Edwards v. Kearzey
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
-The Constitution of North Carolina of 1868 took effect on the 24th of April in that year. Sects. 1 and 2. of art. 10 déclare that personal property of any resident of the State, of the value of' $500, to be selected' by Such resident, shall be exempt from sale under execution or other final, process issued for the collection of any debt; and that every homestead, and the buildings used'therewith, not exceeding in. value $1,000, to be selected by. the owner, or, in lieu thereof, at the option of the owner, any lot in a city, town, or village, with the buildings, used thereon, owned and occupied by any resident of the State, and not exceeding in value $1,000, shall be exempt in like manner from sale for the collectiipn. of any debt under final process.
On the 22d of August, 1868, the legislature passed an act which prescribed the mode of laying off the homestead, and setting off the personal property so exempted by the Con$titu- ■ ti'on.. On the 7th of April, 1869, another act was passed, which repealed the prior act, and prescribed-a different mode of doing what the prior act provided for. This latter act has not been repealed or modified.
. '-Three several judgments were recovered against the defendant in error: one on the 15th of December, .1868, upon a bond dated the' 25th of September, 1865; another, on the 10th of October, 1868, upon a bond dated Eeb. 27, 1866'; and the third on the 7th of January, 1868, for a debt due prior to that time. Two of these judgments were dockétéd, and became liens upon the premises in controversy on the 16th of December, 1868. The other one was docketed, and became such' lien on-the 18th of' January, 1869. When the debts were contracted for which the judgments were rendered, the exemption laws in force were the acts of Jan. 1,1854, and of Feb. 16, 1859. The first-named
On the 22d of January, 1869, the premises in controversy were duly set off to the defendant in error, a.s a homestead. He' had no other real estate, and the premises did not exceed §1,000 in value. On the 6th of March, 1869, the sheriff, under executions issued on the judgments, sold the premises to the plaintiff in- error, and thereafter executed to him a deed in due form. The regularity of the sale .is not contested.
The act of Aug. 22, 1868, was then in force. The acts of 1854 and 1859 had been repealed. Wilson v. Sparks, 72 N. C. 208. No point is made upon these acts by the counsel upon either side. We shall, therefore, pass them by without further remark.
The plaintiff in error brought this action in the Superior Court of Granville County, to recover possession of the premises so sold and conveyed to him. That court adjudged that the exemption created by the Constitution and the act of 1868 protected the property from liability under the judgments, and that the sale and conveyance by the sheriff were, therefore, void. Judgment was given accordingly. The. Supreme Court of the State affirmed the judgment. The plaintiff in error thereupon brought the case here for review. "The only Federal question presented by the record is, whether the exemption was valid as regards contracts made before the adoption of the Constitution of 1868.
The counsel for the plaintiff in error insists upon the negative of this proposition. The counsel upon the other side, frankly conceding several minor points, maintains the affirmative view. Our remarks will be confined to this subject.
The Constitution of the United States declares • that “ no State shall pass any . . . law -impairing the obligation of contracts.”
A contract is the agreement of minds, upon a sufficient con
The lexical definition of “.impair” is “to make worse; to diminish in. quantity, value, excellence, or strength; to lessen in power; to weaken; to enfeeble; to deteriorate.” Webster’s Diet..
“ Obligation ” is defined to be “ the 'act of obliging or binding; that which obligates; the binding-power of a vow, promise, oath, or contract,” &c. Id.
■ “ The word is derived from the Latin word obligation tying up-; and that .from the verb, obligo, to bind or tie up; to engage- by the ties of a promise or oath, or form of law; and obligo, is compounded of the verb ligo, to tie or bind fast and the • preposition ob, which is prefixed to increase its meaning.” Blair v. Williams and Lapsley v. Brashears, 4. Litt. (Ky.) 65.
