Bleakney v. Farmers & Mechanics' Bank
Bleakney v. Farmers & Mechanics' Bank
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiffs in error have confined their exceptions to the answer of the court to the two points made by them.
It is objected, 1. That the act is unconstitutional, because it is retrospective and impairs contracts; and, 2. If it was constitutional, still it did not operate on actions pending at.the time of its passage.
In a case in principle the same as this, Hess and others v. Werts, (4 Serg. & Rawle, 356,) it was decided that such legislation was not prohibited. It impaired no contract, but removed an impediment to a contract fairly entered into by the defendant. ' It is so far retrospective; but every retrospective act is not void. Retrospective laws divesting vested rights — working the destruclion of a right previously attachéd, are contrary to the principles of sound legislation; but every.retrospective act is not void. An act making that a crime, which was not one when committed,'is retrospective;, but there is a great difference between making an unlawful act lawful, and making an innocent act criminal. This law divests no right, but removes an impediment or disability'. It renders lawful an act prohibited, as if it had been lawful ab initio. It works no injustice — infringes no man’s right — it impairs no contract — but takes from the contract the taint which the policy of the law interposed, and gives to the holder of the note a right to recover on the contract — a right which he would have possessed if there had been no legislative interposition. The party i.s restored to his common law right and c.ommon law remedy. In Ogle v. The Somerset and Mount Pleasant Turnpike Co. (5 Serg. & Rawle, 256,) the constitutionality of the law was not questioned; but the point was, whether the act operated oh suits pending..
The cases of Bedford v. Shilling and Ogle v. The Turnpike Co. were decided on the words of the several acts of assembly, where the remedy ,was prospective; but this act of assembly legalizes the act done — all that could have been done, had there been no forfeiture.
The construction of the Court of Common Pleas on the healing nature of the provision of the act of assembly, was the true and legal construction, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BLEAKNEY and another against The FARMERS and MECHANICS' BANK of Greencastle
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published