Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Undеr the applicable statutes existing in Texas-in 1910, the year in which the contracts in this case were made, the State Land Board was authorized to sell the public lands allocated to the Permanent Free School Fund on long-term contracts calling for a down payment of one-fortieth of the principal and annual payment of interest and principal. The time for payment of principal was extended periodically and the principal was never called due. In the event of nonpayment of interest, however, the statutes authorized the termination of the contract and the forfeiture of the lands to the State without the necessity of re-entry or judicial proceedings, the land again to become a part of the public domain and to be resold for the account of the school fund.
“In any cases where lands have been forfeited to the State for the non-payment of interest, the purchasers*499 or their vendees may have their claims reinstated on their written request, by paying into the treasury the full amount of interest due on such claim up to the date of reinstatement; provided, that no rights of third persons may have intervened. In all such cases the original obligations and penalties shall thereby become as binding as if no forfeiture had ever occurred.” Tex. Gen. Laws 1897, ch. 129, art. 4218f.
In 1941, the foregoing, provisions were amended. Among other things, the offering of forfeited land for sale on a subsequent sale date was made permissive instead of mandatory and a provision was added stating that the right to reinstate lands forfeited thereafter “must be exercised within five (5) years from the date of the forfeiture.” Tex Gen. & Spec. Laws 1941, ch. 191, § 3, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat., art. 5326. In 1951, the right of reinstatement was limited to the last purchaser from the State and his vendees or heirs. Tex. Gen. & Spec. Laws 1951, ch. 59, § 2, Vernon’s Ann. Ciy. Stat., art. 5326.
I.
Although neither party has raised the issue, we deal at the outset with a jurisdictional matter. The appeal in this case is here under 28 U. S. C. § 1254 (2) (1958 ed.).
In 1962 Congress expanded the scope of 28 U. S. C. § 2103 to apply to appeals from the United States courts of appeals.
II.
We turn to the merits. The. City seeks to bring this case within the long line of cases recognizing a distinction between contract obligation and remedy and permitting a modification of the remedy as long as there is no substantial impairment of the value of the obligation. Sturges v. Crowninshield,
The Court' of Appeals rejected the City’s contention. The Texas cases, according to the Court of Appeals, hold
We do not pause to consider further whether the Court of Appeals correctly ascertained the Texas law at the time these contracts were made, or to chart again the dividing line under federal law between “remedy” and “obligation,” or to determine the extent to which this line is controlled by state court decisions, decisions often rendered in contexts not involving Contract Clause considerations.
The decisions “put it beyond question that the prohibition is not an absolute one and is not to be read with literal exactness like a mathematical formula,” as Chief Justice Hughes said in Home Building & Loan Assn. v. Blaisdell,
Of course, the power of a State to modify or affect the obligation of contract is not without limit. “[WJhatever is reserved of state power must be consistent with the fair intent of the constitutional limitation of that power. The reserved power cannot be construed so as to destroy the limitation, nor is the limitation to be construed to destroy the reserved pоwer in its essential aspects. They must be construed in harmony with each other. This principle precludes a construction whieh would permit the State to adopt as its policy the repudiation of debts or . the destruction of contracts or the denial of means to enforce them.” Blaisdell, supra, at 439. But we think the objects of the Texas statute make abundantly clear that it impairs no protected right under the Contract Clause.
III.
Texas, upon entering the Union, reserved its entire public domain, one-half of which was set aside under the 1876 Constitution to finance a universal system of free public education.
