61 N.C. 200 | N.C. | 1867
The bond upon which the suit was brought was for $2,000, dated 2 January, 1865, with condition reciting the hire of two slaves until 25 December, 1865, for the sum of "two hundred dollars," etc., and concluding as usual. Upon the trial below it was agreed that the slaves remained in the service of the defendant until the Federal troops reached Asheville, about 25 April, 1865, when they went off with, or under the influence of those troops; also, that it was proclaimed (201) by the plaintiffs at the hiring that such money would be required as would pay the debts against the estate, and that none other would be required; and in this connection a large debt to the Bank of Cape Fear at Asheville was referred to, and perhaps other debts; it was also agreed that the notes of that bank could, at the time of the trial, be purchased at 25 cents in the dollar.
The parties submitted to his Honor the question as to the amount that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover, especially whether they were entitled to recover for the entire year, or only for the time that the slaves served; also, whether defendant could pay in such funds as would pay the bank debt as above.
His Honor gave judgment, to be discharged by the payment of fifty dollars in specie, etc. From this judgment both parties appealed. *170 1. "Dollar" means the representative of 100 cents; Bouvier, and Webster, title Dollar. Such must be taken to be the meaning of that word in this bond, a meaning not to be varied by parol.
2. The ordinance of 18 October, 1865, so far as it affects this fundamental law of written contracts, is in direct conflict with the Federal Constitution. See Federalist, No. 44, Elliott's Debates passim; Sturgesv. Crowninshield, 4 Wheat., 122; Green v. Biddle, 8 Wheat., 1; Baltimore,etc., v. Nesbit, 10 How., 395; Curran v. Arkansas, 15 How., 304;Hicks v. Hotchkiss, 7 Johns. Ch., 297; Commercial Bank v. Chambers, 8 Sm. M., 9; Smith v. Morse,
The bond upon its face is for $200. But it is stated in the case agreed that it was proclaimed at the hiring, as the terms thereof, that such money would be taken as would pay the debts of the estate; and special reference was made to a debt due the bank, which could be paid in its own notes, and that they were worth twenty-five cents in the dollar. If, therefore, we can look behind the bond to see what the contract was, it would seem that justice would be arrived at by a judgment for one-fourth of the amount of the bond.
The question then is, can we look for the agreement of the parties outside of the bond? If an agreement is reduced to writing, then the writing is the best evidence; and upon general principles it cannot be varied by parol evidence. But it does not appear that the agreement in this case was reduced to writing. Indeed, it appears affirmatively that it was not. It is stated in the case agreed that it was proclaimed at the hiring that such money would be taken as would pay the debts of the *171 estate, yet that is not stated in the bond. And the bond does not profess to set forth the agreement, but recites the fact that the hiring had taken place before the bond was given; so that it appears, both by the case agreed and by the bond itself, that the agreement of the (203) parties was before and outside of the bond, and that the bond was not intended to embrace all the terms of the contract, although it did embrace some, and was intended to secure the price. The case of Daughtry v.Boothe, 4 Jon., 87, was very much like this. In that case the defendant hired of the plaintiff a slave, with a stipulation that the slave should not be carried out of the county; and, as in this case, a bond was given for the price, but did not recite this stipulation. It was held that the stipulation might be proved by parol. The cases of Twidy v. Sanderson, 9 Ire., 5, and Manning v. Jones, Bus., 368, are to the same point, and settle the question.
But allowing it to be true that when the whole contract is not set forth in the bond, and is not professed to be set forth, such portions as are outside may be proved by parol, yet it is insisted that so much of the contract as is set forth cannot be contradicted by parol, and that here it is set forth that the price of the hiring is $200, and that dollars meancoin. Upon general principles those propositions are true; but the ordinance of the Convention of October, 1865, entitled, "An ordinance declaring what laws are in force, and for other purposes," sec. 3, provides that in all executory contracts solvable in money, whether under seal or not . . . it shall be competent for either party to show, by parol or other relevant testimony, what the understanding was in regard to the kind of currency in which the same are solvable; and in such case the true understanding shall regulate the value of the contract." That ordinance in terms embraces this case.
But then it is objected that the ordinance is void, as impairing the obligation of contracts. If it has that effect it is void, because the Constitution of the United States forbids a State, either in convention or by the Legislature, to pass a law impairing the obligation of contracts.
But it is not seen by us how an ordinance which facilitates the means of ascertaining what a contract is, and then enforces it, (204) impairs its obligation. It is precisely the reverse.
We collect from the whole case that the contract was that for the hire of the slaves for the year 1865, the defendant should pay the nominal sum of $200, in such money as would pay debts, and that the true value of the contract was one-fourth of the sum, to wit, $50 in coin.
Judgment was entered for that sum, with interest from 1 January, 1866, in the court below, and we see no error.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed. *172
Cited: Harrell v. Watson,
(205)