The libel was; filed upon a bottomry bond for supplies and repairs furnished the bark at Rio in the spring of 1858. The cause had been once to the supreme court of the United States, which reversed the decision of the circuit court The circuit court had rendered a decree for the entire sum secured by the bot-tomry bond. The supreme court was of opinion that some of the items in the bills secured by the bonds were not subjects of bot-tomry, and that the actual necessity for some of the supplies and repairs was not shown. That court, therefore, reversed the decision of the circuit court and remanded the cause with instructions, “To refer the account for supplies and repairs to one or more commissioners, experienced in commerce and of known intelligence and probity, to ascertain under the instructions of the court, what portion of the supplies and repairs actually furnished to the ship was really necessary; and for the amount thus as*988certained and approved by the court, to enter a decree £or libellants.” The parties selected Mr. J. W. Gurley as master, and the selection was approved by the court. The master took the testimony of but one witness, in addition to the evidence already in the record. This witness testified to facts which had occurred fourteen years before he gave his testimony, and the evidence in the rec-ord shows that he must have been mistaken in his statement of facts. The master concluded, and we think properly, that this new evidence did not substantially change the case as it appeared in the original record. The master reported that the principal sum due on the bond for supplies and repairs actually furnished the ship and really neces■sary, amounted to $4,392.25.
1. The first exception is to the amount of this allowance. The libellant claims that because Clark, the master of the vessel, was .also a part owner, he was authorized to make a bottomry bond on the ship anywh'ere and for any reason. But it seems to me too late to review this question. If Clark was a part owner it must appear in the record, and the supreme court has decided that the whole bond cannot be sustained. It has, therefore, either found that Clark was not a part owner, or if he was, that he was not on that account authorized to make the bond unless there was a real necessity therefor. I regard this exception as raising a question already settled by the supreme court
2. The second exception is, that the master did not allow the 19% per cent maritime interest on the $4,392.25 which was stipulated for in the bond nor legal interest from and .after the date of judicial demand, July 3, 1858. The master was not required to pass upon these questions. He has done what the order of reference required and no more. This exception must, therefore, be overruled, but this court will now determine the question for itself. In admiralty appeals, the supreme court never does allow interest as .such. Hemmenway v. Fisher, 20 How. [61 U. S.] 255; Boyce’s Ex’r v. Grundy, 9 Pet. [34 U. S.] 275; Phil. Pr. U. S. 260. When in the opinion of the court interest should be allowed, it is included in the decree as a .gross sum. Now the supreme court has directed specifically for what sum the decree in this case shall be, to wit: The amount found due for supplies and repairs actually furnished and really necessary. The bot-tomry bond, which is the basis of the libel, expressly provides that the libellant shall be entitled to “a premium of 19% per cent, for the voyage, in consideration whereof all risks of the sea, seizures, enemies, fires, pirates, etc., are to be on account of” libellants. By the terms of the bond, this premium is as much the due of the libellants as the principal sum loaned on the bond, and as there does not seem to have been any question raised in the supreme' court of its allowance, if any part of the principal sum found was recoverable, and it is not excluded by .the decree of the supreme court, we must allow the premium on the amount actually found due by the master. But it is insisted strenuously that as neither the bottomry bond nor the decree of the supreme court says anything about the allowance of ordinary interest, none can be allowed. Does the fact that there is no stipulation for ordinary interest in the bond preclude this court from allowing interest from the commencement of the suit, before which time the bond, if anything at all was due on it, was payable? The general common law rule is that the law does not imply a contract on the part of the debt- or to pay interest on the sum he owes, although the debt maj be of a fixed amount, and may have been frequently demanded. 2 Chit Cont (11th Am. Ed.) 950, and cases there cited. But according to the American authorities, interest will be allowed after a demand of payment, even of an unsettled claim, for goods sold and delivered or services rendered, from the time of the demand, and the presentment of an account or commencement of a suit is sufficient demand on which to found and from which to date a claim of interest. Barnard v. Bartholomew, 22 Pick. 291; McIlvaine v. Wilkins, 12 N. H. 481 et seq.; Selleck v. French, 1 Conn. 32; Gray v. Van Amringe, 2 Watts & S. 128; Golf v. Rehoboth, 2 Cush. 475. Interest is allowed on liquidated demands in the admiralty as well as at law. The Swallow [Case No. 13,665]. In suits for seamen’s wages, interest is allowed from the time of demand, or if no demand be made, from the commencement of the suit Gammel v. Skinner [Id. 5,210]; Sheppard v. Taylor, 5 Pet, [30 U. S.] 675.