The circumstances behind the 1941 amendment are well described in the Reports of the Commissioner of the General Land Office. The general purpose of the legislation enacted in 1941 was to restore confidence 'in the stability and integrity of land titles and to enable the State to protect and administer its property, in a
No less significant was the imbroglio over land titles in Texas. The long shadow cast by -perpetual reinstate- ' ment gave rise to a spate of litigation between forfeiting purchasers and the State or between one or more forfeiting purchasers and other forfeiting purchasers. See, e. g., Weaver v. Robison,
The Contract Clause of the Constitution does ■ not render Texas powerless to take effective and necessary
The State’s policy of quick resale of forfeited lands did not prove entirely successful; forfeiting purchasers who repurchased the lands again defaulted and other purchasers bought without any intention of complying with their contracts unless mineral wealth was discovered. The market for land contracted during the depression. 1938-1940 Rep. 12. These developments hardly to be expected or foreseen, operated to confer considerable advantages on the purchaser and his successors and a costly and difficult burden on the State. This Court’s decisions have never given a law which imposes unforeseen advantages or burdens on a contracting party constitutional immunity against change. Honeyman v. Jacobs,
The clouds on title arising from reinstatement rights were not without significance to the State’s vital interest in administering its school lands to produce maximum revenue and in utilizing its properties in ways best suited to the needs -of a growing population. The uncertainty
The program adopted at the turn of the century for the sale, settlement, forfeiture, and reinstatement of land was not wholly effectual to serve the objectives of the State’s land program many decades later. Settlement was no longer the objective, but revenues for the school fund, efficient utilization of public lands, and compliance with contracts of sale remained viable and important goals, as did the. policy of relieving purchasers from the hardships of temporary ádversity. Given these objectives and the impediments posed to their fulfillment by timeless reinstatement rights,. a statute of repose was quite clearly necessary. The measure taken to induce defaulting purchasers to comply with their contracts, requiring payment of interest in arrears within five years, was a mild one indeed, hardly burdensome to the pur
The judgment is
Reversed.
Notes
The Act of 1895 provided in pertinent part:
“See. 11. If upon the first day of November of any year the interest due on any obligation remains unpаid, the Commissioner of the General Land Office shall endorse on such obligation 'Land Forfeited,’ and shall cause an entry to that effect to be made on the account kept with the purchaser, and thereupon said land shall*499 thereby be forfeited to the State without the necessity of re-entry or judicial ascertainment, and shall revert to the particular fund to which it originally belonged, and be resold under the provisions of this act or any future law: . . . Provided, further, that nothing in this section contained shall be construed to inhibit the State from instituting such legal proceedings as may be necessary to enforce such forfeiture, or to recover the full amount of the interest and such penalties as may be due the State at the time such forfeiture occurred, or to protect any other right to such land, which suits may be instituted by the Attorney General or under his direction, in the proper , court of the county in which the land lies or of the county to which such county is-attached for judicial purposes: Provided, this section shall be printed on the back of receipt.” Tex. Gen. Laws 1895, ch. 47.
Art. 5326 now reads:
“If any portion of the interest on any sale should not be paid when due, the land shall be subject to forfeiture by the Commissioner entering on the wrapper containing the papers ‘Land Forfeited,’ or*500 words of similar import, with the date of such action and sign it officially, and thereupon the land and all payments shall be forfeited to the State, and the lands may bе offered for sale on a subsequent sale date. In any case where lands have heretofore been forfeited" or may hereafter be forfeited to the State for non-payment of interest, the purchasers, or their vendees, heirs or legal representatives, may have their claims re-instated on their written request by paying into the Treasury the full amount of interest due on such claim up to the date of re-instatement, provided that no. rights of ■ third persons may have intervened. The right to re-instate shall be limited to the last purchaser from the State or his vendees or their heirs or legal representatives. Such right must be exercised within five (5) years from the date of the forfeiture. ... In all cases the original obligations and penalties shall thereby become as binding as if no forfeiture had ever occurred. If any purchaser shall die, his heirs or legal representatives shall have one (1) year in which to make payment after the first day of November next after such death, before the Commissioner shall forfeit the land belonging to such deceased purchaser; and should such forfeiture be made by the Commissioner within said time, upon proper proof of such death being made, such forfeiture shall be set aside, provided that no rights of third persons may have intervened. Nothing in this Artiele shall inhibit the State from instituting such legal proceedings as may be necessary to enforce such forfeiture, or to recоver the full amount of the interest and such penalties as may be due the State at the time such forfeiture occurred, or to protect any other right to such land.”
