Citations

Full opinion text

OPINION ON ENTRY OF JUDGMENT MURRAY M. SCHWARTZ, District Judge. This opinion addresses the entry of judgment on a special verdict pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 49(a). After deliberating for seven and one-half days, a jury, which sat through 81 trial days and what turned out to be 15,564 transcript pages of proceedings, returned its special verdict on March 17,1983. Entry of judgment was deferred for thirty days at the request of counsel. At the end of that period, the parties submitted their proposed forms of judgment. The function of a Court in the present procedural posture — entry of judgment on a special verdict — is narrow. Its task is to apply the law to the facts as found by the jury and translate the same into a judgment. See 5A J. Moore, Moore's Federal Practice ¶ 49.02, p. 49-8 (2d ed. 1982). The instant matter is unusual in that two of the three litigants insist that the special verdict entitles each to judgment against the other. In addition to the entry of a judgment on the special verdict, the parties agreed other issues should be determined by the Court as part of the judgment. Falling into the latter category are two issues which only arise if judgment is entered for plaintiff. These issues include: first, the currency of the jury award, if any, and its adjustment to reflect the difference and decline of the value of the Jamaican dollar against the United States dollar; and second, whether and to what extent prejudgment interest, if any, is to be awarded to plaintiff. Also involved at a peripheral level are treatment of the so-called outparcels and assessment of costs. These matters will be considered seriatim. In order to understand the special verdict sheet, which will be produced in full at a later portion of this opinion, a background statement is essential. BACKGROUND Plaintiff, Rose Hall Ltd. (“Rose Hall” or “plaintiff”), is a Cayman Islands corporation whose ultimate principal and controlling stockholder is John W. Rollins, Sr. Rose Hall owned approximately 5500 acres of land on the north coast of Jamaica near Montego Bay. In the late 1960’s, Rose Hall organized a wholly owned subsidiary company called Rose Hall (H.I.) Ltd. (“Rose Hall (H.I.)”) for the purpose of owning a hotel in Jamaica to be known as the Rose Hall Holiday Inn. The hotel property owned by Rose Hall (H.I.) consisted of the hotel building and an 11 acre tract of land cut out from the Rose Hall acreage. The hotel was financed by a US$6,250,000 loan from the Bank of Nova Scotia (“BNS”) to Rose Hall (H.I.) and leased to a subsidiary of Holiday Inns for a twenty year term but guaranteed by defendant Holiday Inns, Inc. (“Holiday Inns”). Chase Merchant Bankers Jamaica, Ltd. (“Chase Jamaica”) is a wholly owned subsidiary of defendant Chase Manhattan Overseas Banking Corporation (“CMOBC”), which in turn is a wholly owned subsidiary of Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., a wholly owned subsidiary of the Chase Manhattan Corporation. On June 3, 1974, Rose Hall borrowed US$3,000,000 from Chase Jamaica. As security for the loan, Rose Hall gave Chase Jamaica a first mortgage on approximately 3000 acres of Rose Hall’s land, lying largely in the middle of the 5500 acre assemblage, a second mortgage on the Rose Hall Holiday Inn and a pledge of all the shares of Rose Hall (H.I.). The parties to the loan agreed that certain of the 3000 acres described in the mortgage, called the “outparcels,” were not intended to be covered by it, and would be released to Rose Hall at any time upon request. This agreement is embodied in a letter from Chase Jamaica to the Rose Hall Directors, dated May 10, 1974. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit (“PX”) 472). Rose Hall quickly went into default on its loan from Chase Jamaica. By mid-1975 Rose Hall (H.I.) had entered into negotiations for the sale of the hotel to the Urban Development Corporation (“U.D.C.”), a corporation owned by the Jamaican government. John Rollins negotiated principally with Moses Matalón, who between 1975 and 1977 was the Chairman of the U.D.C. By May or June 1976, those negotiations had crystallized into a tentative arrangement with the Jamaican government. The hotel and the 11 acres on which it was situated would be sold to U.D.C. for US$13,000,000, payable in US$10,000,000 cash and US$3,000,000 in long-term Jamaican government guaranteed debentures. The US$10,000,000 cash was to be loaned by BNS to the Jamaican government. From the sale proceeds, BNS was to receive US$6,250,000 to pay off the existing mortgage and US$2,625,000 toward other obligations owed to BNS by Rollins entities. Chase Jamaica was to receive US$1,125,000 cash toward repayment of its loan, and the US$3,000,000 in debentures were to be available for repayment of the remainder. In exchange, BNS and Chase Jamaica were to release their previously existing security interests in the hotel with the Jamaican government providing security sufficient to satisfy BNS. As the sale negotiations continued, Rose Hall fell further behind in payments due under the Chase Jamaica loan. In early 1976, Chase Jamaica, as pledgee of the shares, registered the stock of Rose Hall (H.I.) in its name and became involved in the sale negotiations. Holiday Inns learned of the sale negotiations in approximately April 1976, and, desiring to modify the terms of the lease with Rose Hall (H.I.) which it considered oppressive, held discussions with John Rollins and Jamaican government representatives. Plaintiff contended that these discussions embodied: first, threats to breach its lease unless it was granted concessions; second, false and malicious statements that Rose Hall (H.I.) had misrepresented its earnings to the government; and third, assertion of a false claim that Rose Hall (H.I.) owed Holiday Inns approximately US$4 million previously spent by the lessee for maintenance and repair of the hotel. Without specifying which allegation formed the basis for its finding, the jury implicitly concluded that Holiday Inns wrongfully interfered with the Rollins negotiated proposed US$13,000,000 sale to U.D.C. and thereby caused Rose Hall US$4,500,000 in damages. During the spring and summer of 1976, political and economic conditions in Jamaica deteriorated. Under Prime Minister Michael Manley, leader of the People’s National Party (“P.N.P.”), the government moved to the left in foreign and domestic policy and created widespread apprehension, flight of capital, and political violence on the island. This culminated in the declaration of a national State of Emergency on June 19, 1976. As a result, tourism and resort development declined dramatically. In early August, 1976, Chase Jamaica informed Holiday Inns that it was the owner of the Rose Hall (H.I.) shares, and arranged a meeting for August 20, 1976 in Miami, Florida. This meeting formed the basis of conspiracy claims by plaintiff against the defendant Holiday Inns. Rose Hall alleged that Chase Jamaica and Holiday Inns conspired to frustrate the consummation of the US$13,000,000 arrangement and replace it with a sale at a drastically reduced price, thereby accomplishing objectives beneficial to themselves without regard to Rose Hall’s interests. The jury, however, found that there was no such conspiracy. In late August, 1976, the U.D.C. formally notified Rose Hall (H.I.) that it was no longer interested in pursuing the US$13,-000,000 negotiations. On September 14, 1976, Chase Jamaica made a proposal far