'. The of. a contract every thing obligatory scope. Among these elements nothing is more important than the means of enforcement. This is the breath of its vital existence. Without if, the contract, as such, in the view of the law, ceases to be, and. falls into the class of those “ imperfect obligations,” as they are termed, -which depend for their fulfilment upon fhe will and' conscience of those' upon whom they rest. The ideas of right and remedy are inseparable. “ Want of right and want of remedy are the same thing.” 1 Bac. Abr.', tit. Actions in General, letter B.
In Von Hoffman v. City of Quincy (4 Wall. 535), it was said: “ A statute of frauds embracing pre-existing parol contracts not before required to be in writing would affect its validity. A statute declaring that the word ‘ ton ’ "should, in prior as well as subsequent contracts, be held to mean half or double 'the' weight' before prescribed, would affect its construction. ■' A' statute próviding that. a.previous contract of indeb'tment may be extinguished by a process of bankruptcy would inVolve its discharge'; and a, statute forbidding thé sale of any of the debt- or’s property under a judgment upon such a' contract would relate to the remedy.” , X- *
It cannot be doubted, either, upon principle or authority', that each of such laws would violate the. obligation of the contract,
In Green v. Biddle (8 Wheat. 1), this court sjaid, touching the point here under consideration: “ It is no answer, that the acts of Kentucky now in question are regulations of the remedy, and not of the right to the lands. If these acts so change the nature and extent - of existing remedies as materially to impair the rights and interests of the-owner, they'are just as-much a violation of the compact as if they i overturned his rights and interests.” - ,
“;One of the tests that, a contract has been impaired is, that its valúe has by -legislation-been diminished. It is not by the Con-, stitution to be impaired at all. This is not a question- of degree or manner or cause, but of. encroaching in .any respect on its obligation, — dispensing with any part of its force.” Planters’ Bank v. Sharp et al., 6 How. 861.
It is to'be understood that the encroachment thus denounced must be material. .Jf it be not material, it will be regarded as of no account.
These rules are axioms in the jurisprudence. of this- court. We think they rest upon a solid foundation. Do they not cover this case ; and are they not decisive of the question before us ?
We will, however, further examine the subject.
It is the established law of North Carolina that stay, laws are void, because they are in conflict'.with the national Constitutioh. Jacobs v, Smallwood, 68 N. C. 112; Jones v. Crittenden, 1 Law Repos. (N. C.) 385; Barnes v. Barnes et al., 8 Jones (N. C.), L. 366. This ruling is clearly correct. Such laws change a term of the contract by postponing the time of payment.. This impairs its obligation, by making it less valuable to the creditor.' But-it does this solely by operating on the remedy. The contract is not otherwise touched by the offéndirig law. -Let us suppose a-case; A party recovers two'judg
The power -to tax involves the power to destroy. McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 416. The power to modify at discretion the remedial part of a contract is the same thing.
But it is said that imprisonment for debt may be abolished in all cases, and that the time prescribed by a statute of limitations may be abridged.
Imprisonment for debt is a relic of ancient barbarism. Cooper’s Justinian, 658; 12 Tables, Tab. 3. It.has descended with the stream of time. It is a punishment father than, a remedy. It is right for fraud, but wrong for misfortune. It breaks the spirit of the honest debtor, detroys his credit, which is a form of capital, and, dooms him, while it lasts, to helpless idleness. Where .there is no fraud, it is the opposite of a remedy. Every right-minded man must rejoice when such a blot is removed from the statute-book.
But upon the power of' a State, even in this class of cases,
Statutes of limitation are statutes of repose. They are necessary to the welfare of society. The lapse of time constantly carries with it. the means of proof. The public as well as individuals are interested in the principle upon which they proceed. They do not impair the remedy, but only require its appli cation within the time specified. If' the period limited be unreasonably short, and designed to defeat the remedy upon pre-existing contracts, which was part of their obligation, we should pronounce the statute void. Otherwise, we should abdicate the performance of one of our most important duties. The obligation of a contract cannot be substantially impaired in any way by a State law. This .restriction'is beneficial to those whom it restrains, as well as to others. No community can have any higher public interest than in the faithful performance of contracts and the honest administration of justice. The inhibition of the Constitution is wholly prospective. The States may legislate as to contracts thereafter made, as they may see fit. It is only those in existence when the hostile law is passed that are protected- from its' effect.
