Rodgers v. Bass

46 Tex. 505 | Tex. | 1877

Moore, Associate Justice.

On the 3d day of April, 1852, the appellant, who then resided in the State of Delaware, by letter of attorney, duly executed, authorized James A. Mason to sell a tract of six hundred and sixty-seven acres of land belonging to her, situated in Gonzales county, Texas. On the 20th of February, 1860, said Mason, (who then, and subsequently until his death, in the year 1864, resided in Harris county, Texas,) sold and conveyed" said land, under and by virtue of the authority thus conferred, to the appellee, J. B. Bass, in consideration of one thousand dollars cash down, and two notes of said Bass, payable to his, said Mason’s, order, for |883.75 each, with interest at ten per cent, per annum from date, due in one and two years from said February 20, 1860, and secured by a mortgage upon the land.

In the year 1858, appellant removed from Delaware to the county of Camden, State of Eew Jersey, where she has ever since resided, never at any time having been in the State of *512Texas. In the month of February, 1862, Bass, at the solicitation and special request of said Mason, he being still the holder of said notes, paid to him, in said county of Gonzales, in Confederate treasury notes, the full amount of principal and interest then due on the note, payable February 20,1861.

It appears, from the evidence found in the record, that at the time said payment was made, Confederate currency had just come into circulation in this State, and was received and used in all business transactions as money, no difference being made in business transactions between it and coin; that property of all kinds could be purchased with it at the same rates at which it was held in specie; that Bass had taken the Confederate money, which he paid Mason a few days previous to its payment, for beef cattle sold by him, at “ specie prices.”

As Mason died while the war between the Southern and Roríhem States was still being waged, it may be inferred that appellant may not have been fully informed of the payment of the note for some time after the renewal of intercourse between Texas and Hew Jersey. Be this as it may, the first knowledge which we can say Bass had of objection by appellant to the payment thus made, was by the bringing of this suit, August 27,1872, whereby she claims that the full amount of principal and interest of both of said notes was unpaid, and belonged to, and justly due her, and asked judgment for the same, and for the foreclosure of said mortgage.

Subsequently to the commencement of the suit, the note, which fell due in 1862, was paid. The controversy is now, therefore, solely in reference to the other note, and turns upon the determination of the inquiry, whether the payment of it to Mason, by appellee, at the time this was done, in Confederate treasury notes, should be held to be a valid payment and satisfaction of the debt evidenced by it.

The circumstances which brought, what is usually called Confederate money, into circulation; the character of the transaction of which, so to speak, it was an essential part; the popular feeling of the great mass of the people where *513it circulated, and belief that it was necessary, as long as possible, to give it currency, and thereby aid the Government by which it was issued; and, notwithstanding this feeling, its fluctuations, and rapid depreciation, and ultimate entire worthlessness, especially while the fierce passions aroused by the struggle which brought it into existence and kept it in circulation, and while its heart-burnings and bitter memories still inflamed the passions and clouded the judgment,—were well calculated to lead to differences of opinion in regard to it, and the light in which transactions into which it entered should be viewed by the courts when called to act upon them. These differences have been found in our own court, as well as elsewhere. It seems, however, to be now generally admitted that its use in private transactions, between parties where it circulated, did not affect such transactions with any taint of illegality or fraud; that within the “ Confederacy” it was the only circulating medium, and was generally received and passed as money, or token of value, by which values were to a great extent fixed, and debts generally paid and exchanges effected; that it had a value, though greatly varying in different localities and at different periods, as compared with silver and gold coin, which, for the time, were commodities for trade rather than money for circulation, and, therefore, neither executory nor executed contracts can be held illegal or void, because based upon it; and where of importance, in adjudicating such contracts, its value at the time and place where the contract was made should be shown, and that the effect of payments and investments in it by agents, representatives, and trustees must depend, in the main, upon the facts and circumstances of each particular transaction. (Atkin v. Mooney, Phil. (N. C.) Law, 31; Robinson v. International Life Assurance Society, 42 New York, 54; Davis v. Mississippi Central Railroad Co., 46 Miss., 552; Martin v. Horton, 1 Bush., 629; Rodes v. Patilla, 5 Bush., 271; Emmerson v. Mallit, Phil. (N. C.) Eq., 234; Walker v. Page, 21 Graft., 636; Thorington v. Smith, 8 Wall., 1; Myers’s *514Ex’rs, v. Zittelle, 21 Gratt., 733; Hale v, Wall, 22 Gratt., 424; Green v. Seirzer, 40 Miss., 500; Planters’ Bank v. Union Bank, 16 Wall., 483; Bond v. Perkins, 4 Heisk., 564; Westbrook v. Davis, 48 Ga., 471; Suber v. Kent, 5 West Va., 96.)