more attractive to the U.D.C. Instead of US$13 million for the hotel only, Chase Jamaica offered to sell to the U.D.C. all of the Rose Hall collateral for approximately US$9.5 million, consisting of US$8.5 million for the shares of stock of Rose Hall (H.I.) and US$1 million for the 3000 acres of mortgaged land. The U.D.C. accepted the offer in late September or early October, 1976, with closing taking place on November 18, 1977. In this action, plaintiff alleged and the jury found that this sale was unreasonably “cheap” and in violation of Chase Jamaica’s mortgagee duties, determining that, as a result, plaintiff was damaged in the amount of US$1,500,000 for the cheap sale of the land and US$0 for the shares of Rose Hall (H.I.). The title conveyed by Chase Jamaica to the U.D.C. included the outparcels. After the sale, the U.D.C. and Chase Jamaica agreed that the U.D.C. would honor Chase Jamaica’s obligation to release the outparcels. Although efforts are being made by Rose Hall and the U.D.C. to accomplish this reconveyance, problems relating to boundary determination have impeded progress. In this proceeding, plaintiff has requested that the Court issue a declaratory judgment that if the U.D.C. fails to reconvey the outparcels by October 1, 1983, CMOBC is liable to Rose Hall for resulting damages. On September 21, 1976, Rose Hall representatives requested Chase Jamaica to permit Rose Hall (H.I.) to bring a lawsuit in Georgia against Holiday Inns for interference with the US$13,000,000 arrangement. Rose Hall representatives also requested that Chase Jamaica withdraw its offer of sale to the U.D.C. In December, 1976, a lawyer for the Jamaican government requested that Chase Jamaica sell the assets of Rose Hall (H.I.) instead of its shares. Chase Jamaica refused these proposed courses of action and subsequently consummated its US$9.5 million sale to the U.D.C. of Rose Hall (H.I.) stock and 3000 acres of land. By selling stock rather than the hotel asset, Chase Jamaica effectively made the interference claim against Holiday Inns unavailable to plaintiff. Rose Hall sued Holiday Inns in Georgia for wrongful interference with the US$13,000,000 sale negotiations on September 30, 1976. The Georgia court held, without determining the merits of the interference claim, that such a suit could only be brought by Rose Hall (H.I.). Rose Hall, Ltd. v. Holiday Inns, Inc., C.A. No. C227-30 (Ga.Super.Ct., Fulton Cty., filed Sept. 30, 1976), aff’d, 146 Ga.App. 709, 247 S.E.2d 173, cert. denied, No. 55491 (Ga. Oct. 3, 1978). In effect, the Georgia court confirmed the unavailability of the interference claim. The jury found that Chase Jamaica wrongfully prevented Rose Hall from suing Holiday Inns in the Georgia action, and as a result plaintiff suffered US$4,500,000 in damages. On October 4, 1976, Rose Hall filed an action in the Supreme Court of Judicature of Jamaica to enjoin the sale of stock and land by Chase Jamaica to the U.D.C. and, alternatively, for damages. Plaintiff represented to the Jamaican court that its “damages could be quantified at about $10,000,-000.” Rose Hall Ltd., et al. v. Chase Merchant Bankers Jamaica Ltd., et al., Suit No. E-211 of 1976, (Sup.Ct. of Judicature of Jam., Jan. 17, 1977). (PX 140, p. 14). The Jamaican court refused to enjoin the sale on the ground that monetary damages would be an adequate remedy if Rose Hall succeeded in proving its case at trial. In the instant action, the plaintiff contended, and the jury found, that the defeat of the injunction was caused by misrepresentations to the Jamaican court made by representatives of Chase Jamaica to the effect that it would be financially able to meet any damage liability in view of the the permanence of its Jamaican operation and its affiliation with the other Chase entities. There was evidence that at the time these representations were being made, actual undisclosed plans to close down Chase Jamaica’s operation existed. By February 1978, Chase Jamaica’s office closed and ceased active business. In mid-1980, the Jamaican court listed the Jamaican action for trial in January, 1981. Rose Hall moved to stay the Jamaican action pending resolution of the Delaware action. CMOBC opposed the stay and offered to pay any final judgment that might be entered against Chase Jamaica to the extent of J$10,000,000, subject to certain conditions. The Jamaican court, noting that CMOBC’s offer was so conditional as to be “worthless,” granted the stay of the proceedings. Rose Hall Ltd., et al. v. Chase Merchant Bankers Jamaica Ltd., et al., Suit No. E-211 of 1976 (Sup.Ct. of Judicature of Jam., Feb. 12, 1981) (PX 141, p. 21). On Chase Jamaica’s appeal, the Court of Appeal of Jamaica affirmed the granting of the stay. Chase Merchant Bankers Jamaica Ltd., et al. v. Rose Hall Ltd., et al., Sup.Ct. Civil Appeal No. 78/80, (Ct. of Appeal, Jam., June 23, 1982) (PX 641). Chase Jamaica then appealed the decision to the Privy Council in London. Insofar as is reflected in the record, that appeal is pending. On April 11, 1979, Rose Hall filed the instant action against CMOBC, the parent corporation of Chase Jamaica, and against Holiday Inns. The complaint was served on April 17, 1979. One of the alternative grounds advanced by plaintiff for imposing liability on the parent, CMOBC, for Chase Jamaica’s wrongs is embodied in Paragraph 54 which was added to the Second Amended Complaint by amendment on September 30, 1982. After extensive discovery, a jury trial was held from October 12, 1982 to March 8,1983. The jury returned the “Special Verdict Accompanied By Interrogatories to the Jury Under Rule 49(a)” on March 17, 1983. It reads as follows: SPECIAL VERDICT ACCOMPANIED BY INTERROGATORIES TO THE JURY _UNDER RULE 49(a)_ 1. In selling (a) the 3,000 + acres of land and (b) the shares of Rose Hall (H.I.) Ltd. did Chase Jamaica breach its duty to act in good faith, without reckless disregard for the interests of the mortgagor, taking reasonable precautions to obtain the best available price and to avoid an unreasonable sale of excess collateral? Yes x No_ 2. Did Chase Jamaica wrongfully prevent plaintiff from suing Holiday Inns in Georgia for alleged interference with the US$13 million sale either by Chase Jamaica selling to UDC shares instead of assets of Rose Hall (H.I.) or by refusing to take other action which would have permitted Rose Hall (H.I.) to join in the Georgia lawsuit? Yes x No 3. Did CMOBC control Chase Jamaica’s major decisions and actions relating to its actions under Question 1. or its actions under Question 2.? As to Question 1. (a) because of the Edge Act Yes_No x theory and/or (b) independently of the Edge Yes_No x Act As to Question 2. (a) because of the Edge Act Yes No x theory and/or (b) independently of the Edge Yes_No x Act 4. Did Chase Jamaica, through its representations, as a result of its control by CMOBC, deceive the Jamaican court into not enjoining the sale of the collateral? Yes x No. 5. Did Holiday Inns wrongfully conspire with Chase Jamaica in (a) selling the land, or (b) the shares under Question 1. or in taking its actions under Question 2.? A. As to the sale of the land— Question l.(a) Yes_No x B. As to the sale of the shares of Rose Hall (H.I.)— Question l.