Billgerry v. Branch & Sons

19 Gratt. 393
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 Gratt. 393 (Billgerry v. Branch & Sons) 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
Billgerry v. Branch & Sons, 19 Gratt. 393 (Va. 1869).

Opinion

RIVES, J.

It does not seem material to consider or settle the question of pleading raised by the demurrers to the original and amended declarations in this case. The common counts in indebitatus assumpsit, which were sustained, would have sufficed to sustain a recovery under *the authority of Bank of U. S. v. Jackson’s adm’x, 9 Leigh 221. The contract was one. of privitjr between these parties, and sprung out of the payment of money by one to the other. Had the case been submitted to a jury, it would have conduced to a clearer development of the issue, if the plaintiff had been allowed to count specially, as he did in his amended declaration, upon the particular facts of his demand. The practice of relying on these general counts, was disapproved and discouraged at an early date in the case of Wood v. Luttrel et al., ex’ors of Carr, 1 Call 232, 240, by Judge Pendleton, who used this just and emphatic language: “I cannot forbear to mention that I do not like this new practice of general counts much, as they tend to surprise the other party without giving him the opportunity of preparing for a full defence. ” Butin this case the parties waived their right to have a jury for the trial of this cause, and agreed that the whole matter, of law and fact, should be heard and determined by the court. Inasmuch, therefore, as the court held and was well justified in holding, that a recovery, if at all, might be had under the common counts; and proceeded to hear and determine the case upon its merits under these counts, we are relieved of the necessity of adjusting the pleadings with any technical nicety. There was, perhaps, no other reason for sustaining the demurrer to the amended declaration, save that it did not, in the opinion of the court, set out a legal cause of action; a conclusion also reached in the judgment given for the defendants upon the facts.

We are therefore remitted to the enquiry whether the contract in this case was capable of being asserted in a court of law. The parties to this contract were all alike residents of the Confederate States. In February 1863, the plaintiff in error purchased of the defendants three several drafts of the Farmers Bank of Virginia upon the New Orleans Canal and Banking Company, *bearing date the 26th August 1862, for the sum of two thousand dollars each. Prior to the date of these drafts, the city of New Orleans had been taken by the forces of the United States, and so “occupied and controlled” by them as to be excepted out of the terms of the president’s proclamation of 16th August 1861, that had declared Bouisiana, along with other southern States, in a state of insurrection against the United St The taking of the city was followed by the president’s proclamation of 12th May 1862, raising the blockade of its port from and after the 1st day of June 1862; and the decisions of the Supreme court have fixed the 6th of May 1862 as the period of the full and final restoration of the city to the jurisdiction and authority of the United States. These facts disclose a case of a contract of endorsement between citizens within the insurrectionary districts, during the pendency of hostilities, of a bill drawn by a bank in Virginia upon a bank in New Orleans, that was then claimed and recognized as within the rightful territory of the United States. This statement is sufficient to reveal, in its true light and bearing, the important question upon which we have to pass in this case. In another part of this investigation, I may have to recapitulate other circumstances relevant to other topics of this discussion ; but for present purposes, I have stated all that is necessary to possess us of the points made in this case.

Now it is alleged that the purchase of this bill was illegal and void on two grounds: First, that it was a trading, condemned and avoided by the laws of nations in case of international wars, which, for the purposes of this argument, are assumed to rest upon the same principle and reason as our late internal war; and secondly, that it was prohibited and annulled by the act of congress of July 13, 1861, interdicting “all commercial intercourse” between the inhabitants of the insurrectionary ^districts and the citizens of the rest of the United States. These positions are plainly contradictory; the one referring the claim to the decision of international law, and the other to the decision of municipal law. They cannot both stand together: a choice must be made between [148]*148them. If the case rests on international law, the municipal is excluded; and e con-verso, if within the pale of the municipal, it is without that of the international.

Hence, our first enquiry should be, whether the contract relied on in this case is affected by, or within, the purview of the law of nations touching dealings between alien enemies; and herein we have to consider at the outset the assumption already alluded to; namelj', that our late civil strife was attended with all the legal incidents and consequences' of a war inter gentes. In calling this an assumption, I do not mean to treat with any disrespect the argument of the counsel for the appellees; but I rather indicate thereby the strong and decided sense I entertain of what I humbly submit it can be satisfactorily shown to be. I understand the position to be, that there is no distinction upon reason or authority, between public war of whatever sort and international war, in the vacating of contracts between individual citizens of belligerent countries flagrante bello. That we may more critically examine and determine the soundness of this position, let us first acquire a precise and definite idea of this important tenet of the law of nations. Its indispensable attribute is, that it should be a contract between “alien enemies,” because the doctrine is founded on the principle, that a declaration of war puts not only the adverse governments in their political capacity at war, but renders all the subjects of the one the enemies of the subjects of the other. Vat-tel, bk. 3, c. 5, ? 70; also note to Clemontson v. Blessig, 11 Exch. R. 135. Hence, “no valid contract can be made, nor any promise arise, by implication of law from any * transaction with an enemy,” says Justice Clifford, in Hanger v. Abbott, 6 Wall. U. S. R. 534.

These conditions are all fulfilled in the case of foreign wars between independent nations, because it can be aptly said of them, that a state of war is. contradictory of a state of commerce, and that there cannot be war for arms and peace for commerce. Considerations of public safety, imperiouslj1' forbid all contracts between alien enemies ; so that after the termination of the war, during which they were made, the illegality of the transaction may be set up as a valid defence against an action founded upon any such contract. But are such conditions found in a war waged between citizens of a common country'; and is this doctrine at all applicable to the status or the dealings of fellow-citizens embroiled in a civil war? Under our complex system of State and Federal governments, the constitution of the United States is not overthrown by the insurrection of any portion of the people, however formidably arrayed or efficiently organized under all the facilities of revolt arising out of their separate organizations into States, under all the forms and with all the powers necessary to command the resources and services of their inhabitants. Whatever may have been the theory, on which this rebellion was.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Gratt. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billgerry-v-branch-sons-va-1869.