McCartney v. Wade
McCartney v. Wade
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Although there is some conflict in the evidence in this case, we are satisfied from the proof, that, however successful the complainant may have been in dissembling his sentiments for a time, he was, during the late civil war, a Union man; that the defendants were fully identified, in sentiment and feeling, with the late rebellion; that complainant held a note on defendants, Wade and Love, for about $200, bearing date, 6th March, 1862; and that he surrendered- this note under duress, as charged in his bill. It seems that, acting under this influence, complainant received Confederate Treasury notes in payment, after having refused, on several occasions, to do so, upon the assurance of W. L. Gregg, now deceased, that he would borrow one hundred and fifty dollars of the amount; that he took the note of said Gregg for that sum, with Hubert A. Gregg as security, bearing
Several persons living in the- same county in which the'parties resided, had been previously arrested by the Confederate military authorities for refusing to receive Confederate Treasury notes; and among others, one witness states that in January, 1863, he was arrested by a squad of ten or more men, and taken sOme seventy-five or eighty miles, to General Morgan's headquarters, at McMinnville, where he was released, on condition that he would agree to take Confederate money in payment of all debts, and return home and inform the people that they would be compelled to receive it. General Morgan told the witness that he, Morgan, was 'acting under the orders of General Bragg, and that the penalty for refusing to take Confederate money would be a fine of five hundred dollars and compulsory ser vice, in the army, or imprisonment.
Witness, after his return home, gave publicity to this information, at a public sale, when about two hundred persons were present; and we have no doubt, from this and other evidence contained in the record, that complainant was fully informed of the military order before
On the day the note was surrendered, or the succeed
The complainant did not act under a vague and general apprehension of giving offense to the Confederate authorities, which may have been common to all the citizens, but with knowledge that a strong military order had been issued, and enforced by arrests in the section of country where he lived, and under the immediate pressure of personal threats, and a zealous and active combination against him, which he was powerless to resist. It was not necessary that he should express his fears at the time, as the expression of them might have brought about an immediate arrest.
Duress, or the want of free agency, like any other fact, may be established by circumstantial testimony; and no importance can be attached to the complainant’s declarations, made soou after the contract, and while the military order and the power to enforce it were still in existence, in the presence and hearing of persons from whom he differed in opinion, to the effect that he had acted voluntarily, as it may be fairly inferred, from all the circumstances, that these declarations were made to allay suspicion, and under the same influences of fear and apprehension under which he had previously acted; and there is no evidence in the record to show that his mind had been disabused of these impressions when
The complainant is, therefore, entitled to a decree declaring that the note was surrendered under duress; but is not entitled to the specific relief granted by the Chancellor, for the reason that ' he did not return, or offer to return, the Confederate - notes. It is in proof that, on the day after they were received by complainant, AV. L. Gregg borrowed one hundred and fifty dollars of the notes which had,-'Been paid, but refused to pay interest, and executed his. note, with security, payable one day after date, without- interest. The note is not in evidence, and no copy of it is contained in the record; but it is in proof that Gregg desired to obtain the loan, to enable him to pay a debt he owed to Isaac Gibson. One witness states;? that he promised to pay complainant “in tbe currency of the country at the close of the war, and in gold and. silver, if that was the currency of 'the country;” and declared that the money would answer him the same purpose as gold and silver.
Another witness says that 'Gregg remarked, he would take the Confederate money and - risk it, and another witness states that complainant said Gregg was to pay the note “in the currency of the country, when it was paid.”
Gibson proves that, in the*Spring of 1863, Gregg paid him one hundred dollars in’Confederate money; and from
It was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, in Thorington v. Smith, 8 Wal., 13, that contracts between the inhabitants of- the Confederate States, made during the late civil war, must be interpreted and enforced with reference to the condition of things created by the insurgent governing power; and that where a note was executed, payable in dollars, parol proof may be admitted to show the sense in which the word “dollars” was nsed, and that if “Confederate dollars” were meant, the plaintiff could only recover their value at the time n place of the contract.
We are, therefore, of the opinion, that, as W. L. Gregg realized the full value of the Confederate money he borrowed, and promised to pay in the currency that might prevail at the close of the war, his administrator, and Robert A. Gregg, the security, should be required to pay the amount of said note, with interest from the time the suit at law was commenced. And as all' the facts are substantially stated in the bill, and all the parties were brought before the Court, and complete justice can be done in this case, on the prayer for discovery and general relief without the further prosecution of the suit at law; and as the evidence shows that the complainant did not return the Confederate notes retained by him; let a decree be pronounced in his favor, against James Wade and Ar-mistead A. Love, for the amount due on their note to complainant, after deducting therefrom the sum of one
The Chancellor’s decree will be^ modified accordingly.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.