(b) Yes_No x C. As to Question 2. Yes_No x 6. If the answer to Question 1. is “Yes”, what damages, if any, did plaintiff suffer as a result: (a) for the land $ 1,500,000 (b) for the shares $ 0_ If the answer to Question 2. is “Yes", what damages, if any, did plaintiff suffer as a result: $ 4,500,000 NOTE: Answer Questions 3., 4., 5., and 6. only if Question 1. or Question 2., is answered “Yes.” Regardless of your answer to Question 3., 4., or 5., answer Question 6. The Special Interrogatories were formulated so that Interrogatory Nos. 1 and 2 posed the question of whether Chase Jamaica, a nonparty to this action, committed any wrong with respect to the sale of the land or Rose Hall (H.I.) shares and wrongfully prevented plaintiff from suing Holiday Inns in Georgia. Interrogatory Nos. 3, 4 and 5 sought to determine who was liable if Interrogatory Nos. 1 and/or 2 were answered in the affirmative. Interrogatory Nos. 3 and 4 inquired whether CMOBC was liable. Interrogatory No. 3 centered on liability by reason of control of Chase Jamaica under plaintiffs Edge Act theory or independently of the Edge Act while Interrogatory No. 4 sought to have the jury determine on an alternative theory of liability whether Chase Jamaica deceived the Jamaican court into not issuing an injunction and whether that deception resulted by reason of control by CMOBC. Interrogatory No. 5 sought to determine whether Holiday Inns was liable to plaintiff for wrongfully conspiring with Chase Jamaica. Finally, Interrogatory No. 6 sought to have the jury’s assessment of damages if Chase Jamaica did commit any of the wrongs set forth in Interrogatory Nos. 1 and 2. An assessment of damages in answer to Interrogatory No. 6 does not necessarily mean Rose Hall is entitled to judgment. The jury was instructed to assess plaintiff’s damages in Interrogatory No. 6 even if it found none of the named defendants in the lawsuit responsible for the wrongs committed by Chase Jamaica. This instruction by Judge Steel to the jury on the special verdict sheet was done over objection of CMOBC at the behest of plaintiff. Plaintiff consistently maintained before Judge Steel that CMOBC is liable for Chase Jamaica’s breaches of duty under the Edge Act as a matter of law. As a consequence, plaintiff asserted prior to verdict, and presumably will assert in the future, that the jury’s answers to Interrogatory Nos. 3, 4 and 5 are irrelevant, i.e., who is liable and on what theory is unimportant because CMOBC is liable as a matter of law. While ruling against plaintiff on its theory under the Edge Act, Judge Steel was obviously persuaded by plaintiff that if he were in error, a lengthy retrial could be avoided by obtaining the jury’s assessment of plaintiff’s damages without regard to who was liable. In answer to Interrogatory No. 1, the jury determined that Chase Jamaica wrongfully failed to realize the best available price for the land and shares of Rose Hall (H.I.) Ltd. in its sale to the U.D.C. In answer to Interrogatory No. 6, the jury found plaintiff was damaged in the amount of US$1,500,000 for the land and US$0 for the shares. Therefore, the jury necessarily concluded that at the time of the sale, the Rose Hall (H.I.) shares were worth no more to the U.D.C. than the US$8,500,000 sale price it paid and the 3000 acres were worth US$2,500,000, or US$1,500,000 more than the US$1,000,000 sale price paid by the U.D.C. By its affirmative answer to Interrogatory No. 2, the jury determined that Chase Jamaica wrongfully prevented Rose Hall from suing Holiday Inns for interference in the US$13,000,000 sale negotiations between John Rollins and the U.D.C. In answer to Interrogatory No. 6, the jury found that as a result plaintiff suffered damages in the amount of US$4,500,000. As indicated in the instructions, for the jury to arrive at this conclusion, it must have determined that in fact Holiday Inns did interfere, and that if Rose Hall had been able to sue Holiday Inns, it would have been awarded US$4,500,000 in damages. In this action, however, Holiday Inns could not be sued directly for the interference; rather it was sued only on a conspiracy theory of liability. Therefore, in order to impose liability on Holiday Inns, plaintiff was required to prove Holiday Inns conspired with Chase Jamaica in committing the wrongs described in Interrogatory No. 1 or Interrogatory No. 2. In answer to Interrogatory Nos. 5(A), (B) and (C), the jury found no conspiracy on the part of Holiday Inns. Therefore, there is no basis for imposing liability upon Holiday Inns. Several possible bases for imposing liability on CMOBC for Chase Jamaica’s wrongs were submitted to the jury in Interrogatory Nos. 3 and 4. The jury determined that CMOBC did not control Chase Jamaica’s major policy decisions and actions relating to the events described in Interrogatory Nos. 1 and 2. In addition, the jury found that CMOBC rebutted the presumption of control under the Edge Act, established by Judge Steel in Rose Hall Ltd. v. Chase Manhattan Overseas Banking Corp., 494 F.Supp. 1139 (D.Del.1980). Therefore, the only basis found by the jury for holding defendant CMOBC liable for the wrongs of its subsidiary, Chase Jamaica, is embodied in Interrogatory No. 4. An affirmative answer to that question constitutes a factual finding by the jury that during the injunction proceeding in Jamaica, Chase Jamaica made false representations to the Jamaican court which induced that court to defeat Rose Hall’s attempts to enjoin the sale of collateral. The jury found that the Jamaican court was deceived by Chase Jamaica to believe there was no intention to close its operations and that it would remain in Jamaica with access to sufficient funds to satisfy any money judgment against it, when actual undisclosed plans to the contrary existed. The jury also found that this deception of the Jamaican court was controlled by CMOBC. ENTRY OF JUDGMENT All parties are agreed that at this procedural stage the Court should enter judgment in favor of defendant, Holiday Inns, Inc. and against plaintiff. Plaintiff and CMOBC disagree, however, as to whether judgment can be entered between them. Even if judgment can be entered, questions remain as to whom, and if for plaintiff, in what principal amount. The differences between plaintiff and CMOBC are attributable in part to perceived inconsistencies in the special verdict. The trial court must attempt “to harmonize the jury’s answers to interrogatories, if it is possible to do so under a fair reading of them.” Andrasko v. Chamberlain Manufacturing Corp., 608 F.2d 944, 947 (3d Cir.1979); see Gallick v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co., 372 U.S. 108, 119, 83 S.Ct. 659, 666, 9 L.Ed.2d 618 (1963). On the other hand, if the interrogatory answers are hopelessly irreconcilable and the jury has been discharged, there is no alternative but to order a new trial, at least with respect to the area of factual conflict. See Guy v. Rudd, 480 F.2d 677 (3d Cir.1973); cf. Franki Foundation Co. v. Alger-Rau & Associates, Inc., 513 F.2d 581 (3d Cir.1975). Keeping the above principles in mind, the Court turns to the alleged inconsistencies. CMOBC first urges that the jury’s negative answers with respect to whether CMOBC controlled Chase Jamaica’s major decisions in answer to Interrogatory No. 3 are inconsistent with its affirmative answer as to control found in Interrogatory No. 4. Interrogatory No. 3 relates only to CMOBC’s control of Chase Jamaica insofar as the latter made and implemented major decisions relating to the sale of collateral (land and shares of Rose Hall (H.I.) Ltd.) and wrongfully prevented suit against Holiday Inns for its interference with plaintiff’s original proposed sale of the hotel only to the U.D.C. The CMOBC control of Chase Jamaica referenced