1 Abb. 261 | Ga. | 1868
In 1863, John Neal loaned twenty-five hundred dollars, in “Cmfederate Treasury Notes,” to Milner, the Bankrupt, for which amount he made his promissory note to Neal. Subsequently, Neal, in making a disposition of some of his property among his children and grand children, gave this note to his son-in-law, Samuel Bailv, in trust for minor children of Susan Beall, a daughter of Neal.
Bailey, as trustee, sought to prove this claim against the estate of the Bankrupt. Counsel for the latter objected : First, because the consideration for the contract was Confederate Treasury notes ; Secondly, because these notes were borrowed for the purpose of hiring a substitute to serve in the Confederate army, with the knowledge of Neal; and that the notes were so appropriated, and the substitute hired therewith did go into the said army.
Evidence being heard on these points, the Register rejected the claim, and the proceedings were certified to the Judge. The conclusion at which the Register arrived was approved.
The party whose claim was thus rejected, petitioned the Judge for a re-hearing, on the ground that the testimony adduced — in proof of the second objection in particular— was wholly insufficient to warrant the decision of the Register, or affirmance by the Court. A new hearing was granted before the Register. The testimony on both sides is long and contradictory, with the exception that all agree that the loan was made in Confederate Treasury notes.
The Register adhered to the course of reasoning previously entertained by him, and gave the same judgment as before. Mr. Baily being still dissatisfied with the ruling, the matter was again certified for review.
From the views which I entertain of the legal principles involved in this proceeding, it is not essential to an approval
“No State shall enter into any treaty, alliance, or confederation ; grant letters of marque and reprisal; coin money; emit bills of credit,” etc. Const. U. S., Art. 1, sec. x, p. 1.
No disquisition on the origin of bills of credit, or history of their rise and progress, or of their fall, under the inhibition just cited, would aid in the determination of this case. Therefore, I will but remark that the great minds that framed the Constitution were, from recent experience, aware of the blighting effect on the domestic and foreign commerce of the States, and on the welfare of the whole country — which flowed from the almost indiscriminate issuing of these bills by the colonies, and afterwards by the States, as money among the people — to suffer its perpetuation, or to longer tolerate it to the States; and time has proven the wisdom of their statesmanship.
So far as I have been able to ascertain, all paper answering to bills of credit put forth during the War of Independence were promises to pay. But, be this so or not, the Supreme Court of the United States, in Craig et. al., v. The State of Missouri, (4 Peters, 410,) held that a paper currency emitted by a State, and receivable in discharge of all debts and taxes due the State, and of all salaries and fees of office, etc., etc., — and pledging the faith and funds of the State for the redemption of these paper issues — was within the Constitutional prohibition.
The same Court, in Briscoe v. The Bank of the Common
Taking this definition, as imparted by the highest judicial tribunal in the land, as a guide, it will conduct to a correct conclusion of the endeavor to ascertain whether these treasury notes, or bills, issued by the so-called Confederate States, fall within it.
Although it is declared that no State shall emit bills of credit, yet, if two or more of the States ally themselves, or confederate together, and on their faith and credit issue these bills, I apprehend the inhibition would apply with a force equally as direct and controlling against the allied or confederated States as against a single one.
Here is a copy of one of these Treasury notes:
“Fundable in eight per cent, stock or bonds of the Confederate States. Six months after a ratification of a treaty of peace between the Confederate States and the United States, the Confederate States of America will pay five dollars to bearer. Richmond, September 2, 1861.
Receivable in payment of all dues, except duties.”
Then follow the names of a Register and Treasurer.
One decision — and only one — on this subject has been brought to my notice ; that is the case of Bank of Tennessee v. Union Bank of Louisiana, lately tried before Judge Dubell, and a jury, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana, and published in the American Law Review for January, 1868.
