Farnsworth v. Vance
Farnsworth v. Vance
Opinion of the Court
delivered the ©pinion of the Court.
At the February Term, 1861, of th® Circuit Court of Greene County, the plaintiffs in error confessed judgment upon three promissory notes, executed by them on the 13th of October, 1858, for the sum of $2,395, and costs. Subsequently, and during the same Term, they appeared in open Court, and offered to stay the judgment, under the Act of the General Assembly of Tennessee, passed on the 26th day of January, 1861; and thereupon, came certain persons, and offered themselves as stayors of the judgment. It was admitted that the security offered, was ample and sufficient; but the Court, being of opinion that the Act, as to debts contracted prior to its passage, was unconstitutional, and simply void, refused to allow the stay. The parties then prayed an appeal to this Court.
The Constitution of the United States, inhibits the States from passing any “law impairing the obligation of contracts.” The same restriction is contained in the Constitution of Tennessee. The Act of the 26th of January, 1861, is supposed to contravene this provision.
A contract has been defined to be, “an agreement to do, or not to do, a particular thing.” Without more, this would be simply a promise, and not binding. It has also been defined to be, “an agreement, upon sufficient consideration, to do, or not to do, a particular thing,” To be obligatory, it must be made freely, not under duress, or any kind of restraint; understandingly, and not preceded by fraud or deceit. A contract, then, is an agreement, made understandingly, by parties free to act, upon sufficient consideration; to do, or not to do, a particular thing.
The right to make contracts is one of the original rights of mankind, coeval with the right to acquire and hold property, and antecedent to all legislation. It furnishes the highest constraint that men can impose upon themselves, and one which they use the strongest terms to express, employing language, which, in its literal signification, implies strict bodily confinement. It is this quality which constitutes the obligation, or binding effect, of the contract. The act of the party, self-imposed, it is at once an absolute duty, and a perfect right: — duty to
The obligation of the contract thus being limited and fixed by its stipulations, the State may not enact any law which enlarges, abridges, or in any way whatever, changes the intention of the parties. The measure, or degree, in which the change is effected, can, in no respect, influence the conclusion; for, whether the law affect the validity, the construction, the duration, the discharge, or the evidence, of the contract, it impairs its obligation, though it may not do so to the same extent, in all the supposed cases. Any deviation from its terms, by postponing, or accelerating the period of performance which it prescribes, imposing conditions not expressed in the contract, or dispensing with the performance of those which are a part of the contract, however minute, or apparently immaterial in their effect upon it, impair its obligation. Still more, a law which makes the contract wholly, in
We may remark, that, sacred as is the obligation of a contract, the law rarely has power to compel the observance of it. That must depend upon the ability and good faith of the party. A failure to observe it, is a breach of the contract. At this point the law interposes, and the means used to enforce it constitute the remedy which society affords the injured party; and any law regulating the proceedings of Courts on this subject, would be a law regulating the remedy. The State is in the exercise of its legitimate and acknowledged powers, when it is regulating the remedy and mode of proceeding in its Courts.
The power of State legislation to control the remedy for breach of contract, underwent much discussion in the case of Ogden vs. Saunders, 12 Wheaton, 214. The matter in judgment was the validity of the New York Statute of insolvency. The majority of the Court decided in favor of the validity when operating upon future contracts, and between its citizens. Chief Justice Marshall, with Justices Story and Duvall, dissented. The opinion of these three Judges, delivered by the first, though not authoritative in that particular case, is deservedly held in high authority, as a commentary upon this clause of the Constitution.
In the course of the discussion, the Chief Justice
“But, although the identity of obligation and remedy be disproved, it may be urged, that they are precisely commensurate with each other, and are such sympathetic essences, (if the expression may be allowed,) that the action of law upon the remedy is immediately felt by the obligation; that they live, languish, and die together. The use made of this argument, is, to show the absurdity and self-contradiction of the construction, which maintains the inviolability of obligation, while it leaves the remedy to the State governments.”
“We do not perceive this absurdity, ’ or self-contradiction. One country exhibits the extraordinary spectacle of distinct, and, in many respects, independent governments, over the same territory, and the same people. The local governments are restrained from impairing the obligation of contracts, but they furnish the remedy to enforce them, and administer that remedy in tribunals constituted by themselves. It has been shown that the obligation is distinct from the remedy, and, it would seem to follow, that law might act on the remedy, without acting on the obligation. To afford a remedy, is certainly the high duty of those who govern to those who are governed. A failure in the performance of this duty, subjects the government to the just reproach of the world,
The great jurist then examines what had been urged “as a conclusive argument against the existence of a distinct line, dividing obligation from remedy.” It is this: the law affords remedy, by giving execution against the person, or the property, or both. [This opinion was delivered in 1827.], The same power which can withdraw the remedy against the person, can withdraw that against the property, or that against both, and thus effectually defeat the objection. The Constitution, we are told, deals not with form, but with substance; and cannot be presumed, if it designed to protect the obligation of contracts from State legislation, to have left it thus obviously exposed to destruction.
The answer is, that if the law goes further, it annuls the obligation without affording the remedy which satisfies it. If its action on the remedy be such as palpably
We perceive, then, no reason for the opinion, that the prohibition to pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts, is incompatible with the fair exercise of that discretion which the State Legislatures possess, in common with all governments, to regulate the remedies afforded by their own Courts. We think that obligation and remedy are distinguishable from each other; that the first is created by act of the parties, the last is afforded by Government. The words of the restriction we have been considering, countenance, we think, this idea: No State shall “pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts.” These words seem to us to import, that the obligation is intrinsic, that it is created by the contract itself, not that it is made dependent on the laws made to enforce it: 12 Wheaton, 350-354; 7 Curtis, 211-214.