in Interrogatory No. 4 relates to the separate and distinct conduct of Chase Jamaica of “deceivpng] the Jamaican court into not enjoining the sale of the collateral.” Control of decisions relating to sale of plaintiff's collateral by Chase Jamaica and interference with a projected law suit against Holiday Inns for the benefit of plaintiff is vastly different from control of Chase Jamaica’s conduct as a party before a Jamaican court opposing issuance of a preliminary injunction. The Court holds that the answers to Interrogatory Nos. 3 and 4 are easily harmonized so as not to preclude entry of judgment. CMOBC next urges that the answers to Interrogatory No. 6 are internally inconsistent. Specifically, CMOBC argues that the jury found that plaintiff suffered no damage as a result of Chase Jamaica’s sale of the shares of Rose Hall (H.I.) to the U.D.C. The primary assets owned by Rose Hall (H.I.) were the hotel and the chose in action against defendant, Holiday Inns, Inc. CMOBC urges that the jury, by awarding zero damages for sale of the shares, found that the US$2,255,000 paid by the U.D.C. was the best available price for the shares. Defendant then urges that the jury’s finding of zero damages for the shares necessarily “includes a finding that the price fully compensated plaintiff for the $4.5 million claim as well as every other asset owned by Rose Hall (H.I.).” CMOBC then reasons that plaintiff could not have suffered a loss of US$4,500,000 for wrongful interference with its suit against Holiday Inns since that claim was necessarily included in the jury’s zero calculation of loss to plaintiff by reason of sale of the Rose Hall (H.I.) shares. There is a telling difference between owning a chose in action and having an active, viable interest in pursuing it. Even in these litigious times, those possessing a chose in action may choose not to prosecute it for reasons personal to themselves. In those instances, even though the chose in action has no monetary value to the one possessing the right at law to prosecute suit, it could be of considerable economic worth to another who has no such inhibition. That state of affairs is easily visualized in the instant case. Both plaintiff and Chase Jamaica had trained upon the U.D.C. as the sole buyer for the Jamaican hotel with Holiday Inns, Inc. projected to continue as lessee. One has no trouble postulating that the jury could well have concluded that the U.D.C., the only viable buyer because of social and political unrest within Jamaica, had no interest in litigating with its tenant, Holiday Inns. Thus, the chose in action would have a zero value to the U.D.C. no matter how meritorious it might be, and that value to the U.D.C. would be reflected in the jury’s evaluation of the stock in answer to Interrogatory No. 6. On the other hand, the jury found the same chose in action was worth $4,500,000 to plaintiff. Since the value of a chose in action can vary with the parochial interest and attitude of the one having the right to pursue it, the Court concludes there is no internal inconsistency in the answer to Interrogatory No. 6. The final controversy with respect to the Interrogatories is directed to the form of Interrogatory No. 4. Specifically, whether the issue of control of Chase Jamaica by CMOBC was left for determination by the jury. CMOBC vigorously asserts that by reason of the language of question 4 as compared with the form of Interrogatory No. 3, the Court predetermined that CMOBC controlled Chase Jamaica for purposes of Interrogatory No. 4. Plaintiff just as vigorously argues that by reason of the same language of Interrogatory No. 4, the issue of control of Chase Jamaica by CMOBC was left for jury determination. The parties’ varying interpretations need not detain the Court for entry of judgment purposes. The jury instruction devoted to Interrogatory No. 4 expressly provided: If you find that the Jamaican court was deceived by Chase Jamaica to believe there was no intention to close Chase Jamaica and that it would remain in Jamaica with ongoing access to sufficient assets to satisfy a money judgment, when actual undisclosed plans and intentions to the contrary existed, and if you find that its action was controlled by CMOBC, then you should disregard the separate corporate entity of Chase Jamaica and find that CMOBC is liable for the wrongs of Chase Jamaica. It is appropriate to view Interrogatory No. 4 “in the context of the charge.” Gallick v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co., 372 U.S. 108, 121, 83 S.Ct. 659, 667, 9 L.Ed.2d 618 (1963). Moreover, while CMOBC’s counsel requested an additional instruction with respect to Interrogatory No. 4, he never questioned or raised any objection to its form, after having lost the skirmish on whether plaintiff was entitled to go to the jury on the theory encompassed within that Interrogatory. CMOBC’s silence with respect to the form of Interrogatory No. 4 and its newly assumed litigation stance with respect to whether judge or jury determined control for purposes of this special verdict question are all the more puzzling in light of the request for an additional instruction which highlights CMOBC’s assumption that the control portion of Interrogatory No. 4 was within the province of the jury. Similarly, plaintiff’s counsel never raised a question as to the meaning and intent of Interrogatory No. 4. Language of the Third Circuit Court of Appeals is instructive: If the questions were not so understood, the silence of all counsel on the issue is incomprehensible. “A special verdict, finding, or answer must be construed in the light of the surrounding circumstances. It is to be construed in the light of, and in connection with, the pleadings, instructions, the issue or question submitted * * *.” Halprin v. Mora, 231 F.2d 197, 201 (3d Cir. 1956) (citation omitted). Considering the language of Interrogatory No. 4, and all of the aforementioned surrounding circumstances, the Court concludes that all concerned, including the jury, understood that the jury had to determine control for purposes of Interrogatory No. 4. Accordingly, the Court concludes that the ambiguity sought to be introduced by CMOBC should not bar entry of judgment on the special verdict. CMOBC raises several arguments in support of its contention that construction of the special verdict as a whole precludes entry of judgment against it. The central argument is that there is no justification for piercing the corporate veil because CMOBC did not proximately cause the injury complained of by the plaintiff. In essence, defendant asserts that the “fraud on the court” found by the jury to have been committed by Chase Jamaica and controlled by CMOBC did not proximately cause plaintiff’s damages totalling US$6 million In its affirmative response to Interrogatory No. 4, the jury found that Chase Jamaica, as controlled by CMOBC, deceived the Jamaican court into not enjoining the sale of the collateral. Subsequently, Chase Jamaica consummated the sale of the shares of Rose Hall (H.I.) and the 3000 acres of land for US$9,500,000, a price which the jury found was $1,500,000 below the best available price. CMOBC asserts that the fraud did not cause the $1,500,000 in damages; rather, it merely relegated plaintiff to an adequate damage remedy in Jamaica. According to CMOBC, had plaintiff pursued its Jamaican action to trial, it would have been able to enforce any judgment for money damages against the then empty shell of Chase Jamaica because CMOBC