Bumpass v. Taggart

26 Ark. 398
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 26 Ark. 398 (Bumpass v. Taggart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bumpass v. Taggart, 26 Ark. 398 (Ark. 1870).

Opinion

HaRRikgton, Special Judge.

This is a case brought by Edward R. Taggart, plaintiff in the court below, against Creed M. Bumpass and John H. Iiicks, upon a promissory note.

The complaint is as follows:

“Edward R. Taggart, plaintiff, vs. Creed M. Bumpass and John H. Hicks, defendants.
Phillips circuit court. Complaint at law.
“The plaintiff, Edward R. Taggart, states that the defendants, Creed M. Bumpass and John II. Hicks, by their promissory note, dated July 3,1869, agreed to pay to the plaintiff one thousand and eighty-eight dollars, on or before the first day of J muary next after said date; which note is herewith filed and made a part of this complaint. No part of said debt has been paid; wherefore ho prays judgment for his debt and for other relief.”

The note filed therewith is in the following words:

“Helena, Aek., July 3, 1869.
“On or before the first day of January next we promise to pay to the order of E. R. Taggart one thousand and eighty - eight dollars for value received.
“O. M. BUMPASS & CO.”

This action was commenced on the 7th day of May, 1870, and on the same day an affidavit was made by the attorney for plaintiff, and filed in the case, setting forth that he believed there was no good and valid defense to said action upon the merits of the case, and that, if a defense was made, it would be for delay merely. Service was duly made on each of said defendants, and, no answer being made, judgment was given the plaintiff.

An appeal, with supersedeas, was granted by this court, and the appellants now ask that said judgment be reversed, and allege as grounds therefor:

First. That the note sued on and offered in evidence was not stamped, as required by law.

Second. That the note described in the complaint is not the instrument exhibited therewith.

■ As no answer was made in this case, in the court below, no ruling of that court can properly be before us, unless it fall under the maxim that “all acts of an inferior court are presumed to be rightly done, in a superior court;” and. as the record shows nothing to the contrary, it must he presumed that the evidence of indebtedness received by the court below was legal evidence.

Resides, notice was duly given the defendants, and no answer made; thereby the. defendants admitted the truth of the allegations contained in the declaration. See 12 Ark. 599, and authorities there cited.

Or, if the note were sufficiently stamped, or without stamp, it would not thereby become void, but could, even after suit had been commenced thereon, have been stamped to the satisfaction of the law. See 24 Ark. 326 — and our statute expressly declares “that no judgment will be reversed, impaired or affected for any defect of form contained in the record, pleadings, process, entries,returns, or other proceedings therein, which by law might be amended by' the court in which such judgment was rendered; but such defects and imperfections shall be supplied and amended by the Supreme Court, or shall be deemed to have been supplied and amended.” See Gould’s Digest, chapter 134, section 36.

Again, no instrument of writing is subject to the invalidating effect of the stamp act, unless the stamp was omitted “with intent to evade the provisions of this act.” Act of Congress, June 30, 1864, section 158. And, in order to defeat a recovery on an unstamped note, it must appear not only that the note is unstamped, but that the stamp has been fraudulently omitted. 34 Cal., 167; 10 Allen, 250, and 47 Barbour, 187.

But tbe case before us.does not require us to go to the extent we have already gone, in sustaining the court below in giving judgment for the plaintiff. Yet, another question presents itself, involving a closer consideration of the law itself — the act of Congress of June 30, 1864, entitled “An act to provide internal revenue to support the government, to pay interest on the public debt, and for other purposes,” and especially section —, which provides “that hereafter no deed, instrument, document, writing or paper required by law to be stamped, which has been signed or issued without being duly stamped, or a deficient stamp, nor any copy thereof, shall be recorded, or admitted, or used as evidence in any court, until a legal stamp or stamps, denoting the amount of tax, shall have been affixed thereto as prescribed by law.”

Does this refer to State courts?

This law was placed upon our books in the time of the nation’s need and the nation’s haste, and so willing were the people at the time to provide the revenue to support the government, that courts, under the pressure of public sentiment, may not have well considered the statutes, and have given it a more liberal interpretation than Congress ever intended it to have, for we cannot presume that Congress intended to do what was clearly unwarranted by the constitution of the United States.

The object of this act is to raise money to support the government, and for this purpose vast powers were granted by the States, in forming the constitution of the United States, to the Congress established by it; but all powers not delegated to the United States by the constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, were reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

The character of our government, somewhat complex, is fitly expressed in the motto on the seal of the United States — “H7 pluribus anum.” It is one government composed of many governments. Each government must be, and is, equally sovereign within its sphere, and Congress is just as much bound to respect and not to impede the free exercise, by the States of their retained rights, as States are to respect and to not impede the free exercise by the federal government, of all her delegated rights. See, on this subject, the very able opinion of Chief Justice MARSHALL, in McCulloch v. State of Maryland, 4 Wheaton, 316.

"While, then, the power to levy taxes, for the purposes indicated in the constitution, may be admitted, it cannot be admitted that it can be so exercised as take, from the domain of State legislation, such subjects as are properly and naturally confided to it, and the care of which has not been surrendered to Congress by the States.

The court, whose action we are reviewing, was created by the State, and is maintained by the State, and created and maintained by those rights and powers inherent and reserved to the States, and in no manner prohibited by the federal constitution. To this court, the laws of the State are supreme rules of action. Can Congress, then, come into this court and change her rules of action? In other words, can Congress declare what instrument shall be or shall not be evidence in a State court, in a case therein pending, growing entirely out of a domestic transaction, and which the laws of the State declare shall be evidence?

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26 Ark. 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bumpass-v-taggart-ark-1870.