CHARLESTON – The Administrative Office of the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia has set the interest rate at 7.00 percent for judgments and decrees entered during the 2016 calendar year.
A law passed in the 2006 legislative session requires the Administrative Office of the Supreme Court annually to determine the interest rate to be paid upon judgments or decrees for the payment of money, including pre-judgment interest.
The law, West Virginia Code 56-6-31, went into effect on Jan. 1, 2007. It requires the pre-judgment interest rate to be three percentage points above the Fifth Federal Reserve District secondary discount rate in effect on the second day of January of the year in which the judgment or decree is entered. The law also says the rate cannot exceed 11 percent per year or be less than seven percent per year.
The main bank for the Fifth Federal Reserve District is the Fifth Federal Reserve Bank in Richmond, Va. That bank’s secondary discount rate on January 2, 2015, was 1.5 percent.
When combined with the statutorily mandated increase of three percentage points, this would create an interest rate for the year 2016 that would be less than the statutorily mandated minimum of seven percent, with the result that the rate of interest for West Virginia decrees and judgments for the payment of money entered on or after Jan. 1, 2016, is the minimum 7.00 percent.
The law also requires the Administrative Office to notify promptly the courts and members of the West Virginia State Bar of the rate of interest in effect for each calendar year.
The Supreme Court has notified the Bar and posted the rate information on the West Virginia Judiciary website, News & Publications page.
The public may contact Administrative Counsel Kirk Brandfass at the Administrative office of the Supreme Court for further information at (304) 558-0145.