undertook to pay any judgment up to J$10,000,000. The ready answer to this contention is that assuming arguendo the plaintiff had an adequate damage remedy in Jamaica, it does not follow that plaintiff cannot be awarded relief in this Court CMOBC further contends that the “fraud on the court” found in Interrogatory No. 4 did not proximately cause Rose Hall $4,500,-000 in damages which flowed from the loss of its cause of action against Holiday Inns for interference. To support this contention, CMOBC argues that Rose Hall never pleaded that the loss of its interference claim resulted from the denial of the injunction. At most, asserts CMOBC, plaintiff alleged and the jury found that the defeat of the injunction resulted in the cheap sale. Contrary to its position with respect to the internal inconsistency of Interrogatory No. 6, CMOBC now ignores that this cheap sale involved not only 3000 acres of land, but also the stock of Rose Hall (H.I.). One of the assets of Rose Hall (H.I.) was the interference claim. At the time of the sale, the interference claim was transferred to the U.D.C. and became unavailable to plaintiff. Therefore, the injury plaintiff alleged resulted from the cheap sale necessarily included the loss of the cause of action. Further, in Paragraph 54 of the Second Amended Complaint, plaintiff alleged “... Chase Overseas [CMOBC] is liable for, and should be regarded in law and in fact as a party to, all the wrongful acts and omissions of Chase Jamaica ... alleged in this complaint....” The complaint, read as a whole, alleges injury as a consequence of the loss of the interference claim. Although CMOBC currently asserts that an affirmative answer to Interrogatory No. 4 is insufficient to hold it responsible for the damages found in Interrogatory No. 6, it is clear that when the Special Verdict form was prepared, all parties assumed that such a result would necessarily follow. CMOBC is actually claiming that the question of whether the wrongs in Interrogatory No. 4 proximately caused the damages in Interrogatory No. 6 was never submitted to the jury. However, CMOBC at no time requested an instruction on causation or an interrogatory directed at the amount of damages flowing from the “fraud on the court.” This in itself is a strong indication that CMOBC also assumed that the damages would be the same as those found in Interrogatory No. 6. In addition, CMOBC contends that Chase Jamaica’s conduct which deprived Rose Hall of the interference claim occurred after the injunction had been denied. It follows, argues CMOBC, that the plaintiff’s claim relating to the deprivation had not yet accrued at the time of the fraud on the Jamaican court. Whatever merit this argument has in relation to a December, 1976 refusal by Chase Jamaica to convert the stock sale into an asset sale at the alleged request of the U.D.C., it does not preclude entry of judgment against CMOBC on the wrongful deprivation of the interference claim. Contrary to CMOBC’s contention, this is not the only allegation of failure to preserve the claim that went to the jury. The Court also submitted to the jury the issue of whether Chase Jamaica “refus[ed] to take other action which would have permitted Rose Hall (H.I.) to join in the Georgia lawsuit.” As explained in the instructions, this “other action” included a refusal to assign the claim to Rose Hall before transferring the stock to the U.D.C. There is some evidence from which the jury may have found that such a request to permit assignment of the claim was made by Rose Hall in late September, 1976, i.e., before the October-November, 1976 injunction proceeding. CMOBC further attacks the significance of the jury’s finding in Interrogatory No. 4 by stating that the perjury, if any, committed by Chase Jamaica cannot serve as a basis for a cause of action under American or English and Jamaican law. Whatever merit such a claim may have, it is, as CMOBC notes, more appropriate to defer development and consideration of it until briefing on future motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Finally, CMOBC objects to entry of a judgment for plaintiff based on Rose Hall’s “new theory” that CMOBC should be held responsible because it inequitably stripped Chase Jamaica of its assets in order to evade paying any judgment to plaintiff. In view of this Court’s resolution of the alleged inconsistency between the responses to Interrogatory Nos. 3 and 4, and the controversy over the form of Interrogatory No. 4, it is apparent that judgment is being entered on the basis of a consistent reading of the special verdict, and not on the “new theory” of inequitable stripping of assets. Any further consideration of this alternative theory, if necessary, will be deferred until this Court’s consideration of motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. In summary, the Court finds no impediment to the entry of judgment based upon the jury’s responses to the special interrogatories. Judgment will be entered against CMOBC in the amount of US$6,000,000 and no judgment will be entered against Holiday Inns. Having found entry of judgment appropriate, the Court now turns to those matters relevant only if judgment is entered — the currency of the award and prejudgment interest — and the two tangential matters — the outparcels and taxing of costs. CURRENCY OF THE AWARD (DEVALUATION) CMOBC asserts that the US$6 million verdict must be converted into J$ and then reconverted into US$. While this appears confusing and somewhat meaningless, the effect of CMOBC’s argument would have a drastic impact on the value of the award due to an anomaly between Jamaican and domestic law concerning currency conversion of judgments. Generally, courts make damage awards in the currency of the forum because such an award may be enforced more easily by the courts. When damages are calculated in a foreign currency, conversion must be undertaken to arrive at a damage award in the currency of the forum. Pursuant to Jamaican law, which follows Commonwealth precedent, damages are usually converted into the currency of the forum using the exchange rate in effect on the date of injury or breach. See In re United Railways of Havana and Regia Warehouses Ltd., [1976] A.C. 443. The American rule, however, converts currency as of the date of judgment. . See Zimmermann v. Sutherland, 274 U.S. 253, 47 S.Ct. 625, 71 L.Ed. 1034 (1927); Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 144. But see Vishipco Line v. Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 660 F.2d 854, 865-66 (2d Cir.1981) (federal court sitting in diversity will follow New York minority breach date rule for conversion of currency), cert. denied, - U.S. -, 103 S.Ct. 313, 74 L.Ed.2d 291 (1982). Since the J$ has been devalued drastically since 1976, utilization of the date of injury rate and the date of judgment rate effectively results in a drastic reduction in the judgment. This anomalous result is based entirely upon the assumption that a Jamaican court would convert the US$ award into J$. The parties do not quarrel that Jamaican law, with its Commonwealth precedent, governs this aspect of the form of judgment. Until recently, Anglo-American courts steadfastly held to the aforementioned rule that their courts could make monetary awards only in the currency of the forum. This rule would lead to the result CMOBC propounds because this Court, sitting in diversity, must apply the law of Jamaica — thereby requiring the US$ judgment to be converted into J$ as of the date of injury. This J$ award would then have to be reconverted into US$ as of the date of judgment since this Court may not make an award of damages in a foreign currency. See Jamaica Nutrition Holdings, Ltd. v. United Shipping Co., 643 F.2d 376, 379 n. 5 (5th Cir.1981). This rule is summarized in the Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws: When in a suit for the recovery of money damages the cause of action is governed by the local law of another state, the forum will convert the currency in which recovery would have been granted in the other state into local currency as of the date of the award. Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 144. For purposes of the form of judgment, the operative phrase is “the currency in which recovery would have been granted.” Thus, the central question is whether a Jamaican court could have issued a judgment in US$. If so, the Restatement provides: When courts of state of applicable law would have calculated damages in some other currency and would have given judgment in that currency. The courts of some states that are not Anglo-American will on occasion give judgment in a foreign currency. In a situation where the applicable law would have given recovery in foreign currency, the forum will convert the currency in which recovery would have been granted in that state into the currency of the forum as of the date of judgment. Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 144, comment f (emphasis in original). Therefore, if the Jamaican court would have awarded damages in US$, conversion is inappropriate. A trilogy of cases decided by the House of Lords, however, marks a departure from the anachronistic rule that English courts could award damages only in sterling. In 1975, in Miliangos v. Frank (Textiles) Ltd., [1975] 3 All E.R. 801, the House of Lords allowed an award of damages in Swiss francs for failure to pay a debt under an agreement governed by Swiss law and which specified payment in Swiss francs. In 1978, the House of Lords extended the Miliangos rule to claims of damages in tort, Owners of the Motor Vessel Eleftherotria v. Owners of the Motor Vessel Despina R ("The Despina R”), [1979] 1 All E.R. 421, and to claims of damages for a breach of contract, Services Europe Atlantique (SEAS) v. Stockholms Rederiaktiebolag SVEA ("The Folias"), [1979] 1 All E.R. 421. With the apparent ability of a Jamaican court to award damages in a foreign currency firmly ensconced, the next question is whether, under these circumstances, the Jamaican court would have made such an award. In The Despina R, the House of Lords considered three possible currencies as appropriate for the award of damages. First, following the traditional rule as espoused in SS. Celia (Owners) v. SS. Volturno (Owners), [1921] 2 A.C. 544, damages could be assessed in sterling. Based upon Miliangos, this possibility was rejected. Second, damages could be assessed in the currency of the loss or expenditure. Third, damages could be assessed in the currency which the plaintiff normally dealt or had the closest connection with because this was the currency of the effective loss or expenditure. The Despina R, [1979] 1 All E.R. at 426. Under either of the two last alternatives, the House of Lords, speaking through Lord Wilberforce, found that such an award “gives [the plaintiff] exactly what he has lost and commits him only to the risk of changes in the value of that currency, or those currencies, which are either his currency or those which he has chosen to use.” Id. CMOBC attempts to limit the holdings of the trilogy and its progeny to admiralty cases and cases involving foreign torts. Relying upon a recent decision of the Commercial Court of the Queen’s Bench Division, CMOBC argues that the rule of The Despina R does not apply to purely domestic torts in Jamaica where both parties conduct business in Jamaica. See AVX Ltd. v. EGM Solders Ltd., The Times 7 July 1982, 1980 A2569 (Q.B.) The AVX decision is distinguishable on several grounds. First, under the holding in The Despina R, the plaintiff must show that the foreign currency was either his normal currency of operations or that the foreign currency is the measure of loss. The plaintiff in AVX failed to satisfy either prong. Second, the plaintiff had neither alleged losses in a foreign currency nor demonstrated that the contractual basis for the tort claim was in a foreign currency. Finally, the plaintiff, in a demand letter in 1980, claimed damages in sterling thereby weakening any claims in another currency. In AVX, the English court was confronted with a plaintiff attempting to inflate damages by converting to a currency which had appreciated vis-a-vis sterling. Exactly the converse is evident in this case where CMOBC seeks substantial erosion of a jury award through currency conversions. The principles embodied in the recent English trend are the traditional tort premises of restitutio in integrum and reasonable foreseeability of the damage sustained. The Despina R, [1979] 1 All E.R. at 427. Whether the currency of the award is that of the plaintiff’s normal operation or that of the loss is left to the discretion of the court to choose whichever is most equitable. Id. at 427-28. In this case there was no expenditure but the loss was felt in US$. As discussed supra the thwarted sale was for US$13 million. The sale by Chase Jamaica to the U.D.C. was for US$9.5 million. All evidence of damages was placed before the jury in the form of US$. Further, while it is unclear if the plaintiff’s normal currency was US$, that currency was clearly associated with the property in question. The mortgage and all other substantial transactions were based upon US$. Thus, the currency of the loss and the currency of the plaintiff with respect to the transaction was US$. In summary the Court finds that a Jamaican court would have the ability to grant judgment in US$. Furthermore, such a judgment would have been entered on these facts. This result works no undue hardship upon the parties. The loss was felt in US$ and utilization of this currency for the amount of damages was certainly foreseeable. A contrary result, however, suffers from serious defects. First, the principle of restitution would be offended, if not destroyed, if CMOBC’s argument were adopted. Second, the plaintiff has already suffered the impact of effective devaluation because the award reflects 1976 US$ which are worth less than 1983 US$. Finally, the defendant should not be permitted to take advantage of an anomaly which results when two judicial systems arrive at equally valid but different dates for currency conversion. If both jurisdictions applied either the judgment day or the breach/injury day rule, the exercise would result in a wash transaction. Only employment of differing governing rules yields a fundamentally unfair result. PREJUDGMENT INTEREST Plaintiff contends that prejudgment interest should be awarded in this action. CMOBC vigorously argues that prejudgment interest, as a discretionary matter, should be disallowed or substantially reduced. The questions surrounding this issue include: first, what law governs the right, to prejudgment interest; second, the entitlement, if any, to prejudgment interest under the applicable law; third, the applicable rate of prejudgment interest; and fourth, whether the award of prejudgment interest, if any, should be substantially reduced. These issues will be discussed seriatim. Choice of Law For purposes of the disposition of the availability of prejudgment interest, jurisdiction based upon diversity is assumed. As such, a federal court sitting in diversity must apply the same choice of law principles as a Delaware court would utilize. Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing Co., 313 U.S. 487, 496, 61 S.Ct. 1020, 1021, 85 L.Ed. 1477 (1941). In a contract action, if the contract contains a choice of law provision regarding prejudgment interest, that choice will be honored. See Oliver B. Cannon & Son Inc. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York, No. 79-129, slip op. at 1-2 (D.Del. June 8, 1982). In the absence of such a provision, Delaware courts will engage in a choice of law analysis to determine the proper law governing the availability of prejudgment interest. Neither the parties’ submissions nor independent research has revealed relevant Delaware authority concerning the question of prejudgment interest on a tort claim where the choice of law is in dispute. In the absence of a Delaware decision on point, the general principle embodied in the Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws is persuasive: the substantive law selected by choice of law principles also determines the amount of damages. Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 171. As recognized by the comments to that section, prejudgment interest is an element of damages: Interest. The law selected by application of the Rule of § 145 determines whether the plaintiff can recover interest and, if so, at which rate for a period prior to the rendition of judgment as part of the damages for a tort. Id. § 171, comment C. Even though a Delaware court has not yet adopted § 145’s most significant relationship test for tort cases, presumably the Delaware court would follow the Restatement and apply the same law to the question of prejudgment interest as that which governs the substantive cause of action. See Stauffer Chemical Co. v. Keysor-Century Corp., 541 F.Supp. 234, 239 (D.Del.1982) (in absence of Delaware decision, court assumes Delaware court would follow Restatement). The parties do not dispute that Jamaican law governs the underlying claim. As such, under the previous analysis, Jamaican law governs the availability of prejudgment interest. CMOBC, however, argues that both Jamaican and Delaware law are relevant to the availability of prejudgment interest. The former applies, according to CMOBC, to the availability of prejudgment interest and the latter to the applicable rate. CMOBC bases this conclusion upon Miliangos v. George Frank (Textiles) Ltd. (No. 2), [1976] 3 All E.R. 599 (Q.B.). CMOBC, however, has misconstrued Judge Bristow’s opinion which, in fact states: I therefore ... hold that while you look to the proper law of the contract to see whether there is a right to recover interest by way of damages, you look to the lex fori to determine how much. Here it is agreed that the law of Switzerland gives a right to interest by way of damages. The lex fori ... empowers me to award interest at my discretion.... In my judgment the plaintiff should be treated mutatis mutandis in the same way as he would have been had he been awarded judgment in sterling and he had then borrowed sterling in England pending judgment so as not to be out of his money. In my judgment, he is entitled to interest during the agreed period at a rate at which someone could reasonably have borrowed Swiss francs in Switzerland at simple interest and not at compound interest. Id. at 603. That court, therefore, came full circle. Recognizing the foreign law’s ability to grant interest, and the domestic law’s discretionary ability to set the rate, the Court in its discretion used rates applicable in the foreign forum to establish the rate of prejudgment interest. This decision has no direct bearing upon the present question because it represents a foray into Commonwealth choice of law principles. The Court need only ascertain the local law of Jamaica — not the choice of law principles a Jamaican court would utilize. See Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 8 and comment a. The decision is important, however, in recognizing the broad discretion under English law, allotted to the Court with regard to prejudgment interest. See discussion infra pp. 1575-1576. Jamaican Legal Principles Regarding Prejudgment Interest A 1955 Jamaican statute provides, in relevant part: In any proceedings tried in any Court of Record for the recovery of any debt or damages, the Court may, if it thinks fit, order that there shall be included in the sum for which judgment is given interest at such rate as it thinks fit on the whole or any part of the debt or damage for the whole or any part of the period between the date when the cause of action arose and the date of the judgment: Provided that nothing in this section— (a) shall authorize the giving of interest upon interest. The Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, § 3, June 6, 1955, reprinted in Dkt. 758A, Exh. N and Dkt. 762A, Exh. L (“1955 Statute”). Under this statute, a Jamaican court, and hence this Court, has broad discretion to fashion a prejudgment interest award subject only to the limitation that no interest upon interest is awarded. CMOBC seeks to fetter this discretion with two arguments: first, that the 1955 Act must be read in conjunction with a more limited 1908 statute; and second, that the rate of interest cannot exceed the statutorily mandated six percent postjudgment rate. As to the first contention, CMOBC refers to a 1908 Jamaican statute which authorized a jury to award interest at a six percent rate but only in certain specified actions including: actions to enforce a debt, actions in trover or trespass de bonis asportatis, and some insurance actions. The Interest (Allowance By Jury) Act, §§ 2, 3, June 27,1908, reprinted in Dkt. 758A, Exh. M. Such a construction, however, fails to consider the obvious breadth of coverage of the later in time 1955 statute. Finding neither citation of authority nor any other construction which supports CMOBC’s argument, this Court will not embrace CMOBC’s argument and limit the obviously broad terms of the more recent statute. Second, CMOBC argues that the applicable prejudgment interest rate should be limited to the statutorily mandated post-judgment interest rate. A 1971 Jamaican statute establishes this rate at six percent. The Judicature (Supreme Court) Act, § 51(1), reprinted in Dkt. 785A, Exh. O. While this argument has some appeal because it promotes consistency, it fails to account for the express latitude to establish a prejudgment interest rate granted by the 1955 Statute. Furthermore, this argument has been rejected by an English court on the basis that identical rates can only be justified if the statutorily established post-judgment interest rate is reasonable. If that rate is not reasonable, even though a court cannot avoid the statutorily mandated postjudgment rate, it should exercise the discretion granted to it to establish a reasonable prejudgment interest rate. See Jefford v. Gee, [1970] 1 All E.R. 1202, 1210 (Ct. of App.). Having determined that this Court, applying Jamaican law, may, in its discretion, award prejudgment interest to the plaintiff, the Court now turns to the question of the period of prejudgment interest. Obviously, prejudgment interest will accrue until the date of judgment. The starting date, however, represents a more problematic issue. As noted, the 1955 Statute allows a court great