Crenshaw v. Seigfried

24 Gratt. 272
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 28, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 24 Gratt. 272 (Crenshaw v. Seigfried) 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
Crenshaw v. Seigfried, 24 Gratt. 272 (Va. 1874).

Opinion

Moncure, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The first error assigned by the appellant, in the decree appealed from, is, that it sustains the plaintiff’s exception to commissioner White’s report: the said exception being, “because the commissioner allows defendant war interest; and, whilst not allowing war interest to be charged on the bond in the proceedings mentioned for the period of the late war, deducts from the principal the scaled value of the Confederate money, which was paid on account of interest during that time.

The said decree appealed from was pronounced on the 23d day of May 1872, and therefore the act in force April 2, 1873, entitled “an act to.amend and re-enact section 14 of chapter 187 of the Code of 1860, in relation to interest,” acts of Assembly 1872-73, page 344, chap. 353, does not apply to this case, and it is unnecessary, and would be improper, to express any opinion in regard to the validity of so much of said act as relates to the remission of interest on contracts from the 17th day of April 1861 to the 10th day of April 1865 ; especially as that question is understood to be involved in other cases now pending in this court.

Nor is it necessary to decide the question, very much [276]*276and ably discussed 111 this case, whether interest on any J , J contract, for the period aforesaid, or any part thereof, lawfully be remitted by a court or jury, merely because of the existence of the war during that period. Both the debtor and the creditor were citizetis of the Confederate States, and resided therein, and in the neighborhood of each other, during the whole war.

There are two plain and undeniable propositions, on which the question involved in the first assignment of error depends, which are decisive of the question in favor of the appellant; and they are:

1st. That the debtor bound herself by contract to pay, not only the principal of the debt, but interest thereon, til payment'; and,

2dly. That the interest which accrued on the principal, during the' war, was actually paid, annually, by the debtor to the holder and owner of the bond.

In regard to the first of these two propositions: The debt was ior $2,000, loaned to the debtor, Anna Seigfried, on the 27th day of March 1852, by Anne C. Morris, guardian of James M. Morris. It was an investment, by the guardian, of so much of the ward’s money; and tor its security, the borrower executed her bond, payable to the said guardian twelve months after date, with interest from the date, and a deed of trust on a tract of land, containing 705 acres, lying in the county of Albemarle. The principal of the debt was not paid at its maturity, twelve months after the date of the bond, to wit: on the 27th day of- March, 1853; nor was any part of it paid until the 30th day of December 1870, when it appears that a payment of five hundred dollars was made on account of the bond. But the interest was ato doubt punctually paid annually as it accrued, at least down to the 26th day of March 1868. This appears to liave been certainly the case as to all the interest which [277]*277accrued durum the war, which is regularly credited on , T n ;. , , , the bond. In fact all the interest which accrued on the bond down to the 26th of March 1870, was credited by endorsements on the bond, except the interest for the last two years, $240, which was plaid by a check, dated March 14th, 1870. It is manifest from these facts, that this was a permanent loan and investment of two thousand dollars of the ward’s money; of which, by an understanding and agreement between the parties the borrower was to have the use, in consideration of which use, and so long as it continued, she was to pay, punctually, to the lender, the annual interest accruing on the bond. Certainly, the use of money is a valuable and legal consideration for a promise to pay legal interest thereon; and even an act of the legislature passed to annul or impair such a promise, would be unconstitutional and void. Of course a decree, declaring such a promise to be void, even in the absence of such au act, must therefore be erroneous.

In regard to the second of the said two propositions : There cannot be a reasonable doubt, but that the interest which accrued upon the bond during the war, was actually paid, annually, by the debtor to the creditor. The exact amount of the annual interest is regularly credited on the bond, on or about the very day on which it accrued ; and these payments must have been intended by the debtor to be in discharge of the interest, and not on account of the principal of the debt. 3STo doubt, receipts were given by the creditor to the debtor, corresponding with the credits of interest endorsed on the bond. In one of these endorsements, such a receipt is expressly referred to. These receipts, no doubt, are in the hands of the debtor; and would, if produced, show clearly, as the endorsements show, that they were given for interest, and not on account of the principal of the debt. It [278]*278is fair to presume, that these endorsements, or some of them at least, (and they are numerous, and all of them are, expressly, for interest to date,) were made in the presence, and with the knowledge and consent of the debtor. The loan having been made in good money; not only the principal, but the interest also, was demand-able in good money; and yet, the holder of the bond was content to receive, and did actually receive, all the interest which accrued during the war, in Confederate money, though greatly depreciated most of the time. The interest which accrued for the last year of that time, and which became due on the 26th of March, 1865, and was then paid, though $120 in amouut in Confederate money, .was worth in gold, when paid, but one dollar and eighty-four cents. By sustaining the exception to the commissioner’s report, the court below deprived the creditor of the benefit of these reduced payments of interest, and caused them to be applied to the reduction of the principal.

We are therefore of opinion that the Circuit court erred in sustaining the plaintiff’s exception to the commissioner’s report, and instead of sustaining ought to have overruled the said exception.

The appellant’s second assignment of error is, that the decree “did not dissolve the injunction, as to the amount due upon the bond, according to commissioner White’s original report, and leave petitioner to make the same by selling under his deed of trust. The plaintiff had no cause for going into a court of chancery,” &c.

We think the plaintiff had a right to go into a court of chancery, at least for the purpose of having the precise balance due upon the debt ascertained by an account, if not for the purpose of ascertaining by an enquiry who was entitled to the bond, of which there had been many different holders, of whom some were trus[279]*279tees for the benefit of persons under disability. And having ascertained, by such an account and enquiry, the balance due upon the debt, and who was certainly entitled to receive the same, it was competent for the court, in the exercise of a sound discretion, either to have dissolved the injunction as to the balance due upon the debt and interest, and left the appellant to make the same by selling under his deed of trust, or to have had the trust executed by a commissioner appointed by the court, and under its immediate supervision and direction.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Gratt. 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crenshaw-v-seigfried-va-1874.