Beirne v. Dunlap

8 Va. 514
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJuly 15, 1837
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Va. 514 (Beirne v. Dunlap) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beirne v. Dunlap, 8 Va. 514 (Va. 1837).

Opinion

Parker, J.

The justice of this case seems clearly to be with the plaintiff in the court below, and 1 have felt much inclined to sustain the judgment, if it could be done without breaking down the barriers which separate one remedy from another. But upon reflection, I think debt was not the proper form of action.

The action of debt only lies for money (or tobacco, under the act of assembly) and the plaintiff recovers the sum in numero, and not a compensation in damages, [516]*516they being merely nominal. For any collateral thing, debt will not lie. Buller’s N. P. 167.

Bank notes are not money, although they pass generally as money by common consent, and answer in some sort the purposes of money. Money is the coin issued or adopted by the sovereign authority, and made a legal tender in payment of debts.

The obligation upon which this suit is brought promises to pay “the sum of 813 dollars 79 cents in notes of the United, States bank or either of the Virginia banks,” on or before the 1st day of September 1834. Is this a note for the payment of money, with a condition ? or is it, in substance as well as form, a stipulation to pay bank paper currently passing among us as a substitute for money, and “ which is enumerated in dollars and cents as specie is?” See Campbell v. Weister, 1 Litt. 30.

I think it is substantially a mere contract to pay bank notes to a certain specified amount,.expressed in words as appropriate as any other to signify how much bank paper was to be paid, and is equivalent to an engagement to pay bank notes amounting to 813 dollars 79 cents, or so many bank notes as on their face will nominally make that sum. To pay 100 dollars in bonds or bank paper, means bonds or notes calling for that sum, which the obligors or banks are bound for. It is the same thing in law as an engagement to pay the 813 ' dollars 79 cents in 800 busheis of wheat, or in any other commodity whose quantity is ascertained, as the amount of the bank notes in this case is ascertained. And if so, an action of debt will not lie, unless it would lie upon a promise to pay a fixed quantity of any commodity of fluctuating value. In this respect there is no difference between bank paper and any other commodity. Paper may rise or depreciate in value before the day of payment; and if the day passes when the contract is to be fulfilled, the measure of the obligee’s rights, and of the obligor’s liabilities, is the value of the notes [517]*517on that day, to be ascertained by the verdict of a jury, and awarded in damages.

In looking into the cases, some confusion maybe duced, unless we recollect that in this case the quantity of the bank notes is fixed, and that the insertion of the 813 dollars 79 cents has no reference to current coin, but to an amount of bank notes which nominally represents so much coin ; the same terms being always used in the enumeration of both currencies. We may find that a note payable in produce generally, has been decided to be a note for the payment of money. Bollinger v. Thurston, 2 Rep. Con. Ct. 447. (South Carolina) cited 1 Selw. N. P. 4th american edi. 448. So the case cited at the bar from And. 177. 2 Bac. Abr. title Debt. A. p. 617. in notis. of a sum of money “payable in watchesbecause, says the authority, the number of the watches is not certain. And this probably gives the clue to the proper distinction, although it has not been always regarded. In such cases of indeterminate quantity, there can be no other measure of damages than the named sum, and the intervention of a jury is unnecessary. The named sum must necessarily be the amount of the debt, which is then precisely ascertained. But where the named sum is to be paid in any determinate quantity of a collateral article, subject to fluctuation in its market price, the value of that article is the thing due, and as it may be more or less than the named sum for which the creditor is willing to take the article, it must be estimated in damages by a jury.

The mention of a sum in dollars and cents, which could not be fully paid in bank notes, does not in my judgment affect the principle. The same difficulty might occur if the payment was to be made in horses or wheat, and the jury can as well estimate the value of 813 dollars 79 cents in bank notes, as in any other commodity. It is bank paper the obligors engage to pay and the obligee to receive, and if it is not paid at the day, it is its value then which may be claimed in damages.

[518]*518The abstract principle stated in Crawford v. Daigh, 2 Va. Cas. 521. may be correct where the quantity or amount of the commodity is not fixed, but under no other circumstances. The cases on this point in Kentucky (which I do not refer to as authority) go much farther than it is necessary to go here, and farther than I should be willing to carry the doctrine limiting the action of debt, aíj I am at present advised. See Campbell v. Weister, 1 Littel 30. January v. Henry, 3 Monroe 8. Noe v. Preston, 5 Marshall 57. Sinclair v. Peircy, Id. 63. and Brown’s ex’ors v. Durbin’s adm’r, Id. 170.

On this point, and on this alone, I am for reversing the judgment.

Tucker, P.

By the note in this case the plaintiffs in error promised to pay to Charles Lewis on a given day «the sum of 813 dollars 79 cents in notes of the United .States bank or either of the Virginia banks.” Upon this note an action of debt was brought, and the defendants demurred to the declaration. Their demurrer was overruled, and judgment entered for 813 dollars 79 cents with interest and costs, to which judgment the defendants obtained a supersedeas.

The action of debt will only lie upon a money or tobacco bond. An obligation to deliver wheat or bullion, or bank notes, will not sustain such action. For it is determinate in its character, and does not generally lie where the amount of the recovery in money must be ascertained by evidence of value and by the intervention of a jury. It is true that it has been in some cases decided, that an action of debt will lie on a promise to pay a sum of money in a collateral article,provided the time is past when the payment was to be made. Thus in the case cited at the bar, debt was held to lie upon a promise to pay £ 20. in watches. The debt was clearly ascertained and determinate. The defendant having failed to make payment in watches, which [519]*519was an Indulgence to him, became liable to pay money; for it is obvious that no action of any kind could lie for the watches themselves. Debt or covenant were the only remedies which the creditor could have, and in cither he could only recover money, and in both he must have recovered identically the same sum, to wit, £ SO. As then money only could be recovered, and the sum to be recovered was determinate, debt well lay for it.

The true question, then, in this and all similar cases, is whether the contract is to pay money, or whether it is a contract for bank notes. Thus, if I contract to pay A. B. ten 50 dollar notes of the bank of the United States, this is clearly no money contract, and debt therefore will not lie. Assumpsit

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Campbell v. Weister
11 Ky. 30 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1822)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Va. 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beirne-v-dunlap-va-1837.