6 La. Ann. 146 | La. | 1851
The judgment of the court was pronounced by
The plaintiff claims a thousand dollars, being the balance of the price of fifteen soldiers’ discharges, or warrants for bounty land, earned by them by military services, during the late war with Mexico. He alleges, that his assignor, Joseph Gorman, sold them to the late William D.McCright for fifteen hundred dollars, of which a thousand dollars remains unpaid.
The defendant filed a general denial. Although there was no plea to that effect, the district court dismissed the suit, on the ground that all traffic in soldiers’ discharges is forbidden by law; and, therefore, that there was no legal consideration for the sale, even if it existed.
John Kay ser proves, that Gorman was a runner for the deceased McCright, to procure soldiers’ discharges and warrants. The witness was employed by the latter to write for him, and says, the runners made more than the clerks. He proves that McCright paid Gorman at his office, in his presence, $200, and asked him if he wanted more, and said he still owed him about thirteen hundred dollars.
Joseph Bellow proves, that he was present eight or ten days before McCright’s death, when he paid Gorman two hundred dollars, and said there was a thousand dollars still left. He knows that Gorman acted hr McCright in purchasing soldiers’ warrants.
Edward Earle was in in McCiight’s office about a week before his death, when he and Gorman were making a settlement about land-warrants, and heard McCright state that he owed him about a thousand dollars, and requested him to come the next week and he would pay him. He knew that Gorman had money and was a runner for McCright.
These witnesses were subjected to a very rigid cross-examination; but we do not see anything elicited to discredit their evidence. It is true, the most material part of their testimony is to admissions merely of McCright, which, undoubtedly, is the weakest kind of evidence. But we are unable to conclude that these three men have all sworn falsely; and without so doing it is impossible to come to any other conclusion than that the deceased did admit the indebtedness now claimed, to the amount of a thousand dollars, shortly before his death.
The 9th section of the act of Congress passed in 1847, giving bounty lands to our soldiers for services in the Mexican war, declared that “ all sales, mortgages or other instruments of writing, going to affect the title or claim to any bounty right made or executed prior to the issue of such warrant or certificate, shall be null and void to all intents and purposes whatsoever.”
This clause in the act evidently had two objects in view. 1st. To protect the soldier and his family against improvident dispositions of his bounty land; and 2d. To protect the Government against any claim but that of the soldier.
Upon the return of our army from Mexico, there is no doubt the improvidence of many of the soldiers placed them in the-most necessitous circumstances, in which a small amount of money was of far more service to them than all the land due to them by the Government. The forms, too, of obtaining the land occasioned delay and trouble, which their necessities could not brook. Therefore, they disposed of their certificates of service and discharge, giving a power of attorney to comply with the forms for obtaining their warrants, and to sell the same. Speculators purchased in this manner, with a perfect knowledge that the soldier might repudiate the transaction, but entire confidence that he would not do so, or if he did, under the belief that the purchaser would have a personal claim against the soldier for the money advanced. And thus the soldiers’ claims became articles of traffic in market, and the evidences of them have been purchased extensively by speculators, probably with great advantage to many of the soldiers reduced to the most distressing poverty, at a distance from their homes. No law forbids the traffic in the evidences of these claims between third persons, and there is no reason for annulling the transactions between them, which were made with a perfect knowledge of the provisions of the law, and all the risks that were to be incurred. Good faith should exist and be enforced between those whose transactions do not fall within the policy of the law.
There is nothing immoral or improper in the purchase of the soldier’s claims from the soldier himself. The law merely affords him and some of his heirs protection against improvident contracts. The contract against which he is protected is neither malum per se nor fraudulent. A mere pei’sonal privilege is accorded to him and some of his heirs to repudiate his contract, of which they may or may not avail themselves, as they think proper. And we have no hesitation in saying further, that if money was advanced to the soldiei1, by way of payment in a sale, or for mortgage, pledge or in any other manner upon his certificate of discharge, and he should afterwards, under the act of Congress, claim the nullity of the transaction, the courts would hold him personally accountable for the money actually paid or advanced to him. It would be a case to which the equity of article 1787 of our code would apply so forcibly that it could not be disregarded.
The defendant himself has not plead that the transactions of his deceased brother with Gorman wex-e illegal, much loss immoral, but mei'ely denies any indebtedness growing out of those transactions. The record shows no opposition of the soldiers, or their heirs, to the titles to the land or money, the reward of their services; and we are bound to believe from the evidence that the estate
It is therefore decreed, that the judgment of the district court be reversed, and that the plaintiff recover from the defendant one thousand dollars, with interest from the judicial demand, and costs in both courts.