Osborn v. Nicholson
Osborn v. Nicholson
Opinion of the Court
stated the case, and delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error brought this suit on the 10th of February, 1869, in that court, and declared upon a promissory note made to him by the defendants in error for $1300, dated March 26th, A.D. 1861, and payable on the 26th day of December following, with interest at the rate of ten per cent, from date. The defendants pleaded that the instrument sued upon was given in consideration of the conveyance of a certain negro slave for life, and none other; and that at the time of the making of the instrument the plaintiff, by his authorized agent, executed to the defendant a bill of sale, as follows:
“March 20th, 1861.
“ For the consideration of $1300 I hereby transfer all the right, title, and interest I have to a negro boy named Albert, aged about twenty-three years. I warrant said negro to be sound in body and mind, and a slave for life; and I also warrant the title to said boy clear and perfect.”
And that the said negro soon thereafter, to wit, on the 1st day of January, 1862, was liberated by the United States government, the said slave being then alive, and that the plaintiff' ought not therefore to recover. The plaintiff demurred. The court overruled the demurrer, and the plain
The question presented for our determination is, whether the court erred in overruling the demurrer; or, in other words, whether the facts pleaded were sufficient to bar the action.
We lay out of view in limine the constitution of Arkansas of 1868, ■which annuls all contracts for the purchase or sale of slaves, and declares that no court of the State should take cognizance of any suit founded on such a contract, and that nothing should ever be collected upon any judgment or decree which had been, or should thereafter be, “ rendered upon any such contract or obligation.” It is sufficient to remark that as to all prior transactions the constitution is in each of the particulars specified clearly in conflict with that clause of the Constitution of the United States, which ordains that “ no State shall ” . . . “ pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts.”
It may be safely asserted that this contract when made could have been enforced in the courts of every State of the Union, and in the courts of every civilized country elsewhere. In the celebrated case of Somerset, Lord Mansfield said : “ A contract for the sale of a slave is good here; the
Nor is there any question as to an implied warranty, of title or otherwise. There being an express warranty, that must be taken to contain the entire contract on the part of the seller. This warranty embraces four points: that the slave was sound in body; that he was sound in mind; that he was a slave for life; and that the seller’s title was perfect.
It is not averred or claimed that the warranty was false when it was given, in either of these particulars. The title to the slave passed at that time, and if the warranty were true then, no breach could be wrought by any after event. Let it be supposed that, subsequently, a lesion of the brain of the slave occurred, and that permanent insanity ensued, or that, from subsequent disease, he became a cripple for life or died, or that, by the subsequent exercise of the power of eminent domain, the State appropriated his ownership and possession to herself, can there be a doubt that neither of these things would have involved any liability on the part of the seller? He was not a perpetual assurer of soundness of mind, health of body, or continuity of title. A change of the ownership and possession of real estate by the process of eminent domain is not a violation of the covenant for quiet enjoyment.
In Bailey v. Miltenberger
These remarks are strikingly apposite to the point here under consideration. As regards the principle involved we see nothing to distinguish those cases from the one before us. In all of them the property was lost to the owner by the paramount act of the State, which neither party anticipated, and in regard to which the contract was silent. Emancipation and the eminent domain work the same result as regards the title and possession of the owner. Both are put an end to. Why should the seller be liable in one case and not in the other? We can see no foundation, in reason or principle, for such a claim.
It was formerly held that there could be no warrauty against a future event. It is now well settled that the law is otherwise.
Where an article is on sale in the market, and there is no fraud on the part of the seller, and the buyer gets what he
But we think the exact point here under consideration was settled by the Court of Queen’s Bench in Mittelholzer v. Fullarton.
Lord Chief Justice Denman said: “My Brother Weight-man asked during the argument., what would have been the result, if at the end of a year the services had been determined by the act of God, and to this no sufficient answer was given. . . The plaintiff’s right vested when the bargain was made. The subsequent interference of the colonial legislature does not prevent his recovering what was then stipulated for.”
Williams, Justice, said: “The whole question is, who shall bear the loss occasioned by a vis major ? and that de
If all the buildings upon leasehold premises be destroyed by fire, the lessee is nevertheless liable for the full amount of the rent during the residue of the term.
All contracts are inherently subject to the paramount power of the sovereign, and the exercise of such power is never understood to involve their violation, and is not within that provision of the National Constitution which forbids a State to pass laws impairing their obligation. The power acts upon the property which is the subject of the contract, and not upon the contract itself.
Such also is the rule of the French law and such was the Homan law. The seller is not bound to warrant the buyer against acts of mere force, violence, and casualties, nor against the act of the sovereign.
It has been earnestly insisted that contracts for the pur
Where the traffic was carried on by the subjects of governments which had forbidden it, a different rule was applied.
But without considering at length the several assumptions of the proposition, it is a sufficient answer to say that when the thirteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States was adopted, the rights of the plaintiff in this action had become legally and completely vested. Eights acquired by a deed, will, or contract of marriage, or other contract executed according to statutes subsequently repealed subsist afterwards, as they were before, in all respects as if the statutes were still in full force. This is a principle of universal jurisprudence. It is necessary to the repose and welfare of all communities. A different rule would shake the social fabric to its foundations and let in a flood-tide of intolerable evils. It would be contrary to “ the general principles of law and reason,” and to one of the most vital ends of government.