The Judge is there reported to have said, in his charge to the jury, “That Confederate Treasury notes issued by said Government, and circulated as money, were bills of credit within the meaning of the Constitution; and, therefore, an unlawful issue.” The views which present themselves to my
During the latter part of the year 1860, and in the early part of 1861, South Carolina, Georgia, Louisiana, Virginia, and other States, by similar modes, called on the people to send delegates to meet in Convention. Accordingly, these Conventions assembled, and each passed an ordinance of secession, as it is generally termed, by which ceremony, these Conventions severally adventured to withdraw the States from the Federal Union, and to release the people from their subjection to the laws of the land, and their allegiance to the nation. The Constitutional State governments were overthrown, and superseded by spurious and revolutionarf governments. The setting up of a pretended Central or General Government, styled, “The Confederate States of America,” followed ; and, soon thereafter, open rebellion and war of portentous magnitude burst upon the nation. The Prize Cases, 2 Black 635, Shortridge v. Mason, United States Circuit Court, District of North Carolina. Opinion of the Court delivered by Chief Justice Chase. 2 Am. Law Review 95.
In the seceded States, (so-called) the sovereign authority being, for the time, displaced, consequently there ceased to be, within any of them, a government under the Constitution of the United States. Then, can it be said that the usurping power could pledge the faith of the State by a public law, or otherwise, for the payment of the notes or bills issued by the so-called Confederate States of America ? Or could this pretended central government bind any of those States for the redemption of these notes ?
But these Confederate Treasury notes or bills do not pretend to have been emitted by a State, or a combination of States of the Union; nor can it be inferred from indicia found upon them — nor can their recondite history show— that they emanated from the sovereign power, and on the faith of any of the States. And thus it will be seen, that they did not possess the characteristic attributes of bills of
Notwithstanding these notes or bills were not, in my judgment, bills of credit within the prohibition contained in the tenth section of the first article of the Constitution, yet they were none the less illegal; they were issued by a pretended government, organized in the name of certain States, by subjects and citizens of the United States, and who, at the very time, were in rebellion against their rightful government, and whose design and object was to “dismember and destroy it.” The Prize Cases — Shortridge v. Mason, supra.
It may not be wholly unimportant to remark that it is a well established doctrine of the Courts that a wide distinction exists between an executed and an executory contract. In the former case, Courts of justice will not, as a general rule, interfere between the parties, to set the contract aside, but will leave them where they placed themselves; and this, too, notwithstanding the contract be, in part only, founded on an illegal consideration.
Nevertheless, any person owning property may, if no fraud be put upon him, and no misrepresentation, or circumvention or covin enter into the transaction, alienate it conditionally or absolutely, for what currency or thing he chooses, or even given it away. But an executory contract, like this claim of Bailey, the trustee, nevertheless, will not be enforced. The principles of law directly applicable to executory contracts, based upon illegality, were long since determined by the Courts, both in England and in this country. One case only will be referred to. The doctrine on this subject, as laid down by Mr. Justice Washington, in Toler v. Armstrong, 4 Wash., 296, is so succinctly announced that it is best it be given in his own words: “ I understand the rule, as now already settled, to be that, where the contract grows immediately out of, and is connected with an
illegal or immoral act, a Court of Justice will not lend its aid to enforce it. And if the contract be, in part only, connected with the illegal transaction, and growing immediately out of it, though it be, in fact, a new contract, it is equally tainted by it.”
If this demand of twenty-five hundred dollars were allowed, the dividends of the creditors, arising from the assets would, of course, be diminished that amount; and this without any fault on their part, but wholly through the illegal dealings of the bankrupt and Heal. Bankrupt Law, section 22.
I may add that the law, in allowing a guilty party to take advantage of the illegality of his own act — as is here done by the bankrupt — does so, not with a view of conferring a benefit on him, but upon grounds of public policy, and also in this case, that injustice may not be done to the creditors of the bankrupt.
The decision of the Register is approved. The Clerk will certify this opinion to Mr. Register Murray.