Commonwealth v. Beaumarchais

3 Va. 107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedNovember 2, 1801
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Va. 107 (Commonwealth v. Beaumarchais) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Beaumarchais, 3 Va. 107 (Va. Ct. App. 1801).

Opinion

ROANE, Judge.

This cause has been, rightly considered. as an important one: Not so much on account of the magnitude of the sum in dispute, (for, that is but a secondary consideration with every just government, and no consideration at all, with every upright Judge,) as on account of. certain important principles involved in the discussion, and of an opinion which may have gone abroad, that the honor and justice of our country might be implicated. Whether, and to what extent, such an opinion may really exist at this time; or, from what source the impressions lately floating in the public mind, relative to this cause, may have been derived; whether from the incorrect allegations of interested parties, (which I understand to have been even carried into prints,) or otherwise, I pretend not to say: But certain I am, that a decision founded on the basis of those impressions, of which, as a citizen, I could not be entirely ignorant, would be very different indeed, from one which results from a minute and critical investigation of the contract, and testimony before us.

Many important points have been made in the discussion of this cause, and it has been very ably argued. If I shall pass over some of those points in silence, it is because I deem them unnecessary to be decided: If I shall pass over without an answer, many objections which were taken, it is by no means for want of a due respect for the gentlemen who made them; but on account of that pressure of business, which now, as often heretofore, compels me to give, rather a general, than a detailed opinion, upon the case before me.

However unquestionable the claim of this Commonwealth, to unabridged sovereignty, as at the date of this contract, may be: However clear the position, that such a sovereignty cannot, without its consent, be impleaded be-' fore any human tribunal; it is not at this day to be questioned, (and it has, accordingly, been properly conceded for the Commonwealth,) that when such consent has been given, through the Legislative organ of our government, the objection on this score must cease. The only question then, on this part of the case, is, whether by a fair construction of the laws, a cognizance of the cause before us, has been yielded to this Court, and in that form of proceeding which the appellee has chosen to adopt.

It has been said on the part of the present appellee, that this foreigner, claiming the benefit of our laws, existing at the time of the contract, is not bound by the posterior laws, [127]*127because he has never assented thereto: But, in fact he has never assented to any of our laws; and it is not on account of such assent, on his part, that he is bound by, or can take the benefit of them. A bettor objection, on his part, would he, that the act of 1781 does not bind him, because it is a retrospective law: But even that objection would not avail; for, it is not at this day to be questioned, that it binds our own citizens, in whose favor the objection lies at least with equal force. That law is, indeed, a retrospective law; but one; often sanctioned by the judgment of this Court; a law, dictated by imperious State necessity, and even by justice; its object being to give to creditors, the real value of their nominal contracts.

Putting this foreigner then on the same footing with our own citizens: nay, even on a better, if in a doubtful case, it be proved that he were ignorant of our laws and language; if, as I am ready to admit, he is more meritorious than a citizen, in serving the cause of liberty, in a strange land: He shall be considered as even a Virginia citizen, with these circumstances, in an equiponderant cause, ready to incline the balance in his favor. This is as much as would be granted in any country under Heaven, and this the benign and liberal policy- of our laws will permit.

If the contract in question is proper for judicial cognizance, it is not necessary that that cognizance should have existed, at the time of its date; but, the contract construed indeed as to its operation by the laws then in being, may, when a tribunal shall afterwards arise for its decision, he properly submitted thereto. If this were not the case, what would become of innumerable instances in this Commonwealth of existing contracts being decided by newly erected tribunals ? It would be impossible to foresee the extent, or consequences of a contrary position. But, in all the instances of pending improvements, in our Judiciary system, I have never heard of the objection being taken, either in the Legislature or elsewhere.

If this position be correct, the appellee, although his contract bears a previous date, is entitled to the benefit of that clause of the Auditor's law of 1778, [c. 17, § 5, 9 Stat. Larg. 540,] allowing an appeal; although, as is supposed, the original law of 1776, [c. 51, 9 Stat. Larg. 345,] has not a similar provision.

By that law, (the act of 1778,) a claimant, like the present had a right to have his claim audited; having a claim upon the Treasury for money, and the laws denying him [128]*128access thereto, through any other medium, than the Audi¿ors’ board, except in those cases, where (which is not pretended in the present instance,) an act of Assembly shall forbid the claim to be audited.

This too was a -case proper for the exercise of the Auditor’s discretion and judgment; for, although there was. a written contract, it was a proper subject of his enquiry how far that contract had been complied with, how many goods had been delivered pursuant thereto, &c.; to say nothing of the question which afterwards arose, and is now contested, of specie and paper money.

If, then, there had been no interference on the part of the Executive, relative to this claim, no interception of the appellee’s regular progress to the board of Auditors, .there is no doubt but that a decision against him, by that board, would create a jurisdiction in the Court of Chancery. What- was the nature and effect of that Executive interference, and what its influence in the present case ? For, I put entirely out of the question, the decisions of the Legislature. An application to that body, for a gratuity, was proper; but, for a right, under- a contract, an appeal to the Judiciary, was more proper; and possibly, on that ground, the rejection by the Legislature was founded.

A settlement by the Solicitor was not'the proper course for a public creditor to pursue; either as giving him access to the Treasury, or as entitling his case to a Judicial cognizance. Before, therefore, a conclusion shall follow, depriving a party of these privileges, and ousting our Courts of their ordinary jurisdiction, it ought at least to be shewn that the party claimant agreed to a substitution of that officer in lieu of the Auditor, and waived his right of appeal from the decision of. the latter. But, although the Solicitor was not invested with the proper functions of the Auditor, he was yet an useful agent of the Executive, in making statements relative to foreign claims, &c.: There is no ’ testimony in this cause, that the Solicitor was applied to, in the instance before us, in any other sense than this: There is, I believe, no testimony, other than an ex ■parte representation by the Solicitor, that the agent of the appellee consented even to this reference: But, certainly, there is, no testimony, that both (if either) of the parties, applied to this officer as a substitute for the Auditor: Nor, do I see that the report of the Solicitor

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Bluebook (online)
3 Va. 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-beaumarchais-vactapp-1801.