The District Court’s judgment does not explicitly refer to the 1941 statute, but the Court of Appeals interpreted that Act to be the basis of the -judgment. We accept this interpretation.
“Cases in the courts of appeals may be reviewed by the Supreme; Court by the following methods: . . .
“(2) By appeal by a party relying on a State statute held by a court of appeals to be invalid as repugnant to the Constitution, treaties or laws of the Unitéd States, but such appeal shall preclude review by writ of certiorari at the instance of such appellant, and the review on appeal shall be restricted to the Federal questions presented . . . .”
28 U. S. C. §2103 (1958 ed., Supp. V) reads:
“If an appeal to the Supreme Court is improvidently taken from the decision of the highest court of a State, or of a United States court of appeals, in a case where the proper mode of a review is by petition for certiorari, this alone shall not be ground for dismissal; but the papers whereon the appeal was taken shall be regarded and acted on as a petition for writ of certiorari and as if duly presented to the Supreme Court at the time the appeal was taken. Where in such a case there appears to be no reasonable ground for granting a petition for writ of certiorari it shall be competent for the Supreme Court to adjudge to the respondent reasonable damages for his delay, and single or double costs.”
The predecessor of § 1254 (1), §240 (a) of the Act of February 13, 1925 (the Judges Act), was amended on the floor of the Senate to state that review by certiorari from the courts of appeals would carry the same scope of review “as if the cause had been brought there by unrestricted writ of error or appeal.” The word “unrestricted” was added immediately before § 240 (b) (now § 1254 (2)) was introduced, and the sponsor of both amendments, Senator Cum-mins, explained that review by appeal as provided in that section would be limited “to the Federal question, and that it .ought not to extend to the entire controversy that may be in the case,” as he envisaged would be the case with certiorari review. See 66 Cong. Rec. 2919 (remarks of Senator Cummins).
In Wilson v. Standefer,
The state cases on this issue are unclear. In Fristoe v. Blum,
In-regard to the right of reinstatement, Anderson v. Neighbors,
In addition to the State’s common-law right of rescission, Fristoe v. Blum, supra, the forfeiture statute states that nothing in the forfeiture provision “shall be construed'to inhibit the State from insti-
The provisions dealing with forfeiture, which is one of the State’s remedies in case of breach, and reinstatement, which is the purchaser’s remedy to curé his breach, both operate on the rights of a party after breach and thus concern the enforcement of the contract. In this sense they are remedial and the statute of repose challenged here is an alteration of remedy rather than obligation.
But decisions dating from Home Building & Loan Assn. v. Blaisdell,
In Veix v. Sixth Ward Building & Loan Association of Newark,
Texas Constitution, art. 7, § 2; Tex. Gen. & Spec. Laws 1935, ch. 312, § 2, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat., art. 5416.
“In order to perpetuate the dream of a universal system of free public education which was in the minds of most early Texans, the Constitution of 1876 provided that one-half of the Public Domain of the State, in addition to all funds, lands, and other property thereafter set apart for the support of the public schools, all the alternate sections of land reserved by the State out of grants made to railroads or to corporations, and all sums of money that may come to the State from the sale of any' portion of the same, should constitute*510 a perpetual school fund. The lands belonging to this fund were to be sold under such regulations as prescribed by law.
“Under these acts the Permanent Free School Fund has been granted more than 42,500,000 acres of land. The first sale of School Land was a 160-acre tract in Bowie County in 1874. Since 1905, the method of sale has been that of sealed competitive bidding, and most of the land making up this great endowment has now been sold and the sum of approximately $95,000,000 placed in the Permanent Free School Fund.” Giles, History and Disposition of Texas Public Domain, 14^15 (1945) .
