
    G. C. Grammer v. William Thomas Carroll.
    The defendant, the acceptor of a bill payable to the plaintiff out of an expected particular fund, received the fund, but paid it to the holder of a subsequent draft by the same drawer; held, that the defendant was liable to the plaintiff in an action for money had and received to his use.
    Interest may bo given as damages for the non-payment of money received by the defendant to the plaintiff’s use after demand and refusal.
    Assumpsit for money had and received. R. G. Lanphier, Jr., having made a seal for the Supreme Court of the United States, of which court the defendant was clerk, and being indebted to the plaintiff, drew the following bill:
    Washington, October 11, 1831.
    Mr. Carroll, Clerk of the Supreme Court of the United States. Pay G. C. Grammer, or order, on the 1st day of April next, the sum of $80, out of any money that may come into your hands as clerk, on account of a seal made by me for the office of said court. $80. R. G. Lanphier, Jr.
    Indorsed : Accepted, William Thomas Carroll, C. S. C. U. S.
    Mr. Lanphier afterwards drew another bill on Mr. Carroll for $100, being the whole price of the seal, in favor of Mr. Middleton, Mr. Carroll’s clerk, who was a creditor of Lanphier, and who was said to be insolvent. Mr. Carroll having certified on the bill, that the seal had been made, and that the money was due to Lanphier, Mr. Middleton took it to the marshal, and got his due-bill for the amount, payable in ten days, which he gave to Mr. Carroll, who received the money from the marshal, and paid it over to Mr. Middleton ; but before he paid it, Mr. Middleton had notice of Mr. Carroll’s acceptance of the draft in favor of the plaintiff.
    Upon the trial, Mr. Coxe, for the defendant, moved the Court to instruct the jury, in substance, that the plaintiff cannot recover without satisfying them that the money came to the defendant’s hands, as cleric.
    But the Court (Cranch, C. J., contra,) refused to give the . instruction; because, if the defendant had a right to draw it from the marshal, the money was, in effect, in the defendant’s hands.
    The Court, (Thruston, J., absent,) at the prayer of the defendant’s counsel, instructed the jury, that the plaintiff cannot recover in this action on the count for money had and received, unless the jury should be satisfied by the evidence that the defendant received the money to the plaintiff’s use.
    Verdict for the plaintiff, $81.75, to bear interest from the 4th of April, 1832.
    
      Mr. Coxe, for the defendant,
    moved for a new trial, upon the ground that upon the count for money had and received, the jury had given interest by way of damages; and the cost of protest of the defendant’s acceptance, which was not given in evidence upon the special counts, which w^ere abandoned, and cited several cases.
   But the Court said, that in this Court, the jury had always been allowed to give damages for the non-performance of the contract; and that it was competent for them to make the interest the measure of their damages; and that interest may be recovered on money received to the plaintiff’s use, after demand and refusal to pay.

Upon the plaintiff’s remitting the cost of protest, the Court refused to grant a new trial.  