Bank of Tennessee v. Union Bank of Louisiana
This text of 2 F. Cas. 678 (Bank of Tennessee v. Union Bank of Louisiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
charged the jury in substance as follows:—
“If the defendants saw fit, without authority from the plaintiffs, to receive in payment of drafts and notes forwarded by the plaintiffs for collection, Confederate notes or any other notes, the illegality or nullity of such notes does not discharge the defendants for their liability as bankers charged with the business of collection.
“Even if the jury should find that the plaintiffs had collected notes in Confederate currency, that they had forwarded Confederate notes to defendants, and that they knew that Confederate notes were largely circulated in New Orleans, these facts would not constitute proof of authority from the plaintiffs to the defendants to collect in Confederate currency.
“That the delivery by defendants to the military authorities of Confederate notes to the amount of their indebtedness to plaintiffs from general funds of the bank would not discharge the defendants, if the jury were of the opinion that the Confederate notes so delivered were not the moneys or funds standing on their books to the credit of the plaintiffs.
“If the jury should be of opinion, from the evidence, that the defendants paid over the amount which they held to the credit of plaintiffs to the officers of the quartermaster’s department, in obedience to special order No. 202, and under coercion, then and in that case such payment was valid, and released defendants from all further claims of the plaintiffs on that account.
“If the jury should find, from the evidence, that the amount claimed by the plaintiffs in this suit was received by the defendants in Confederate treasury notes, issued by the so-called Confederate government, then in rebellion and at war with the United States, and that Confederate notes were so received by the defendants as a direct remittance from the plaintiffs, or in payment of assets belonging to the plaintiffs and collected by the defendants, with their knowledge and approval, express or implied, in the notes afore[679]*679said, and the officers of the quartermaster’s department therefore decided that the payment under special order No. 202 should be made in Confederate treasury notes, and that it was so made accordingly, then such payment was valid, and released the defendants from all further claims of the plaintiffs on account of the amount so paid over.
“That, under the constitution of the United States, no state can enter into any treaty, alliance, or confederation, or emit bills of credit; that the formation of the government of the so-called Confederate States was unlawful, and the emission of bills of credit by such government was unlawful; that the Confederate treasury notes issued by said government and circulated as money were bills of credit within the meaning of the constitution, and therefore an unlawful issue; and that by the law of Louisiana and under the constitution of the United States, all dealing in such notes was unlawful, and all obligations arising therefrom or founded thereon, are also unlawful and without legal consideration.
“If the jury find that the balance of account claimed by plaintiffs arose from dealings in such Confederate treasury notes, remitted by plaintiffs to defendants, or received by defendants for the account of plaintiffs, with their consent and approval, then the claim of the plaintiffs is without lawful consideration, and the jury should find their verdict for the defendants.”
The jury returned a verdict for the defendants.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
2 F. Cas. 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-tennessee-v-union-bank-of-louisiana-circtdla-1858.