It necessarily follows Rom the rulings in the cases just cited, now generally regarded as correct, that when a party, capable of contracting, has made a contract, which is free from all fraud or imposition, he will not be permitted to avoid it, whether it is executed or executory, on the ground that the consideration for it was Confederate money. But when a contract was made, or money collected by one who acts not for himself, but as the representative, agent, or trustee of another, the validity of the contract, or effect of the payment in discharge of the debt, depends upon the fact, whether the power, under which such party acts, authorized him to take Confederate money, or whether the circumstances surrounding the transaction, or the previous action of the principal, justifies the party dealing with him in concluding that the agent had authority to exercise lfis discretion in the premises.

As appellant brings this suit to recover upon the notes given Mason by appellee in part payment for the land, it must be inferred, whether it appears upon the face of the letter of attorney or not, that Mason was authorized to sell upon the terms he did, and to take the notes, payable to Ms own order, for the deferred payment. But, as it is inferable from the evidence that the equitable right to the notes was in appellant, and the proceeds from them, when collected, belonged to appellant, if the one here in controversy has not been satisfied and extinguished by appellee’s alleged payment of it to Mason, as appellant’s agent or as the legal holder and payee of it, the judgment against her should be reversed.

Appellant’s right to a recovery in the case involves the determination of one or both of the following questions:

First: It being conceded that appellant was the equitable *515owner of the note, and entitled to the money for which it was given, and being a citizen of one of the States adhering to tire Union at war with the Confederate States, did Mason have authority to collect or receive the money due upon it at the time it was paid ?
Second: If Mason was authorized to collect the note, was he authorized to receive Confederate money in payment thereof, and would such payment relieve the maker from liability to the party to whom the note equitably belonged and for whom the payee held it merely in trust ?

It cannot be questioned that it is a universally-recognized general rule of international law, that war suspends for the time all friendly intercourse between citizens of hostile States; that while it continues no kind of business or commercial intercourse can be legitimately transacted or carried on by citizens of the one with those of the other, unless specially authorized by government; and so general and pervading is this principle, that war is held to dissolve ipso faeto commercial partnerships existing at. the breaking out of hostilities between citizens of States at war with each other, and to revoke or supersede authority of agents in regard to transactions not agreed upon and in part executed, and especially such as confer authority to buy and sell properly. But, nevertheless, it seems to be equally well settled that war does not revoke or suspend authority for the collection of a debt, given previously to the beginning of hostilities, by a citizen of one of the hostile States to an agent, who, as well as the debtor, resides in the other. (Clarke v. Morey, 10 Johns., 73 : Paul v. Christie, 4 H. & McH., 161; Denniston v. Imbrie, 3 Wash. C. C., 396; Mouseaux v. Urquhart, 19 La., 485; Griswold v. Waddington, 15 Johns., 64; Buchanan v. Curry, 19 Id., 137; Coon v. Penn, 1 Pet., 496; Ward v. Smith, 7 Wall., 44; Fisher v. Krutz, 9 Kan., 501; Grover v. Carter, 3 Hawk., 328; and cases previously cited.)

What, then, was the effect of the payment of the note to Mason in Confederate money? The power to collect the *516note may be inferred from the authority to sell the land and take the note in payment for it; and as no instructions were given, requiring its payment exclusively in gold and silver coin, if it had been paid before the war between the States began, it cannot be denied that Mason would have been authorized to have received in payment of it current bank-bills, or other tokens generally taken and received in payment of debts and current in business transactions as money. (United States Bank v. Bank of Georgia, 10 Wheat., 347.) The creditor, of course, has the right to exact the payment of his debt in such money as the law declares to be a legal tender. Why, then, may the agent, who is authorized merely in general terms to collect, without anything being said as to the character of the money in which he is to do so, receive payment in that which is not a legal tender ? Unquestionably, because, by the authority given the agent, without restriction as to the kind of money he shall receive, it must be inferred that the principal intended, and his agent, as well as the debtor, under-, stood, that he'was willing for his debt to be paid in such bank-bills, or other currency, as was generally taken and received by others in payment of debts. The legal inference from the authority given an agent to collect a debt is, that he is authorized to receive money, current and at par with coin, usually received in like transactions by the community in general where the debt is paid. The agent, therefore, has no authority to sell, or barter and exchange the note to the debtor, or any one else, for drafts, bills of exchange, or any kind of personal or real properly. The inference to be deduced from the general authority given the agent to collect is, that he must do so in money. But in what kind of money shall this be done ? Is it to be understood that, in such cases, the word “money” is to be taken in its most restricted and limited sense, and should be held to refer to such gold and silver coin, or notes and bills, as are, by the Constitution and laws, declared to be a legal tender; or is it to be taken and interpreted according to its popular use, and held to authorize the *517receipt of currency and bills recognized in general circulation where the debt is to be paid, as money? We answer, in general, unless the language of the power is qualified or restricted, it should be held to import the latter. It therefore shows that such an agent is authorized by the power to receive whatever is generally recognized and treated in business transactions as money, and is at par, and readily convertible into money, made by law a legal tender, for the payment of debts, or where the discount upon it is so little as to have no material effect upon its general circulation and value.