These authorities settle the principle, and there can be no question that the libellants are entitled to ordinary interest on the' amount properly loaned on the bottomry bond, at least from the commencement of the suit But the claimant says that the question of interest has been ruled adversely to the libellant by the decree of the supreme court in this case. He says that the decree of the supreme court in this case — [The Grapeshot] 9 Wall. [76 U. S.] 145 — directs this court to ascertain “what portion of the repairs and supplies actually furnished to the ship were really necessary, and for the amount thus ascertained and approved by the court, to enter a decree for the libellants.” That as this direction of the court says nothing about interest, none can be allowed. To sustain this view we are referred to the cases of Boyce’s Ex’r v. Grundy, 9 Pet. [34 U. S.] 290; Hemmenway v. Fisher, 20 How. [61 U. S.] 255; to rule 23, U. S. Sup. Ct. Bules; and to Phil. Pr. U. S. (Rev. Ed.) 257. The rule of the supreme court and these authorities apply only to cases when the judgment or decree of the lower court has been affirmed. The holding is that unless the supreme court, in the affirmance of a judgment or decree, *989allows interest, it cannot be allowed by tbe lower court, when called on to execute the mandate. But in the case of The Grapeshot [supra] the decree of the circuit court was reversed, and the cause sent back to the circuit court to ascertain the amount due libel-lants, and with instructions to render a decree for the amount so ascertained. The supreme court never passed upon the question of interest It never disallowed interest. The libellants are clearly - entitled to it unless it is expressly disallowed. As well might it be claimed that libellants are not entitled to their premium of 19% per cent, which is expressly provided for in the bond, because the supreme court makes no mention of it in its order remanding the case to this court.
Claimant further says, that no interest should be allowed, because the ship was seized and sold in August, 1858, and ever since that date the proceeos of the sale have been in the registry of the court or in the United States treasury, and claimant has had no use of the funds. This is no answer to the libellant’s demand for interest The claimant might have saved himself this loss by paying what was due on the bond, or if he had tendered the amount now found to be due, he could not have been required to pay interest The libellants have asserted their rights in the ordinary way, in a court of justice. They are not to be punished, because in the administration of the. law the claimant has been subjected to loss, a loss which he might have avoided had he chosen to take the proper steps to avoid it
3. The third exception is, that the master erred in his construction of the words “were really necessary,” contained in the decree of the supreme court directing this court “to ascertain what portion of the supplies and repairs actually furnished were really neces-sai’y.” “Necessity for repairs and supplies is proved when such circumstances of exigency are shown as would induce a prudent owner to order them.” The Grapeshot, 9 Wall. [76 U. S.] 141. I have looked into the evidence in the record, and am not able to see that the master has been too strict in his construction of the words “really necessary.” The fact is, he allows for all repairs which the evidence shows were actually made, and for all supplies actually furnished. This exception must be overruled.
The other exceptions refer to small items in the account which the master has rejected. The evidence seems fully to justify the findings of the master in respect to these items. My opinion is that none of the exceptions are well taken, and they must be overruled. In making up the amount of the decree, however, the premium of 19% per cent on the amount found due by the master will be allowed, and also interest at the rate of five per cent, per annum on the same amount from the date of judicial demand, to wit, July 3, 1858.