E. g., Tex. Gen. Laws 1895, ch. 47, § 9; Tex. Gen. Laws 1919, ch. 163, § 4. In 1941, the required down payment was increased from one-fortieth to one-fifth of the purchase price, and the amount of the annual payments was reduced from one-fortieth of the assessed price to one-fortieth of the unpaid balance. Tex. Gen. & Spec. Laws 1941, ch. 191, § 2, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat., art. 5312.
E. g., Tex. Gen. & Spec. Laws 1941, ch. 191, § 1; Tex. Gen. & Spec. Laws 1951, сh. 59, § 1, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat., art. 5320a; Tex. Gen. & Spec. Laws 1961, ch. 399, § 1, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat., art. 5421c-9.
Tex. Gen. Laws 1919, ch. 163, § 5, aS amended by Tex. Gen. Laws 1925, ch. 130, § 3, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat., arts. 5306, 5311a.
1938-1940 Report of the Commissioner of the General Land Office 12 (hereafter cited as Rep.). See also Tex. Gen. Laws 1925, ch. 94; Tex. Gen. Laws 1926, ch. 25, §1, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat'., art. 5326a.
Under the Act of April 18, 1913, forfeiture for nonpayment of interest did not empower the. Commissioner to put land on the market again until after lapse of specific period during which the forfeiting purchaser was given a right to repurchase the tract. Johnson v. Robison,
“Under the Reappraisement Act of 1913,- forfeiting owners were allowed to repurchase their land at the reappraised value set by a board, and the accumulated delinquent interest on forfeited contracts was ignored.” 1938-1940 Rep. 12.
Gulf Production Co. v. State,
Tex. Gen. & Spec. Laws 1941, ch. 191, § 2, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat., art. 5312.
Tex. Gen. Laws 1905, ch. 103, § 4; Tex. Gen. Laws 1919, ch. 163, § 6, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat., arts. 5313, 5314. Giraud v. Robison,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I have previously had a number of occasions to dissent from judgments of this Court balancing away the'•First Amendment’s unequivocally guaranteed rights of free speech, press, assembly and petition.
“No State shall . . . pass any . . . Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts . . . ,”
a balancing which results in the State of Texas’ taking a man’s private property for public use without compensation in violation of the equally plain guarantee of the Fifth Amendment, made apрlicable to the States by the Fourteenth, that
“. . . private property [shall not] be taken for public use, without just compensation.”
The respondent, Simmons, is the loser and the treasury of the State of Texas the ultimate beneficiary of the Court’s action.
In 1910 Texas obligated itself by contract to sell the land here involved, the purchasers to pay one-fortieth of the price in cash, the balance due at unnamed dates, with annual interest at 3% of the unpaid balance to be paid each succeeding year. The contracts of sale approved on behalf of the State by the Texas Land Commissioner provided that the land was sold “in accordance with the provisions of” two Texas statutes.
“re-instated on . . . written request by paying into the Treasury the full amount of interest due on such claim up to the date of re-instatement, provided that no rights of third persons may have intervened.”3
Some 37 years after execution of the contracts involved in this case, interest payments fell into arrears and the State declared the contracts forfeited. Five years and two days later Simmons, having become the owner of the contracts by valid sale and assignment, tendered payment of all interest due
This Court now reverses the Court of Appeals and holds that Texas was justified in dishonoring its contractual obligation because of a state law passed in 1941 which attempted to change the obligation of this contract and the many others like it from one unconditionally allowing reinstatement, provided no rights of third parties had intervened, to one which cast off that.right unless “exercised within five (5) years from the date of the forfeiture.”
The Court does not deny that under Texas law the State’s contractual promise to permit reinstatement gave the purchaser a right which the State under its law was bound by the contract to honor.
II.
