Barlow v. Gregory

31 Conn. 261
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 31 Conn. 261 (Barlow v. Gregory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barlow v. Gregory, 31 Conn. 261 (Colo. 1863).

Opinion

Sanford, J.

This is an action against the indorser of a promissory note dated June 29th, 1860, and payable six months after its date. The note was presented for payment on the 31st of December, was dishonored, and the indorser was notified the same day. The only question now made is, whether the note was presented at the proper time.

By statute (Rev. Stat., tit. 37, sec. 2,) it is provided that “ whenever any negotiable note or bill of exchange shall be payable in this state, and the third day of grace on such note or bill shall fall upon a day appointed by the Governor of this state as a day of public fasting, or thanksgiving, or upon the fourth day of July, or upon Christmas day, such promissory note or bill of exchange shall be due and payable on the secular day next preceding such day of fasting, thanksgiving, fourth of July or Christmas day; ” and by an act passed at the May session of the General Assembly of the year 1860, and approved on the 6th day of June, the first day of January was, by way of amendment to the above recited act, added to the other holidays therein enumerated; but the time when the amendment should go into operation not being specified in the act itself, it took effect on the fourth of July, 1860, under the general statute upon that subject.

Within the terms of the act of 1860, therefore, the note was presented at the proper time. But the defendant contends that in regard to these parties that act was inoperative, because it took effect after the indorsement was made; and if construed so as to affect this contract, would impair its obligation, and be repugnant to the tenth section of the first article of the Constitution of the United States.

We think this claim unfounded. We suppose the constitutional prohibition applies only to laws aimed at contracts and intended to operate upon some of the stipulations which such contracts contain, and we may safely affirm that it was not the intention of the framers of the constitution to interfere in [265]*265any manner with the legislation of the states in relation to their internal police.

It certainly was not the design of our legislators by the act of 1860 to curtail the term of credit agreed upon between creditors and their debtors, or in any other way to affect existing contracts, or the obligations which such contracts impose. Their object obviously was to promote the public health, public morals, or public welfare in some other respect, by enabling a portion of our people for a season to shake off the cares of business and devote another day to recreation and the cultivation of the social affections. With the wisdom or expediency of the enactment we have nothing to do. Our inquiry regards only the constitutional authority of the legislature to adopt it. We are satisfied that it possessed that power. The statute in question is of the character of a police regulation, and for that reason, if for no other, is beyond the purview of the constitutional prohibition.

A contract to perform labor or deliver goods on a day appointed by the Governor for public fasting and prayer, as the law now stands, would be a valid contract. But suppose that after such a contract made and before the time appointed for its performance, the state legislature,.deeming it expedient to return again to the good old ways of our ancestors, should by law prohibit the performance of all servile labor on days appointed for public fasting, would such a law be repugnant to the constitution ? We think it would not, although it would incidentally postpone for a single day the performance of the supposed contract.

Again, this law was not intended to impair the obligation of any contract, nor does it in fact operate upon any of the stipulations which these parties have made. A contract is an agreement between two or more persons to do or not to do a particular thing ; and the obligation of a contract is found in the terms in which that contract is expressed, and is the duty thus assumed by the contracting parties respectively to perform the stipulations of such contract. When that duty is recognized and enforced by the municipal law, it is one of perfect, and when not so recognized and enforced, of imperfect obliga[266]*266tion. The indorser of a noto agrees with the indorsee to be responsible for the maker’s performance of his promise; so that, in order to learn what the contract of the indorser is, we must first ascertain the contract of the maker. In the case before us the maker agreed with the payee to pay the note six months after its date. And the payee agreed to give the maker credit for that period. The contract of the original parties then was for six months and only six months credit. The payee then became indorser and transferred his rights and obligations to the indorsee, and also undertook that the maker should perform his promise, and if he failed, that the indorser upon due notice of such failure would pay the note himself. Now, had the statute in question provided that notes which by their terms were payable on the first of January should be due and payable on the last day of December, the rights of the maker under the contract, and consequently of the indorser, would have been injuriously affected, and the obligation of the payee’s contract would have been impaired, because that entitled the maker to six months’ credit, which the act curtailed. But the act now under consideration cuts off merely one of the days of grace, leaving the term of credit for which the parties stipulated in their contract to remain intact. I know that days of grace are sometimes said to make a part of the original contract; as by Bissell, J., in Savings Bank v. Bates, 8 Conn., 511; but the expression is not strictly accurate. The original contract is found in the terms which- the parties have agreed upon and adopted as the exponents of their intentions, and no where else; and the words six months ” no more signify six months and three days when employed in a negotiable note or bill of exchange, than when used in any other instrument. The custom of merchants in relation to such notes and bills indeed, is to allow to the makers of the one, and the acceptors of the other, a longer time to make their payments in than is allowed to other debtors. And this custom having become general and uniform in its observance, is now recognized by the courts as part of the mercantile law by which they are governed. In the language of the court in Tassell v. Lewis, 1 Ld. Raymond, [267]*267743, the custom is that three days are allowed for the payment of bills and notes.” Days of grace no more make part of the original contract now, than they did when their allowance was optional with the holder of the paper, or when the existence of the custom had to be proved by witnesses. They are still days of respite or indulgence, demandable indeed and allowed in every case under the custom as an incident to the contract, but in regard to which the contracting parties have in fact made no stipulation.

In some districts a tenant for years is by custom entitled to take an away-going crop after the expiration of his term, though his lease is silent on the subject. We have never heard that right spoken of as making part of the original contract.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Conn. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barlow-v-gregory-conn-1863.