Meredith v. Salmon
Meredith v. Salmon
Opinion of the Court
Although the bond in controversy is in the possession of a bona fide purchaser, the obligor may, notwithstanding, make any defence here he could have made in an action by the obligee. The purchaser holds the bond subject to every infirmity of consideration—to all the equities attaching to the instrument in the hands of the party to whom it was executed. The only question then to be considered is, what did the parties mean by the words “current funds,” used in the several obligations executed by the vendee % Did they intend to provide for payment of the debt in the money current, whatever it might be, at the maturity of these obligations, or were they contracting with reference to Confederate money, and its probable continuance as the circulating medium of the country. This question must be decided not alone by the language of the instrument,
That an individual during the war, having urgent need for Confederate notes, and knowing they would be useful to him in the payment of specie debts, might have been willing to execute his obligation therefor, payable at a remote period, and incur all the risk of an appreciation of the currency may be readily imagined. But it is difficult to believe that a person possessed of ordinary intelligence would deliberately have encountered the hazard of being required to pay $25,000, with its accumulated interest, in a sound currency, for a tract of land worth only $6,000, whatever may have been his conviction of the result of the struggle. Certainly if the parties looked forward to some other and more valuable currency as a medium of payment, and measured their agreement by a more permanent standard, that very consideration must have had its influence on them in estimating the price to be paid for the property.
If we are permitted to speculate as to their views, we may reasonably suppose they entertained the opinions held by a great majority of the people. They probably anticipated an early triumph of the Confederate cause, and, as a necessary result, a marked appreciation of the Confederate money. Mr. Wellington Goddin, a witness, an extensive auctioneer and real estate agent during the war, in answer to a question asked him, says that he wrote the bonds in accordance with instructions given .him by the parties ; that he does not know what were their views as to the kind of currency in which thebonds were to be paid ; but that he would state his opinion after hearing an interview between them at the time. He says : “ Confederate notes at the time of the contract were greatly depreciated, and as nearly all the citizens of the South had the greatest confidence in the success of the cause, and as in that event the currency would be greatly enhanced in value, persons selling real estate
The extended credit given would indicate, in such a case, not that the vendor expected payment in coin or lawful money of the United States, but that the Confederate currency would be less depreciated when the day of payment arrived. In this view the stipulation in relation to “ current funds” may be readily explained as intended to exclude the idea of an agreement to pay in coin. These views are strongly confirmed by the conduct of the vendor subsequent to the sale. In October 1863, we find him receiving from the vendee payment in full of the bond maturing in June 1868. The bond falling due in June 1867, was placed by him in the hands of a broker and sold for Confederate money. The remaining three were assigned to Fendall Griffin, from whom he had purchased the land. It is not proved ; it is not even suggested, that the vendor was impelled to this course by a pressing and urgent demand, or by the prospect or hope of a better investment. His sale of the-bonds under the circumstances is utterly inconsistent with the theory that the vendor was unwilling to receive the Confederate notes, and intended to await the advent of a better circulating medium. The conduct of the holders of these bonds also repudiates such a pretension. As late as Uovember 1864, all of them, except the appellant, readily accepted payment, not because their necessities required it, but, according to the evidence, because
It is insisted, however, that this evidence is plainly contradictory of the written agreement. Were this so, it would- still be legitimate, as the statute authorizes either party to show by parol or other relevant evidence, what was the true understanding, either expressed or to be implied, in respect to the kind of currency in which the contract was to be fulfilled. Such evidence, how
The case of Taylor v. Turley, 33 Maryland R. 500, very recently decided, in some of' its features is very similar to this. The note in controversy there was executed the 7th February 1863, in the State of Tennessee, while the Confederate forces “ were in the ascendancy in that State, for a loan of Confederate money, payable two years after date, “in current bankable funds.” Four judges in a court of seven, held that the note was payable in United States currency. The other three were of. opinion that the note according to its terms, when construed in the light of the facts and circumstances described by the evidence, was payable in Confederate currency. Judge Stewart, in delivering the opinion of the maj ority, relies mainly upon the fact, that no evidence had been adduced tending to show that the parties in employing the words, “ current bankable funds,” referred to Confederate money, and its probable continuance for the next two years as the prevailing currency of the State of Tennessee. On the contrary, the facts showed that they contracted in view of the fluctuating value of the circulating medium in that State, depending upon the fortunes of war, at one time Confederate notes constituting the currency, and at another United •States treasury notes, accordingly as the contending forces alternately obtained the ascendancy; and these very fluctuations confirmed the conclusion that the parties contemplated the very possible occurrence of a different currency at the maturity of the obligation from
In the State of Virginia the condition of things was entirely different. At the period of the execution of this instrument, certainly, there was no such struggle for ascendancy between contending forces, no such fluctuations and changes of -currency, as in the State of Tennessee. The operations of the government and the transactions of the people were almost universally conducted through the medium of the Confederate treasury notes. It seems to me, therefore, the construction given to a Virginia contract of 1868 should be the very reverse of that applied to a Tennessee contract of the same period. It is certainly reversing the order of things to presume that parties, contracting with reference to the prevailing currency, contemplated payment in some other unknown and more valuable medium, bio such presumption results necessarily from the use of the words “ current funds.” There is no magic in these words, bio legal import attached to them. Their proper interpretation depends upon the time when and the circumstances under which they are used. The Supreme court of the United States, without the aid of legislative enactments, finds no difficulty in divesting the word dollar of its long established legal signification in this class of cases, and of considering it in the light of all the circumstances surrounding the parties. We on the other hand, with the aid of a liberal statute, are continually embarrassed in our efforts properly to interpret the words “ current funds,” and phrases of a like character, when employed in the same connection. Most persons are willing to concede that an obligation executed in 1863 or 1864 for the payment of dollars, although at a remote period, is to be considered a Confederate cont:act when founded on a loan of Confederate notes, or a sale of property at Confederate prices. In such case they agree that the parties meant the dollars in circula