In its opinion the Court’s discussion of the Contract Clause and this Court’s past decisions applying it is brief. For the most part the Court instead discusses the diffi-. culties and regret which the Government of Texas has experienced on account of the contracts it entered. I therefore think that the first thing it is important to point out is that there is no support whatever in history or in
The Contract Clause was included in the sanie section of the Constitution which forbids States to pass bills of attainder or ex post facto laws. All thrеe of these provisions reflect ‘the strong belief of the Framers of the Constitution that men should not have to act at their peril, fearing always that the State might change its mind and alter the legal consequences of their past acts so as to take away their lives, their liberty or their property. James Madison explained that the people were “weary of the fluctuating policy” of state legislatures and wanted it made clear that under the new Government men could safely rely on States to keep faith with those who justifiably relied on their promises. The Federalist, No. 44, at 301 (Cooke ed. 1961).
The first great case construing the Contract Clause involved, much like the present case, an attempt by -a State to relieve itself of the duty of honoring land grants which it regretted having made. In Fletcher v. Peck,
“of course, the obligation of his contract. . . . Any law which releases a part of this obligation, must, in the literal sense of the word, impair it. . . .
“The words of the constitution, then, are express, and incapable of being misunderstood.”11
On other occasions this Court held that the Contract Clause prohibits a State from repudiating a tax exemp- - tion included by the State in a grant of land. Gordon v. Appeal Tax Court,
The Court does not purport to overrule any of these past cases, but I think unless overruled they require a holding that the Texas statute violates the Contract Clause. It is therefore at least a little surprising that the Court does not find it necessary to discuss them. Instead • the Court quotes a few abstract statements from some other cases, hardly a solid and persuasive basis for devitalizing one of the few provisions which the Framers deemed of sufficient importance to place in the original Constitution along with companion clauses forbidding States to pass bills of attainder and ex post jacto laws.
The cases the Court mentions do not support its reasoning. Home Building & Loan Assn. v. Blaisdell,
None of the other cases which the Court quotes or mentions in passing altered in any way the rule established in Fletcher v. Peck, supra, and adhered to in Blaisdell and thereafter, that a State may not pass a law repudiating contractual obligations without compensating the injured parties.
III.
To subvert the protection of the Contract Clause here, as well as the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments’ prohibition against taking private property for public use without just compensation,
The Court in its due process “reasonableness” formula, true to the principle of that indefinable standard, weighs wha,t it considers to be the advantages and disadvantages to Texas of enforcing the contract provision, against the advantages and disadvantages to the purchasers. The Court then concludes that in its -judgment the scales tip on the side of Texas and therefore refuses to give full faith to the constitutional provision. On the side of the purchasers the Court finds nothing that weighs much: the promise to reinstate was not “central” or “primary”; the contracts as viewed today seem to have been very generous to the buyers; buyers were probably not sub^ stantially-induced to enter into these contracts by the “defeasible right to reinstatement.” The Court tries to downgrade the importance of the reinstatement obligation in the contract by volunteering the opinion that this obligation “was not the central undertaking of the seller [Texas] nor the primary consideration for the buyer’s undertaking.” Why the Court, guesses this we are not told. My guess is different. This particular' provision was bound, I think, to have been a great inducement to prospective purchasers of lots and blocks of land that the State of Texas was understandably eager to sell for many reasons. It took purchasers to build up the population of Texas and thereby improve
The Court observes that it believes “[t]he Constitution is ‘intended to preserve practical and substantial rights, not to maintain theories.’ ”
Let us now look at some of the weights the Court throws on thé scales on the side of Texas: thousands of purchase contracts were forfeited from time to time by failure of purchasers to pay interest; forfeited claims under many of these contracts could be reinstated by purchasers “if and when the land became potentially productive of gas and oil”; some of the purchases were made for speculative purposes; purchasers thwarted efforts of Texas to repurchase the lands in order to.resell them at a higher value; the lands went up in value as the years rolled by, which caused Texas to “lose” millions of dollars; much litigation arose between the State and contract purchasers; the State’s policy of quick resale of forfeited lands, in order to cause rights of third parties to intervene, did not prove successful; the market for land contracted during the depression; clouds on titles arose because of rein-statemént rights on land which Texas had resold; “interest” and “necessity” prompted Texas to pass the 1941 law repudiating its contractual reinstatement rights; carrying out the obligations would have been “quite costly to the school fund and to the development of land use” ; when the land here involved was sold to El Paso in breach of thé State’s obligation to Simmons, El Paso was “ ‘in urgent need of expanding its sources of water’ ”; the State needed more money for its school fund and for efficient utilization of its public lands, money which it could get painlessly if.it was allowed to. repudiate these obligations, which were “impediments” to the State’s desire to raise money by reselling these lands for a higher price.