Tested by these rules, we are of opinion that Confederate money, at the time and place of its payment to Mason, must be held to have been current tokens, or bills, used and passing in business transactions as money at their par value; and hence, it should ordinarily be inferred that an agent would have been authorized to receive them, unless forbidden to do so by his principal, or restrained by express or clearly implied limitation in the power under which he acts. (Story, Prom. Notes, sec. 500, et seq.; Miller v. Race, 1 Burr, 452; Grant v. Vaughan, 3 Id., 1516; Gorger v. Mirville, 3 B. & C., 45; Mann v. Mann, 1 John. Ch., 230; Coleman v. Wingfield, 4 Heisk., 133, and case previously cited.)

It is claimed, however, that the payment of this note in Confederate money is not to be regarded in the same light as if appellant had been a citizen of the Confederacy. It is argued, as appellant was a citizen of the State of Rew Jersey, where Confederate money would have been entirely worthless, and if not, as it would have been in violation of law for her to attempt to have made use of it, if it had been remitted to her, and as it cannot be supposed that she desired to lay up as an investment note put in circulation by, and having no security for their payment but the promise of an illegal and revolutionary government, as regarded by the loyal citizens of Rew Jersey, it is not to be supposed that appellant would have, received such money in payment of the note, if it had been tendered directly to her. This interpretation of the *518power of collecting agents for non-residents of the Confederate States seems to have received the approval of the Supreme Court of the United States, (Fritz v. Stone, October Term, 1874,) and also of the Court of Appeals of Virginia, (Alley v. Rogers, 19 Gratt., 381.) In both of these cases, however, it appears that there had been considerable depreciation in the value of Confederate money before its payment to the agents. The authority of Alley v. Rogers seems also, to some extent, weakened by the case of Pridgeon v. Williams, 21 Gratt., 251, in which the collection of a judgment in favor of a non-resident, by his attorneys, in Confederate money, before it had depreciated but little in value, was held to be valid. It may be also noted that in Fritz v. Stone, it is said: “ The authority to collect was based on the power to remit, and that, it was impracticable, as well as unlawful, to do.” It is certainly not to be presumed that it is necessary or even usual for the agent to remit the identical money he receives to the foreign creditor. But he will almost invariably do this by bill of exchange, whether the debt has been collected in bank-bills or coin: and during the war it would have been just as illegal for the agent to have remitted gold as Confederate money. But had it been remitted, it is a conceded fact, that at the date of the payment to Mason, Confederate money was worth, in the city of blew York, as much as the legal-tender notes of the United States, and was as little below par with gold as these notes have been from that day to this.

It is not necessary for us at present to determine whether the agent, under similar circumstances as in this case, would have had authority to receive Confederate money in satisfaction of a note payable to a resident of that part of the United States with which we were carrying on war. This note was payable to a citizen of this State. It is true, appellee knew that it was given for land which belonged to appellant; but he is not to be supposed to be cognizant of the object and purpose of appellant and her attorney in having the note made payable to the agent. Being payable to Mason, he did *519not need a power of attorney from appellant authorizing him to collect it. Unless appellee was notified, or had information from which he should have concluded that, though the note was payable to and in possession of Mason, its payment to him would operate as a fraud upon appellant, he certainly could make no opposition to Mason’s collecting it in such manner as he thought fit. (Murrell v. Jones, 40 Miss., 565.)

It has been frequently held by this court that a debtor cannot resist a suit upon a note by the party in possession of it, with the apparent legal right, on the ground that he is not in fact the owner, but that in equity it belongs to some one else. (Thompson v. Cartwright, 1 Tex., 87; De Cordova v. Atchison, 13 Tex., 372; Butler v. Robertson, 11 Tex., 142; Wimbish v. Holt, 26 Tex., 672.)

Had the courts been open when appellee paid the note, Mason could have forced Mm to pay it; and surely it cannot be held that one may not voluntarily discharge a debt to a party to whom the law, if appealed to, would give a judgment. From the evidence, there seems no reason to doubt that appellee acted with good faith and entire fairness. This is not a case of an attempt to be relieved from a just debt by its payment in a depreciated and worthless currency, through the pressure of popular sentiment or military orders. It was made on the solicitation of the payee and holder of the note, at a time when Confederate money was eagerly sought for by almost every one, and when it could be readily invested in' property on the same terms as gold and silver coin; and although appellant may have derived no benefit from it, to require appellee to pay the debt a second time, would be palpably unjust. If appellee has cause of complaint against any one, it is of her agent, and not appellee.

The judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

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