Wilson v. Hickson
Wilson v. Hickson
Opinion of the Court
Judgment on a domestic attachment. Affidavit by N. Hickson that J. Wilson was indebted to him in the sum
Independently of the absence of the attachment, without which we could not say the proceedings were correct
There are* many cases in the books, where bank bills have been considered as money. But a reference to the time when those decisions were made, or to the places where they are now made, will clearly show that at those times and places bank bills were of a certain, uniform value, and circulated at par with the gold and silver coin of the country
In this case, the attachment, so far as we can learn any thing about it, and the declaration, being in debt, all the proceedings are erroneous.
The judgment is reversed, with costs.
Vide Foyles v. Kelso, ante, p. 215, and note.
Ante, p. 216. Vide, also, Duerson v. Bellows, ante, p. 217. — Osborne v. Fulton, post, p. 233 — Harper v. Levy, May term, 1824, post. Debt cannot be maintained on a note for the payment of a liquidated sum in current bank paper. Campbell v. Weisler, 1 Litt. 30. It will not lie on articles of agreement under seal to pay a certain sum in bank notes, for they are not money: the proper action in that case is covenant, in which the real damages can be recovered according to the value of the notes. Scott v. Conover, 1 Hals. 222. Where the obligor of a sealed note promised to pay, “in the month of June ensuing the date, one horse at the value of 301.;” Watson v. M'Nairy, 1 Bibb, 356;— where, to pay “281. in salt at 2 dollars per bushel;” Irvin v. Winn, Ibid, note;— where, to pay, “one day after date, 103 dollars in leather or other good property .at its value Bruner v. Kelsoe, Ibid. 487; — where, to pay “89 dollars to be discharged in good merchantable brick, common brick at 4 dollars per thousand, and sand brick at 5 dollars per thousand, to be delivered at the house of tho obligee in Shelbyville on or before the 1st of August next;” Mattox v. Craig, 2 Bibb, 584; — debt was held not to lie, the proper action being covenant.
The decisions referred to in the text, will be all found cited and commented on in Judah v. Harris, 19 Johns. R. 144; which case decides, that a promissory note payable “in bank notes current in the city of New-York,” is a negotiable note within the statute.
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