I do not believe that any or all of the things set out above on which the Court relies are reasons for relieving Texas of the unconditional duty of keeping its contrac
All this for me is just another example of the delusiveness of calling “balancing” a “test.” With its deprecatory view of the equities on the side of Simmons and other, claimants and its remarkable sympathy for the State, the Court through its balancing process states the .case in a way inevitably destined to bypass the Contract Clause and let Texas break its solemn obligation. As the Court’s
IV.
In spite of all the Court’s discussion of clouds on land titles and need for “efficient utilization” of land, the real issue in this case is not whether Texas has constitutional power to pass legislation to correct these problems, by limiting reinstatements to five years following forfeiture. I think that there was and is a constitutional way for Texas to do .this. But I think the Fifth Amendment forbids Texas to do so without compensating the holders of contractual rights for the interests it wants to destroy. Contractual rights, this Court has held, are property, and
The Court seems to say that because it was “necessary” to raise money and clear titles, Texas was not obligated to pay for rights which it took. I suppose that if Texas were building a highway and a man’s house stood in the way, it would be “necessary” to tear it down. Until today I had thought there could be no doubt that he would be entitled to just compensation. Yet the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments protect his rights no more nor less than they do those of people to whom Texas was contractually obligated. Texas’ “necessity” as seen by this Court is the mother of a regrettable judicial invention which I think has no place in our constitu
I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” U. S. Const., Amend. I. See, e. g., Scales v. United States,
Tex. Gen. Laws 1895, ch. 47; .Tex. Gen. Laws 1897, ch. 129, as amended, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat., art. 5326.
Tex. Gen. Laws 1897, ch. 129, art. 4218f, as amended, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat., art. 5326.
The tender was received by the Texas Land Commissioner five years and two days after the forfeiture. The record does not indicate when or how the tender was sent or presented.
The contract price for the 620.65 acres involved in this case was $1.50 per acre. The Texas Legislature in 1955 sold it to El Paso for the fair market value to. be appraised, “but no less than $6.50 per acre.” Tex. Gen. & Spec. Laws 1955, ch. 278.
Tex. Gen. & Spec. Laws 1941, ch. 191, § 3, as amended, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. Stat., art. 5326.
I cannot agree with the Court’s dictum that the Texas cases on this point are unclear. I do not think they could be much clearer. In Gulf Production Co. v. State,
“The provisions for reinstatement were in effect when Kidd purchased the land, and were embraced in the contract between the staté and Kidd when the latter purchased, and neither Kidd nor the state could thereafter arbitrarily and without the consent of the other write into the contract any provision or condition varying, restricting, or enlarging the terms thereof.”
The court also observed:
“The primary object of the state in placing its public domain upon the market was the securing of actual settlers on these lands. The revenues to be derived from sales was but a secondary consideration, a mere incident to the greater purpose of supplying homes to those who sought and lived in them in good faith. The wisdom of this policy of our forefathers has never been seriously questioned, and the provision for the reinstatement of sales forfeited was an expression of the spirit of thát policy. It was right and just that those who had settled upon and improved the state’s lands in response -to the invitation of the state, and who had endured the hardships incident to such settlement, and the privations incident to such improve*521 ment, should be given an opportunity to retrieve their lands when forfeited by reason of temporary misfortunes and the consequent inability to meet their payments in. strict compliance with their obligations. Forfeitures by statute or contract are not favored. They must be viewed with a cold and literal scrutiny, that the injury wrought may be held to the minimum. On the other hand, statutes or contracts designed to reheve from the rigors of forfeiture are looked upon warmly and construed liberally, so as to afford the maximum relief. And this reciprocal rule applies as well to the great state of Texas as to its humblest citizen.”231 S. W., at 131 . Cf. State v. Walden,325 S. W. 2d 705 (Tex. Civ. App.).
