeal from such final disposition of the case as the court below may make when this record is returned to it; and, owing to the many delays which have already taken place, it is to be hoped that the court below will bring this prolonged controversy to a speedy close.
The decree appealed from is reversed, and the record is remitted to the court below so that it may enter a decree nisi disposing of the question of interest in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion; such decree nisi to be subject to exceptions filed by either party in accordance with our equity rules. Costs to await the final decision in the case.