Buckner v. Street

4 F. Cas. 578, 1 Dill. 248

This text of 4 F. Cas. 578 (Buckner v. Street) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckner v. Street, 4 F. Cas. 578, 1 Dill. 248 (circtedar 1871).

Opinion

CALDWELL, District Judge.

In- Osborn v. Nicholson [Case No. 10,595], this court held that slave contracts derived all their obligation from the constitution and laws of the states in which they were made; that the only sanction or validity they had was by virtue of these laws; that the common law would not afford a remedy on such contracts, and that the abolishment of slavery by the thirteenth article of amendment of the constitution of the United States had the effect to repeal these laws, and that the repeal left the holders of such contracts without a remedy. The soundness of - this position is questioned, and I propose briefly to review it

It is conceded that a state cannot pass any law impairing the obligation of any contract, into which it has entered, nor can it pass any law impairing the obligation of any contracts between individuals.

There are qualifications to this general principle, which were pointed out in Osborn v. Nicholson. And a state can no more impair the obligation of its own or individual contracts, by the repeal of the statute under which they were made, than by an affirmative act declaring them void.

But upon what ground were the judgments in the cases establishing • these principles rested? Upon the sole ground that such legislation on the part of the state would be in conflict with that clause of the constitution prohibiting states from passing laws impairing the obligation of contracts. But for that constitutional provision, would or could the courts have rendered the judgments they did render in these cases? •

The opinions of the judges in the numerous cases that affirm these principles afford a conclusive and satisfactory answer to this question.

Now, by what authority were the laws sanctioning slavery and the traffic in slaves repealed? By an amendment to the constitution of the United States, adopted by the people of the United States, and founded on their supreme authority. The moment it was adopted it became a fundamental law, of absolute, paramount obligation. If any state law or constitution, or any provision of the constitution of the United States, previously existing, conflicted directly or by fair implication with its provisions, it was repealed and abrogated. Has it ever been pretended that the limitation of the powers of the states were also limitations on the powers of me whole people of the United States, when acting in their aggregate, sovereign capacity in amending or altering their constitution of government?

The inhibition to pass laws impairing the obligation of contracts is limited to the states. They are, but the national government is not, prohibited from passing such laws. “No state can impair the obligations of a contract; but this inhibition does not apply to the general government.” Bloomer v. Stolley [Case No. 1,559].

“There is nothing in the constitution of the United States which forbids congress to pass laws violating the obligation of contracts, although such a power is denied to the states individually.” Evans v. Eaton [Case No. 4,559], and in Hepburn v. Griswold, 8 Wall. [7.5 U. S.] 637, in answer to . the objection that the legal tender act impaired the obligation of contracts, Mr. Justice Miller says: “Undoubtedly it is a law impairing the obligation of contracts made before its passage. But while the constitution forbids the states to pass such laws it does not forbid congress.”

And the congress of the United States passed laws annulling treaties, which are the most solemn form of contracts that the government can make; and the validity of such acts has always been maintained. Webster v. Keid, Morris (Iowa) 467; Taylor v. Morton [Case No. 13,799]; Gray v. Clinton Bridge [Id. 2,900]; U. S. v. Tobacco Factory [Id. 16,528], affirmed 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 616.

Under our constitution of government the people are the source of all power — they are the supreme power — and their will, when embodied in the form of a constitutional provision, is declared by the constitution itself to be “the supreme law of the land.” It was this supreme law of the land that struck out of existence the laws sanctioning slavery, on which the slave dealer could alone rely to recover the fruits of his traffic.

Mr. Sedgwick says, the effects of the repeal of a statute, when it is clear and abso-' lute, are of a very sweeping character. And-after referring to the cases on that subject, he says: “It will be observed that the operation of the general rule is to give repealing statutes a very retroactive effect; ♦ * * Efforts have been made to resist • these results, and certain exceptions have been made to this retroactive application. The first is, that where a right, in the nature of a contract, has vested under the original statute, then the repeal does not disturb it. And in'this country this principle is carried out and firmly established by the clause of the constitution of the United States, that no state can pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts.”

Now, the soundness of this rule is not questioned, but its application to this ease is denied. The repeal in this case was not by a state statute, nor yet by a law of congress, but by the thirteenth amendment to' the constitution of the United States, which was the work of the sovereign people of the United States, on whose political and lawmaking powers there are no limitations, if we except those imposed by the Deity. They can divest vested rights, and annul and impair the obligation of contracts.

The impediment in the way of repealing acts passed by the states, having their legitimate and full operation on executory contracts, depending for their force and validity on the act repealed, does not obtain when [580]*580the repeal is effected by an amendment to tbe constitution of the United States.

Mr. Sedgwick says that when a right, in the nature of a contract, has vested under the original statute, then the repeal does not disturb it; and he cites in support of this: Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch [10 U. S.] 87; Gillmore v. Shooter, 2 Mod. 310; Couch v. Jeffries, 4 Burrows, 2460; Churchill v. Crease, 2 Moore & P. 415; Terrington v. Hargreaves, 3 Moore & P. 137. “I have examined all these cases. Fletcher v. Peck, as we all know, was ruled upon the ground that the act of the Georgia legislature was repugnant to the clause of the constitution inhibiting states from passing laws impairing the obligation of contracts. All the English cases cited arose under positive enactments, and no question was made in any one of them as to tbe effect of a repealing statute, and they do no more than recognize the well settled rule, that an act of parliament cannot have a retrospective operation on past transactions, unless that intention is expressed, or appears by an unavoidable implication. In Couch v. Jeffries, Lord Mansfield, speaking of the intention of parliament, says: “They clearly meant future actions.” The next and last case cited for this position is Butler v. Palmer, 1 Hill. 324. The opinion of Judge Cowen in this case is a learned and unanswerable argument in favor of the rule I have laid down. A few passages taken from his elaborate opinion will show this very conclusively. He quotes approvingly the language of Lord Chief Justice Tindal, in Key v. Goodwin, 4 Moore & P. 341, 351, where that learned judge said: “I take the effect of a repealing statute to be, to obliterate it (the statute repealed) as completely from the records. of the parliament as if.

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4 F. Cas. 578, 1 Dill. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckner-v-street-circtedar-1871.