Fletcher v. Peck also made clear that the Constitution forbids impairment of a contract whether the contract be executed or, as here, executory.
See also, e. g., Honeyman v. Jacobs,
The Blaisdell opinion said,
“Chief Justice Marshall pointed out the distinction between- obligation and remedy. Sturges v. Crowninshield, supra, p. 200. Said he: ‘The distinction between the obligation of a contract, and the remedy given by the legislature to enforce that obligation, has been taken at the bar, and exists in the nature of things. Without impairing the obligation of .the contract, the remedy may certainly be modified as the wisdom of the nation shall direct.’ And in Von Hoffman v. City of Quincy, supra, pp. 553, 554, the general statement above quoted was limited by the further observation that ‘It is competent for the States to change the form of the remedy, or to modify it otherwise, as they may see fit, provided no substantial right secured by the contract is thereby impaired. No attempt has been made to fix definitely the line between alterations of the remedy, which are to be deemed legitimate, and those which, under the form of modifying the remedy, impair substantial rights. Every case must be determined upon its own circumstances.’ ”
Later, in Honeyman v. Jacobs,
“The legislature may modify, limit or alter the remedy for enforcement of a contract without impairing its obligation, but in so doing, it may not deny all remedy or so circumscribe the еxisting remedy with conditions and restrictions as seriously to impair the value of the right.”
Chief Justice Hughes in the Jacobs case also referred to numerous past cases as having drawn this distinction, including among them
Ibid.
Id., at 440. Mr. Justice Brandéis in discussing Blaisdell the following year said that the statute in that case had been upheld because it had been- found “to preserve substantially the right” of the mortgagee to obtain payment. Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v. Radford,
One scholar who made a study of all the decisions of this Court concerning the Contract Clause had this to say about Blaisdell:
“The Blaisdell case, in the light of subsequent decisions, appears now to have decided merely the very narrow question of the validity of the particular statute under the-specific circumstances there existing. So far as any general rule may be said to have emerged, it is merely an apparently limited extension of the principle that reasonable modification of the remedy, especially if adequate time is left for compliance, does not constitute an impairment of the obligation of contracts. If any advance has been made, it consists in that economic conditions may create an emergency in which a scrupulously drafted statute may call upon the police power to grant wide discretion to courts in extending temporary and conditional relief, to debtors.” Wright, The Contract Clause of the Constitution, 119.
Compare the following language of Mr. Justice Brandeis in Wright v. Vinton Branch,
“[I]t is urged that the limitations here placed upon the .enforcement of the mortgage аre not merely a modification of the remedy recognized as permissible. Compare Home Building & Loan Assn. v. Blaisdell,290 U. S. 398 , 434.”
I dissented in Wood v. Lovett,
None of the cases mentioned by the Court involved legislation by which a State attempted to repudiate its own contractual obligation without giving compensation, nor did any of them come near suggesting or implying that a State iñight do so. Honeyman v. Jacobs,
See Part IV, pp. 533-535, infra.
See, e. g., Rochin v. California,
Quoting Faitoute Iron & Steel Co. v. City of Asbury Park,
See Gulf Production Co. v. State,
The Court’s opinion bears an uncanny resemblance to one I. once said I feared might be rendered some day if this Court continued to decide cases by “balancing.” See Black, The Bill of Rights, 35 N. Y. U. L. Rev. 865, 877-878, reprinted in Cahn ed., The Great Rights, 57-59. I there said, evidently too optimistically, “Of course, I would not decide this case this way nor do I think any other judge would so decide it today.”