In the same case, Justice Thompson, who was one of the majority that decided it, while delivering his opinion, uses this language: “The mode and manner, and the extent to which property may be taken in satisfaction of debts, must be left to the sound discretion of the Legislature, and regulated by its views of policy and expediency, in promoting the general welfare of the community, subject to such regulation. It was the policy of the common law, under the feudal system, to exempt
Mr. Story, Com. on Constitution, Book 3, chap. 34, sec. 1379, says: “Although there is a distinction between the obligation of a contract, and a remedy upon it; yet if there .are certain remedies existing at the time when it is made, all of which are afterwards wholly extinguished by new laws, so that there remains no means of enforcing its obligation, and no redress — such an abolition of all remedies operating in praesenti, is also an impairing of the obligation of such contract. But every change and modification of the remedy, does not involve such a consequence. No one will doubt that the Legislature may vary the nature and extent of remedies, so always that some substantial remedy be, in fact, left.
These authorities seem to us to establish the following propositions :
That the contracts, though regulated by law, are the acts of the parties, and existing laws form no part of them; that the agreement of the parties, not the law, constitutes their obligation.
That the obligation of the contract once established, it cannot be abrogated or relaxed by State legislation.
That there is an essential and substantive distinction between the obligation of a contract, and the means which Government may furnish to enforce it. The latter constitutes the remedy.
That a prohibition to pass any law impairing the obligation, does not imply a prohibition to vary the remedy.
That the Legislature may, in their discretion, vary the nature and extent of remedies, so that always some substantive remedy be, in fact, left.
This brings us to the examination of the Statute under consideration, and the application to it of these
“Be it enacted, etc., That when any bank in this State, has or shall obtain a judgment against any person or persons, no clerk of any Court, nor any Justice of the Peace in this State, shall hereafter issue any execution on such judgment, until two years from the time of the rendition of such judgment shall have elapsed, unless said bank, by its attorney, or agent properly authorized thereto, shall indorse on the execution, that 'notes on the bank thus obtaining judgment, will be taken in discharge and payment of such .execution, in addition to the notes of the Bank of the State of Tennessee, and its branches, and the Nashville Bank and its branches, and such other bank notes as may be at par in said last mentioned ■banks.” •
The other Statutes impose the same restrictions upon all judgments, wherever and by whomsoever obtained. They wer.e declared unconstitutional and void. It is a general rule, that the positive authority of a decision is coextensive only with the facts on which it is made: Sturgis vs. Crowninshield, 4 Wheaton, 122. To this ex
Thus the declamations of the Court, in Townsend vs. Townsend, cited and relied upon by the counsel, if they can he held ever to have had any other authority than extra judicial dicta, are neutralized by the decision in Woodfield vs. Harper. This . case does more; it determines that the State Legislature may, without infringing the Constitution, deprive the creditor of his most cogent and effective remedy, and to an angry and baf
The Act, so far as it is necessary to examine it, is as follows:
"Be it enacted, &e., That from and after the passage of this Act, all judgments and decrees which shall be rendered in any of the Courts of Record in this State, or which shall be rendered by Justices of the Peace of this State, for money, shall be stayed by such Courts and Justices for the period of twelve months from the rendition of such decree or judgment; Provided, that the defendant, or defendants, in said judgment or decree, shall appear before said Courts of Record, during the term of such Court, or within two days after the rendition of the judgment before Justices of the Peace, and give good and ample security for the stay of execution, to be approved of by said Courts or Justices; which stay shall operate as a judgment against the security of said Courts, or before said Justices.”
Other provisions are contained, looking to the subsequent insufficiency of the security. The Act expired, by its own limitation, on the 1st of July, 1862.
Whatever may be our opinion as to the policy of the law, it is our duty to administer it, unless we are clearly satisfied of its unconstitutionality. We simply repeat the uniform language of the Supreme Court of the United States, in saying that “it is but a decent respect due to the wisdom, the integrity and the patriotism of the legislative body by which any law is passed,
This Ant undoubtedly varies the extent of the remedy existing at the time of its passage, and was manifestly intended to afford another, equally certain to the creditor, and more favorable to the debtor. It was passed during the period of impending bankruptcy which immediately preceded the rebellion, and which had much to do in stimulating its earlier movements. The only question is, does it in fact, leave to the creditor “a substantive remedy” against the debtor? To state the question, is to decide it. Judgements and decrees were to be rendered as heretofore; then, at the option of the debtor, the creditor had execution at once, or ‘‘good and ample security,” and execution against both debtor and security at .the end of twelve months. This remedy must be admitted to be real, substantial and effective; and not merely nominal and illusory. We are not prepared to say that in the peculiar condition of affairs at that time, it may not have appeared to the Legislature which enacted it, as supplying to the creditor, by giving to the debtor time, and keeping alive his hope and arousing an increased energy, and interesting friends directly in his behalf, a higher assurance of ultimate satisfaction. However that may have been, our decision cannot depend upon the comparative efficiency of remedies. Since a remedy, solid and valuable, has been provided, we are required by the previous decisions of the Court, to declare this a good and valid Act, and to give it effect. We have had our attention directed to several cases from the courts of some of the sister
This opinion is confined to the case and to the part of the Statute actually under consideration. There are other provisions contained in it which we have had no occasion to examine, and about the validity of which we express no opinion.
The Court, taking such action as should have been taken in the Court below, will direct that the offered security be accepted; and the period of the stay having long since elapsed, execution will issue immediately against the defendants in judgment and their security, for the amount of the judgment, with interest from the date of its rendition until collected, and the costs of the Circuit Court.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.