The case of Boulware v. Newton, 18 Gratt. 708, has been cited as sustaining the pretension of the appellant. There the obligation was for the payment of the sum designated “in current funds.” The counsel in-that ease, relying upon the authority of certain English cases, insisted that the parties were precluded by the reason, policy, and intendment of the law, from affixing to the words “current funds” any other meaning than that of funds current at the date of the contract. Judge Rives, in answering this view, said this would be to disregard the true reason of the authorities, and to deny to our citizens, at that time under all the circumstances of their condition, that absolute freedom of contracting in view of all possible eventualities, which the principles of the common law secure to all, in spite of the changes of government. It was held, not that the words in question of themselves excluded the supposition that Confederate currency was intended, but in the connection in which they were used, and under all the circumstances and provisions of the contract, they would not admit of that interpretation. It was said by Judge Anderson, in Miller & Franklin v. City of Lynchburg, 20 Gratt. 380, 343, that he was indisposed to extend the principle of Boulware v. Newton, in its application to other cases, and would not-apply it unless required to do
It is supposed that Kraker v. Shields, 20 Gratt. 377, is an authority for the appellant here. The cases will be found on examination to be wholly dissimilar. In Kraker v. Shields nothing is said in the notes or deeds of trust about the currency in which payment was to be made, but the money is described generally as so many dollars. There the land was sold in November 1862, at the price of fourteen thousand and five hundred dollars, of which $4,500 were paid in cash in Confederate notes. The estimated value of the land in coin before the war and at the date of sale, was ten thousand dollars, and in November 1865 it would have sold for fifteen thousand dollars Estimating the cash payment at its specie value, and supposing the remainder payable in United States currency, the price stipulated to be paid -was about the fair value of the property. ' In point of fact, however, two instalments falling due in 1863 and 1864, were paid in Confederate money. It was proved that the vendor anticipating a better currency in a year or two, expressly refused to sell except upon the terms of receiving the deferred instalments in the money in circulation when the bonds matured, and that these terms were communicated to the purchaser and by bim accepted, though with considerable reluctance and hesitation.
In the present case the real value of the land does not exceed six thousand dollars, while the agreed value was thirty thousand dollars. Does any one suppose that the purchaser would have entered into this contract, if the vendor here, as in Kraker v. Shields, had informed him it was his determination not to receive payment until the maturity of the respective bonds, and then to require it in gold if that should bo the circulating medium. So far from it, the proof is, as I have before stated, that the vendee made the purchase and executed his bonds in the form adopted, with the express reservation of a right to
As a general rule the construction of this class of contracts is matter of fact rather than law. In their interpretation, but little aid is to be derived from previous adjudications. Still I think we may study with profit and instruction the opinions of our predecessors in controversies arising at an early period of our history. After the close of the Revolutionary war a number of cases were before this court involving the adjustment of liabilities incurred during the existence of paper money. See Watson & Hartshorne v. Alexander, 1 Wash. 440; Skipwith v. Clinch, 2 Call, 213; Smith, ex’or, v. Walker, 1 Call, 39; Bogle, Somerville & Co. v. Vowles, 1 Call, 244; Commonwealth v. Beaumarchais, 3 Call, 122. In some of these cases the obligations were payable presently ; in others at remote periods ; in others the agreement was for the payment of a perpetual ground rent upon the conveyance of real estate in fee. Again, in others, leases had been made for long terms in consideration of annual rents. In some instances the contract provided for the-payment of so many pounds-without further description. In others, the stipulation was to pay current
It is true that these decisions were made under the act of 1781, which directed the application of a fixed scale to all the contracts and debts of that period^ excepting debts and contracts made and entered into for gold and silver coin. But by the 5th section of the same act the court was authorized to award such judgment in such case, as shall appear just and equitable. And in Ambler v. Wyld, 2 Wash. 54, the court said this section was not intended to let men loose from their contracts, but to allow a departure from the established scale in cases where it might be necessary to meet the real contract of the parties. It was the object then as now not to violate, but to execute the contract. And yet the court applied the scale to debts falling due after as before the close of the Revolutionary struggle, although in many instances the parties must have contemplated that the debts would be payable and the rents accrue long after the continental money had disappeared from the channels of circulation. This legislation and these decisions evince the strong disinclination of the distinguished men of that ■era to impose upon debtors the burden of discharging in a sound currency, the nominal amount of debts contracted in the depreciated currency of the Revolution. I think we may with safety imitate their example, applying to the contracts of our own time the same liberal rules of interpretation, and adjusting them upon the same humane and equitable principles whenever it can be done consistently in any degree with legal rights and obligations. These I am disposed to respect in all cases ; but where there is a doubt, any ambiguity in the terms of the contract, that doubt should be resolved in the inter■ests of justice and equity, and according to the probable intent of the parties, rather than by the technical and rigid rules of the common law.
The other judges concurred in the opinion, of Staples, J.
Decree reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Meredith & als. v. Salmon
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