Bank of Tennessee v. Cummings
Bank of Tennessee v. Cummings
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Circuit Judge charged the jury:
“If the Officers of the Bank had notice that the money was to be used by the defendant’s intestate in aid of the Southern Confederacy, as for the manufacture of one of the ingredients of gunpowder,, and with a view’ and for the purpose of so aiding the Confederacy they advanced the money, then your verdict should be for the defendant.”
Now, what was “ the condition of things created by the acts of the Governing Power,” at the making of the note in suit? It was, the seceding States, including the State of Tennessee, had by the solemn acts of their peoples in Convention assembled, or by overwhelming majorities at the Ballot Box, withdrawn from the Union, and organized and called into real active existence an integral, independent Government, — under >the name of “ The Confederate States .of America,”— complete in its several Departments, clothed with all '-the powers, and discharging all the functions incident to a Sovereign State. Under its Constitution, which had ■been formally and enthusiastically adopted, without ap
The United States Government was unable to give to those within the Confederate States Government who •adhered to the cause of the Union any assistance, hence they were compelled to look to the Confederate laws and authority for protection, and in return to yield submission and obedience to those laws and authority.
Just so were the friends of Secession within the loyal States compelled to yield obedience to the laws of the United States; — the one was as much without relief as the other; — and the one Government was as unable to give assistance to its friends within the enemy's lines as was the other.
Yattel, p. 97, says: “The State is obliged to defend and preserve all its Members, and the Prince owes the same assistance to his subjects. If, therefore, the State or Prince refuse or neglect to succor a body of people who are exposed to imminent danger, the latter being thus abandoned, become perfectly free to provide for their own safety and preservation in whatever manner they find most convenient, without paying the least regard to those, who by abandoning them, have been the first to fail in their duty.”
How could the people within the Confederate States
Trying the case by this rule, “interpreting and enforcing the contract with reference to the condition of things created by the acts of the Governing Power/’ it results that the Government of “The Confederate States of America” and its constituent Members had the power, and exercised it, of making laws for their own government and that of its citizens: — that the citizen had no escape from them: — that this contract was made freely and voluntarily, and was lawful, — “interpreted with reference to the condition of things” at the time of its creation; which “made,” as Chief Justice Chase says in the opinion already quoted, “obedience to its authority in civil and local matters, not only a necessity, but a duty.”
It has been repeatedly held that the Government of the Confederate States was a Government De Facto, with belligerent right? In Smith v. Brazleton, 1 Heis., 46, Judge Nelson, a statesman and jurist, in whose
It must be conceded that it is a belligerant right of the first importance to use gunpowder; the right to use carries with it the right to procure by purchase or manufacture, and in the manufacture the right to-all the means in reach for its accomplishment. Then if it was lawful for the State to do these things, by what rule is it unlawful for the citizen to contribute to the lawful act of his State? The State, as a’ State,, cannot manufacture powder, but must do it through employes or persons, — individual constituents of the aggregate composing the State.
A State having a right may employ all the means-necessary to the enjoyment of that right, and it is a gross solecism to say that the State may lawfully have-a thing, but may not lawfully engage' its citizens to-create that thing, or that its citizens may not voluntarily do so.
There is no conflict of opinion between this holding and the case of Puryear, Adm’r, v. McGavock et als., manuscript opinion by Judge Deaderick, as the trans
Reverse the judgment.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.