In Bronson v. Kinzie (1 How. 311), the subject of' exemptions was touched upon, but not discussed. There a mortgage had been executed in Illinois. Sübsequéntly, the legislature passéd a law giving the mortgagor a year to redeem after sale-under a' decree, and requiring the land to be appraised, and not to be sold for less than two-thirds of the. appraised value. The law was held to be void in both particulars as to pre-existing contracts. What is said as to exemptions is entirely obiter; but, coming from so high a source, it is entitled to the most respectful consideration. The court, speaking through Mr. Chief Justice Taney, said: A State “ may, if it thinks proper, direct that the necessary implements of agriculture, or the tools of the mechanic, or articles of necessity in household furniture, shall, like wearing-apparel, not be liable to execution on judgment's. Regulations of this description have always been considered in every civilized community as properly belonging to the remedy to be executed or not by every sovereignty, according to its ou u views of policy and humanity.” He quotes with' ápproba
The learned Chief Justice seems to have had in his mind the maxim “ de minimis” &c. Upon no other ground can any exemption be.justified. “Policy and humanity” are dangerous guides in the discussion of a legal proposition. He who follows them far 'is,apt to bring back .the means of error and delusion.The- prohibition contains • no qualification, and we have no judicial authority to interpolate any. Our .duty is simply to execute it.-'
Where the facts áre qn disputed, it is always the. duty of the court to pronounce the legal result. Merchants' Bank v. State Bank, 10 Wall. 604. Here there is no question.of legislative discretion involved. With the constitutional prohibition, even as expounded by -the. late Chief Justice^ before, us on .one hand, and-on the other the State Constitution .of -1868, and the ^ laws passed. to carry- out., its provisions, we cannot hesitate to hold that both the latter- do seriously impair the obligation of the several contracts here in .question. - We say, as was said in '■■Gunn v. Barry (15 Wall. 622), that no one can cast his eyes upon the new exemptions thus created without being at once struck with, their excessive character, and hence their fatal' magnitude. The claim for the retrospective efficacy of the Constitution or the laws cannot be supported. Their- validity as to contracts subsequently made admits of no doubt.. Bronson v. Kinzie, supra.
The history of the national’ Constitution throws a strong light upon this subject. Between the close of the war of the revolution and the adoption of that instrument, unprecedented pecuniary distress existed throughout the country.
“ The discontents and uneasiness; arising in a great measure ' from the embarrassment in which a great number of individuals were- involved, continued to become more .extensive. At length,
■ “ The system called justice was, in some of the States, iniquity. reduced to elementary principles.” . . . “In some of the States, creditors were treated as outlaws. . Bankrupts were armed with legal authority to be persecutors, and, by the shock of all confidence, society was shaken to its foundations.” Fisher Ames’s Works (ed. of. 1809), 120.
“ Evidences of acknowledged claims, on the public would not command in the market more than one-fifth of their nominal value. The bonds of solvent men, payable at no very distant day, could not be negotiated but'at a discount of thirty, forty, or fifty per cent per annum. Landed property would rarely command any price; and sales of the most common articles for ready money could only be made at enormous and ruinous depreciation.
“ State legislatures, in too many instances, yiélded to the necessities of their constituents, and passed laws by which creditors were compelled to wait for the payment of their just demands, on the tender of security, or to táke property at a valuation, or paper money falsely purporting to be the representative of specie.” 8 Ramsey’s Hist. TJ. S. 77.
“ The effects of these laws interfering between debtors and creditors were extensive. They destroyed public credit and confidence between man and man, injured the morals of the people, and in many instances insured and aggravated the ruin of the unfortunate debtors for whose temporary relief they were brought forward.” 2 Ramsey’s Hist. South Carolina, .429.