discretion in fashioning an equitable award of prejudgment interest. The statute provides that prejudgment interest may be granted “for the whole or any part of the period between the date when the cause of action arose and the date of judgment.” The 1955 Statute, supra p. 1575. The parties basically have propounded three sets of dates as the starting date for prejudgment interest: first, September 30,1976 for damages based upon the interference claim, and November 18,1977 for damages based upon the land; second, April 17, 1979; and third, September 30, 1982. These dates reflect respectively: first, the filing of the Jamaican lawsuit or, alternatively, the accrual of the two causes of action; second, the institution of this lawsuit; and third, the amendment of the complaint to add a new theory of liability which represents the only theory upon which plaintiff prevailed. The parties have engaged in a rather confusing series of arguments regarding each of these dates. Plaintiff, understandably, promotes the view that prejudgment interest should run from the date of accrual of the cause of action. CMOBC counters that this date is appropriate, under Jamaican and English precedent, only for liquidated claims. The distinction is perhaps a fine one: a liquidated claim may best be analogized to an actual loss such as an expenditure. In such instances the date of accrual is proper. See Jefford v. Gee, [1970] 1 All E.R. at 1210; Tate & Lyle Food and Distribution Ltd. v. Greater London Council, [1981] 3 All E.R. 716, 723 (Q.B.). An unliquidated, or disputed, claim might be limited to cases where continuing intangible misfortune is not susceptible to monetary calculation. See Jefford v. Gee [1970] 1 All E.R. at 1208-09. In such a ease, prejudgment interest should run from the date of service of the writ. Id. In the present context it is possible to make strong arguments in support of a characterization of plaintiffs claims as either liquidated or unliquidated. On balance, however, the Court believes that the claims were not susceptible to precise measure on the dates of accrual in the sense of an expenditure. As such, the Court will not accept plaintiffs argument, and in its discretion, under the 1955 Statute, will allow prejudgment interest from the date of service of the writ. The plaintiff forwards another argument to support the award of prejudgment interest from 1976 to the present. Plaintiff contends that since the Jamaican action was filed in September of 1976, the Court should consider that as the “date of service of the writ.” This position retains some analytical appeal. The justification for the commencement of the period of prejudgment interest at the service of the writ for unliquidated claims represents a concern that the defendant should have both notice of the claim and its amount and also a desire to foster prompt suits. Furthermore, damages for unliquidated claims, such as pain and suffering, are spread through time and the amount cannot be quantified at the moment of the. injury. See Jefford v. Gee, [1970] 1 All E.R. at 1209. Nonetheless, the fact remains that CMOBC was not a party to the Jamaican action even though it obviously had notice of that action. In light of the purposes behind the date of service rule, the nature of plaintiff’s claim, and based upon the discretion afforded by the 1955 Statute, I will utilize the date of service on CMOBC in the Delaware action as the starting date for prejudgment interest. This conclusion, however, does not end the inquiry. CMOBC effectively agrees that the date of service rule should be applied but argues that the relevant date should not be April 17, 1979, the date of service in this action; rather, September 30, 1982 should be utilized because that was the date that plaintiff was permitted to amend its complaint to add paragraph 54, see supra note 10 and accompanying text, and this was the only theory upon which plaintiff prevailed. Focusing on the notice requirement, this argument has a great deal of appeal. CMOBC had no notice of this additional theory of liability until the date of the amendment, and therefore, prejudgment interest should not run prior to that date. There are three problems with this approach: first, CMOBC had notice of the suit and the potential extent of liability much earlier than 1982; second, had plaintiff prevailed on any other theory, prejudgment interest would accrue from the filing of the action or the amendment embodying that theory; and third, the very nature of the “relation back” requirement of Fed.R. Civ.P. 15(e) which determines whether amendment should be permitted, indicates that the amended complaint should be considered as having been filed as of the date of the original complaint for purposes of prejudgment interest. For these reasons, the better rule is that prejudgment interest, if awarded, will run from service of the original complaint. It is important to note that in this inquiry the Court seeks only to establish the proper starting date for an award of prejudgment interest. As will be explained infra, English courts, and hence this Court, enjoy discretion to equitably adjust this period of time after a benchmark is established. See infra pp. 1580-1581. In summary, prejudgment interest will be awarded under Jamaican law and shall be calculated from the period of April 17,1979 to the present. Rate of Prejudgment Interest As previously stated, Jamaican law, not the law of the forum, will govern the rate of prejudgment interest. As also stated, the rate of prejudgment interest is not limited by the six percent statutorily mandated postjudgment rate; rather, the Court enjoys the ability to grant prejudgment interest “at such rate as it thinks fit.” 1955 Statute, supra p: 1575. The only limitation on this discretion is that interest may not be awarded on interest; therefore, only simple and not compound interest may be awarded. The parties have presented a plethora of potential interest rates in addition to the six percent postjudgment rate. These include: the London Inter-Bank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”); the average prime rate; the yield on short term (3 month) United States Treasury Bills; the yield on long term United States Treasury Bonds; the interest paid on savings deposits in United States banks; the yield on Moody’s Aaa corporate bonds; the yield on Standard & Poor’s 400 Industrials; and the rate of return of the plaintiff. Affidavit of Gail W. Melick, May 24, 1983 Hearing, PX 1; Stipulation of May 27,1983, Dkt. 767. Being directed to no Jamaican decision on point, the Court once again turns to Commonwealth decisions for guidance. The English cases start with a premise familiar to our jurisprudence: prejudgment interest is not punitive; rather, it seeks to compensate the plaintiff for being out of money which he ought to have either received or retained. See Jefford v. Gee, [1970] 1 All E.R. at 1206; Tate & Lyle Food and Distribution Ltd. v. Greater London Council, [1981] 3 All E.R. at 723; Cremer v. General Carriers S.A., [1973] 1 W.L.R. 341, 355 (Q.B.). In personal injury cases, English courts have awarded prejudgment interest based upon the so-called short-term investment rate calculated as an average during the litigation. This rate reflects the return on funds deposited with courts during the pendency of litigation and is statutorily established by sections 6 and 7 of the Administration of Justice Act. The rate is fixed from time to time by rules made by the Lord Chancellor.