Nelson v. . Rhem
Nelson v. . Rhem
Opinion of the Court
The contract of the defendant is to pay $42,500, “payable one-half in cash and one-half in Liberty Bonds,” and if we were to adopt the construction of the plaintiff we would strike out of the agreement of the parties the terms of payment, leaving an unqualified promise to pay $42,500, as this would be the effect, if “one-half in Liberty Bonds” means the market value of the bonds.
The phrase “one-half in Liberty Bonds” means nothing if not bonds on their face, promising to pay $21,250, one-half the purchase money, and we have no right to change the contract, in the absence of allegation or proof of fraud or mistake, nor can we assume that the parties have inserted meaningless terms in their agreement.
*305 In Smith v. Dunlap, 12 Ill., 189, the contract was to pay $131,480.52 in the indebtedness of the State of Illinois, and the Court says of the construction of the contract: “Where the promisor undertakes to pay a certain number of dollars in specific articles, such as grain, cattle, or other commodities, he must deliver-the-property on the day named in the contract, or he becomes absolutely bound to pay the sum stated in money. The sum expressed in the obligation indicates the true amount of the debt; and the other provisions is inserted for the benefit of the debtor, and relates exclusively to the mode of payment. If he does not avail himself of the privilege of discharging the debt in property, the obligation becomes a naked promise to pay the amount in money. But where the promisor agrees to pay a certain sum in bank notes, or other evidence of indebtedness, which purport on their face to represent dollars, and can be'counted as such, the sum is expressed to indicate the number of dollars of the notes or evidence to be paid, and not the amount of the debt or consideration. The obligation is in fact but a promise to deliver so many dollars, numerically, of the securities described. If the debtor fails to deliver them according to the terms of the contract, he is responsible for their real, not their nominal value. Their cash value is the true amount of the debt to be discharged. And beyond the damages directly resulting from the breach of the contract, the creditor is not entitled to recover.
“The contract in question falls directly within the latter definition. It is an undertaking'to pay a given number of dollars of the indebtedness of the State of Illinois. This indebtedness consists of obligations issued by the State, for the payment of specified sums of money to its creditors. The amount in dollars is expressed on the face of the instruments, and can be at once ascertained by inspection.
“In Clay v. Houston’s Admrs., 1 Bibb., 461, the expression in a note, ‘thirty pounds in militia certificates,’ was construed to mean that number of pounds in certificates as specified on their face, and not an amount of certificates equal in value to thirty pounds in specie. In Anderson v. Ewing, 3 Littell, 245, a note for the payment of ‘eight hundred dollars, on or,before 1 September, 1820, in such bank notes as are received in deposit at that time in the Hopkinsville Branch Bank,’ was held to be a contract to pay eight hundred paper dollars of the description mentioned. The Court said: ‘It is true,-an'instrument drawn, stipulating the payment of a certain number of dollars in cattle, wheat, or other commodities, is construed to mean so much of these articles as will amount to that sum in specie. But the reason of this is evident. The commodities themselves cannot be counted by dollars, as the name is never applied to them. But this is not the case with bank notes. They engage to pay so many dollars, and are numerically calculated by the *306 numbers they express; so that the expression “eight hundred dollars in bank paper” is universally understood to mean that much money, when the numbers expressed on the .face of the note are added together, and not as including so many more, superadded, as will make them equal to eight hundred dollars in specie.’ In Phillips v. Riley, 3 Conn., 266, a note for 'eighty-eight dollars in current bank notes, such as pass in Norfolk between man and man,’ was decided to be a contract to pay banknotes of the kind described, to the nominal amount of eighty-eight dollars. In Robinson v. Noble’s Admrs., 8 Peters, 181, in an action on an agreement to pay freight at the rate of one dollar and fifty cents per barrel, 'in paper of the Miami Exporting Company, or its equivalent,’ the Court held that the specie value of the paper, when the payment should have been made, was the proper measure of damages. In Hixon v. Hixon, 7 Humphrey, 33, a note for 'one hundred dollars, in Georgia, or Alabama, or Tennessee bank notes, or notes on any good man,’ was decided to be an obligation for the payment of that many dollars of the notes specified. In Gordon v. Parker, 2 Smedes & Marshall, 485, a note for 'five thousand dollars’ payable in Brandon money,’ was determined to be a contract to pay that number of dollars of the kind of money described. In Dillard v. Evans, 4 Pike, 175, the Court held a note payable in the 'common currency of Arkansas’ to be a contract to pay so many dollars of the bank paper then current in the State.”
Also, in Easton v. Hyde, 13 Minn., 90, speaking of a similar contract: “But a dollar.is the measure of the value of U. S. bonds, so that the expression, payable 'in U. S. bonds,’ is as universally and clearly understood as would be the expressions payable 'in bank bills,’ 'in U. S. Treasury notes,’ or 'in gold coin.’ If these parties had intended that the bonds should be received at any other than their nominal value, they doubtless would have so provided in the contract.”
The same principle is declared in Lackey v. Miller, 61 N. C., 27, in which the contract was to pay $71 “in current bank notes,” of which Pearson, C. J., says: “In our case the promise is, not to pay seventy-one dollars in United States coin, which may be discharged by paying enough current bank money to make up. that amount in good money, but to pay seventy-one dollars 'in current bank money,’ i. e., seventy-one current bank money dollars; in other words, current bank bills calling on their face for .seventy-one dollars, in the same way as where one promises to pay seventy-one dollars in currency, the meaning is to pay current notes calling on their face for seventy-one dollars, as distinguished from seventy-one dollars in United States coin, or, as is termed, 'in good money.’
“Any other construction of instruments like these would lead to the absurdity of supposing that the same words amount to a promise to pay in United States coin, i. e., good money, and also to a promise to pay in *307 ‘current bank bills/ wbicb are not good money; whereas, it is perfectly clear that the party intends to admit a dtíbt of a given amount, not in United States coin, as in the case of Hamilton v. Eller, 33 N. C., 276, but only in current bank bills, e. g., seventy-one- current bank money dollars, or current bank bills, calling on tbeir face for seventy-one dollars.”
We are therefore of opinion on reason and authority that his Honor properly held that the plaintiff could not recover, as the defendant has paid to the plaintiff $21,250 in cash, and delivered Liberty Bonds of the face value of $21,250, which is all the defendants agreed to do.
Affirmed.
Reference
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- MARGARET D. NELSON v. DR. J. H. RHEM Et Al., Trustees, Etc.
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