Besides the. large issues of continental money, nearly all the States issued their own bills of credit. In manv instances the amount was very large. Phillips’s Historical Sketches of American Paper Currency, 2d Series, 29.' The depreciation of both became enormous. Only., pne per cent of the “ continental money ” was assumed by the new government. Nothing more
The treaty of peace .with Great Britain declared that “ the creditors on either side shall meet with no lawful impediment to the recovery of the full amount in sterling money of 'all tona fide debts heretofore .contracted.” The British minister complained earnestly.to the American Secretary, of State of violations of this guaranty. Twenty-two instances- of laws in conflict with it in different States' were specifically named. 1 Amer. State Papers, pp. 195, 196, 199, and '287. In South Carolina, “ laws were passed in which property of every kind was made|a legal tender in-payment'of debts, although payable according to contract in gold and silver. Other laws installed the debt, so that of sums already due Only a third, and after-wards only a fifth, was securable in law.” 2 Ramsey’s Hist. S. C. 429. Many other.States passed.laws of a similar character. The obligation of- the contract was as often invaded after' judgment as before The attapks were.quite as-common and .effective in one way as in the. other. To meet these evils in their various phases, the national Constitution declared that “no State should emit bills of credit,■■ make any thing but gold and silver coin a-legal tender in payment of debts, or-pass any law . . . impairing the obligation of dontracts.” All these provisions grew out of previous abuses. 2 Curtis’s Hist, of the Const. 866. See also the Federalist, Nos. 7 and 44. In the number last mentioned, Mh Madison said that such laws were not only forbidden by the Constitution, but were “contrary-to the first principles of the social compapt, and to every principle of sound legislation.” •
The treatment of the malady was severe, but the cure was complete.
“ No sooner did the .-new government begin .its auspicious course than- order seemed to arise out of confusion. Commerce and industry awoke, and were cheerful at their labors, for credit and confidence awoke with them* Everywhere was the appear-* anee of prosperity,.and the-only fear was that its progress was. too rapid to consist with the purity and simplicity of ancient manners.” Fisher Ames’s Works (ed. of 1809), 122.
Mr. Chief Justice Taney, in Bronson v. Kinzie (supra), speaking of the protection of the remedy, said: “ It is this protection which the clause of the. Constitution now in question mainly intended to secure.”
■The point decided in Dartmouth College v. Woodward (1 Wheat. 518) had not, it-is believed, when the Constitution-was adopted, occurred to any one. There is no trace of it in the Federalist,'nor- in any other contemporaneous publication. It was first made and judicially decided under the Constitution in that case. Its novelty w.as admitted by Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, but it was met and conclusively answered in his opinion.
We think the views we have expressed carry out the intent of contracts and the intent of the Constitution. The obligation of the former is placed under the safeguard of the -latter. ’ No State can invade it; and Congress is incompetent to authorize such invasion. Its position is impregnable, and will be so while the organic law of the nation remains as.it is. The trust touching the subject with which this court is eharged is one of magnitude and delicacy. We must always be careful to see that there is neither nonfeasance nor misfeasance on our. part.
The importance of the point involved in this controversy induces us to restate succinctly the conclusions at which we have arrived, and which will be the ground of our judgment.
The remedy subsisting in a State when and.' where a; contract is made and is to be performed is a part of its obligation, and any subsequent law of the State which so affects that remedy as substantially to impair and lessen the valué' of the contract is forbidden by the Constitution, and is, therefore, void.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of North Carolina will. be reversed, and the cause will be remanded with directions-to proceed in conformity to this opinion; and it is
iSo ordered
Concurring Opinion
I concur in the judgment in this case, upon the ground that the State law, passed subsequent to the time when the debt in question was contracted, so changed the nature and extent of the remedy for enforcing the payment of the same as it existed at the time- as materially to impair the rights and interests which the complaining party acquired by virtue of the contract merged in the judgment.
