Shotwell's Executors v. Dennman
Shotwell's Executors v. Dennman
Opinion of the Court
On the trial of this cause, the defendant proved, that in the month, of June 1777 he tendered to the plaintiff’s testator, ninety-five dollars in continental money, who refused it,, saying that it was not made to pay debts, but to support war, and he would rather lose his debt than receive it in payment, On this evidence, after reading the act of September 2Oth 1776,
The counsel for the plaintiffs insisted it was not a legal tender, unless the defendant further showed, that the bills were emitted prior to the passing of this act, as under that, bills then emitted were alone made a tender: — but the court "held the tender sufficient.
On a perusal of that act we are clear, that to enable a party to claim the benefit of it, he must prove, the bills he offered are such as are thereby made a tender. The preamble recites that disaffected persons had refused to take the bills which the continental congress and the late convention emitted, and then it is enacted, “ that the bills, emitted, and made current by the continental congress, and the con-
The act of 1779,
The act of 1776 is highly penal, and is not to be extended beyond the strict import of its language; a tender made under it not only stops interest as at common law, but operates as a total and absolute discharge of the debt. Tenders are always to be considered stricli juris, and if it be not legal, even a court of equity will not support it, nor supply a defect, Gammon v. Stone.
JU¡'_ , ¡.'niVi V" a '¡u ,i r.-MENT.
See Wilson’s Laws, App. 3, No, 3,
App. 4. No. 3.
i Vesey. 339,'
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Shotwell's Executors against Dennman
- Status
- Published