Many eases have been decided by the highest State courts where the same questions arose which we have been called upon to consider in this case. In very nearly all of them the contract was adjudged to be valid, and was enforced. They are too numerous to be named. The opinions in some of them are marked by great ability.
Whatever we may think of the institution of slavery viewed in the light of religion, morals, humanity, or a sound political economy,—as the obligation here in question was valid when executed, sitting as a court of justice, we have no choice but to give it effect. We cannot regard it as differing in its legal efficacy from any other unexecuted contract to pay money made upon a sufficient consideration at the same time and place. Neither in the precedents and principles of the common law, nor in its associated system of equity jurisprudence, nor in the older system known as the civil law, is there anything to warrant the result contended for by the defendants in error. Neither the rights nor the interests of those of the colored race lately in bondage are affected by the conclusions we have reached. This opinion decides nothing as to the effect of President Lincoln's emancipation proclamation. We have had no occasion to consider that subject.
Judgment reversed, and the cause remanded to the Circuit Court with directions to proceed
In conformity to this opinion.
Von Hoffman v. The City of Quincy, 4 Wallace, 535 ; White v. Hart, supra, 646.
Story’s Conflict of Laws (Redfield’s edition), § 242.
20 Howell’s State Trials, 79; see also Madrazo v. Willes, 3 Barnewall & Alderson, 353; Santos v. Illidge, 98 English Common Law, 861; The Antelope, 10 Wheaton, 66; Emerson v. Howland, 1 Mason, 50; Commonwealth v. Aves, 18 Pickering, 215; Groves v. Slaughter, 15 Peters, 449; and Andrews v. Hensler, 6 Wallace; 254.
Frost v. Earnest, 4 Wharton, 86 ; Ellis v. Welch, 6 Massachusetts, 246.
12 Pennsylvania State, 80.
31 Pennsylvania State, 41.
Benjamin on Sales, 463.
Dermott v. Jones, 2 Wallace, 1; Revell v. Hussey, 2 Ball & Beatty, 287.
Lambert v. Heath, 15 Meeson & Welsby, 487; see also Lawes v. Purser, 6 Ellis & Blackburne, 930.
6 Adolphus & Ellis, 989.
Baker v. Holtzapffell, 4 Taunton, 45.
Phillips v. Stevens, 16 Massachusetts, 238.
Sugden on Vendors, 291.
West River Bridge Co. v. Dix et al., 6 Howard, 532, 536.
1 Domat., part 1, book 1, tit. 2, § 10, paragraph 4.
Digest 2, 14, 77, Cooper’s Justinian, 615.
Meredith’s Emerigon, 419; Paine v. Meller, 6 Vesey, 349.
1 Wildman’s International Law, 70; Dana’s Wheaton, 199; The Antelope, 10 Wheaton, G7; Le Louis, 2 Dodson, 210.
The Amedie, Acton, 240; The Diana, 1 Dodson, 95; The Fortuna, lb. 81.
1 Phillmore’s Law of Nations, 310.
Le Louis, 2 Dodson, 250.
Lawrence’s Wheaton, 496.
Prigg v. Pennsylvania, 16 Peters, 611.
Calder v. Bull, 3 Dallas, 388.
Taylor v. Porter, 4 Hill, 146; Wynehamer v. The People, 3 Kernan, 894; Wilkinson v. Leland et al., 2 Peters, 658.
Dissenting Opinion
dissented in this case and in the preceding one of White v. Hart, on the grounds:
1st. That contracts for the purchase and sale of slaves were and are against sound morals and natural justice, and without support except in positive law.
2d. That the laws of the several States b}- which alone slavery and slave contracts could be supported, were annulled by the thirteenth amendment of the Constitution which abolished slavery.
4th. That the clause in the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution which forbids compensation for slaves emancipated by'the thirteenth, can be vindicated only on these principles.
5th. That clauses in State constitutions, acts of State legislatures, and decisions of State courts, warranted by the thirteenth and fourteenth amendments, cannot be held void as in violation of the original Constitution, which forbids the States to pass any law violating the obligation of contracts.
Reference
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- Osborn v. Nicholson Et Al.
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- A person in Arkansas, one of the late slaveholding States, for a valuable consideration, passed in March, 1861, before the rebellion had broken out, sold a negro slave which he then had, warranting “ the said negro to be a slave for life, and also warranting the title to him clear and perfect.” The 18th amendment to the Constitution, made subsequently (A.D. 1865), ordained that “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude . . . shall exist within the United States, or any .piaoo subject to their jurisdiction.” Held, that negro slavery having been recognized as lawful at the time when and the place where the contract was made, and the contract having heen one which at the time when it was made could have been enforced in the courts of every State of the Union, and in the courts of every civilized country elsewhere, the right to sue upon it was not to be considered as taken away by the 13th amendment above quoted, and passed only after rights under the contract had become vested; destruction of vested rights by implication never being to be presumed.