Where an appropriate remedy exists for the enforcement of the contract at the time it was made, the State legislature cannot deprive the party of such a remedy, nor can the legislature append to the right such restrictions or conditions as to render its exercise ineffectual or unavailing. State legislatures may change existing remedies, and- substitute others' in their place; and, if ' the new remedy is not unreasonable, and will enable the party to enforce his rights without new and burdensome restrictions, the party is bound- to pursue tlie new remedy, the rule..being, that a State legislature may regulate'at pleasure the modes of -proceeding in- relation to -past contracts as well as those made subsequent to the new regulation.
Examples where the-principle is universally accepted may be given to confirm the proposition. Statutes for the abolition of imprisonment for debt are of that character, and so are statures requiring instruments to be- recorded, and statutes of. limitation.
All admit that imprisonment for debt may be abolished in respect to past Contracts as well as future; and it is equally well settled that the time within which a claim or entry shall be barred may be shortened, without just complaint from any quarter. Statutes of the kind have often been passed; and it has never been held that such an alteration in such a statute impaired the obligation of a.prior contract,'unless the period allowed in the new law Was so short and unreasonable as to amount to a substantial denial of the remedy to enforce the right. Angell, Lim. (6th ed.), sect. 22; Jackson v. Lamphire, 3 Pet. 280.
Beyond all doubt, a State legislature may regulate all such
Creditors as well as debtors know that the power, to adopt-such regulations reside in every State, to. enable it to secure its 'citizens from unjust, merciless, and oppressive litigation, and protect those without other means in their pursuits of labor, which are necessary-to the well-being and the very existence of every community.
Examples of the kind, were .well known and universally approved both before and since the Constitution was adopted, and they are now to be found in the statutes of every State and. Territory within the boundaries of- the United States; and it would be monstrous to hold that every time some small addition was made to such exemptions that the statute making it impairs the .obligation of every existing contract within the jurisdiction of the State passing the law.
Mere remedy, it is agreed,,may be altered, at the will of the 1 State legislature, if the alteration is not Of a character to impair ;the obligation of the contract.; and it is properly conceded that the alteration, though it be of the remedy, if it materially impairs the right of the party to enforce the contract, is equally, within the constitutional inhibition.. Difficulty would doubtless attend the effort to draw a line that would be applicable in all cases between legitimate alteration of the remedy, and provisions which, in the form of'remedy, impair-the right; nor is it necessary to make the attempt in, this case;. as the courts Of all nations agree, and'every civilized community .will' concede, that-laws -exempting necessary wearing-
Expressions are contained in the opinion of the court which may be construed as forbidding all such humane legislation, and it is to exclude the conclusion that any such views have my concurrence that I have found it necessary to state the reasons which induced me to reverse the judgment of the State court.
Concurring Opinion
I concur in the judgment in this case, for the reasons following: —
By the Constitution of North Carolina of 1868, the personal property of any resident of the State, to the value of $500, is exempt from sale under execution; also, a ■ homestead, the dwelling and buildings thereon, not exceeding in value $T,00Q.-
The debts in question were incurred before the exemptions took effect. The court .now holds' that the exemptions are invalid. In this I concur, not for the reas.on that any and every exemption made after entering into á contract is invalid, but that the amount here exempted is so large, as seriously to impair the creditor’s remedy for the collection of his debt.
I think that.the-law was correctly announced by Mr. Chief Justice Taney in Bronson v. Kinzie (1 How. 311), when he • said: A State “ may, if it thinks proper, direct, that the necessary implements of agriculture, or -the tools of a mechanic, or articles of necessity in household furniture, shall, like wearing-apparel, be not liable to execution on judgments.”
The principle was laid down with the like accuracy by Judge Denio, in Morse v. Goold (11 N. Y. 281), where he says: “ There, is no -universal principle of law that every part of the property of á debtor is liable to be seized for the payment of a judgment against him. . . . The question is, whether the law which prevailed when the contract was made has been so far changed that there does not remain a- substantial and reasonable mode
In my judgment, the exemption provided for by the North Carolina Constitution is so large, that, in regard to the mass of contracts and the situation and circumstances of. debtors as they are ordinarily found to exist, it would seriously affect the efficiency of remedies for the collection of debts, and that it must, therefore, be held to be void.
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