Dulany v. Wells

3 Md. 20
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 15, 1790
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 3 Md. 20 (Dulany v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dulany v. Wells, 3 Md. 20 (Md. 1790).

Opinion

[23]*23There were a number of other cases in which similar statements of facts were drawn up for the court’s opinion thereon at this term.

The Court

decided, that the payments made into the treasury were not valid, and gave judgment for the whole of the plaintiff’s claim, except the interest during the war; that is, from the 4th of July, 1776, to the 3d of September, 1783.

The defendants appealed to the court of appeals.

[24]*24The law of nature is the only immutable law. It is implanted in the heart, and ought to govern the actions of all mankind. It is equally obligatory on states as upon private individuals; and a nation in its political capacity, as well as a private individual, can do nothing legally that is contrary to the law of nature. Ruth. b. 2. p. 6. s. 10, 11. Vattel, Prel. Discourse, s. 8, 9.

A person born in a state of society and government,contracts an obligation for the preservation of that government, in his earliest infancy, and before he is capable of making any other engagement whatever. Every person, therefore, knows, who enters into a contract with the subject of a foreign state, that the private engagements of the person who contracts with him, must yield to the prior and superior obligations he owes to the state, whenever its safety or preservation may require it.

Self-preservation is the first law of nature. If I contract with a citizen of France, I know that he is under a prior obligation to his country that prohibits his making any engagement that shall endanger its safety. I know that upon a war being entered into between this country and France, if their • safety required it, they might confiscate my debt, and apply the money to their own defence.

But though such contracts may .be made- to yield to the [25]*25safety of the state, consistent with the law of nature, which declares self-preservation to be its first rule in the ease of a state as well as of an individual, in a case of extreme necessity, yet Vattel says, it is not now practised. In Europe, and any state who should do it, will be guilty of a breach of the law of nations, as now practised, as upon the faith of that custom many of these contracts are created. Vat. b. 3. c. 5. s. 77. Grotius, 700. Jenk. 201. 2 Bynk. 177. But if I contract with one of our own citizens, bound by the samé obligations and the same laws, if he chooses to separate from this government hereafter, how can he acquire a right, or give it to others, to dissolve or annul this contract without my consent.

If two persons in a state of nature should enter into engagements with each other, before they had contracted any prior engagements with society, such private contract would be so far an alienation of their natural rights, that neither of them, without the consent of the other, could dissolve that contract, or by entering into, and becoming a member of, a society afterwards tobe formed, or then existing, could give that society a subsequent right to do it, 1 Ruth. c. 12. s. 9. 2 Ruth. c. 7. s. 12. c. 2. s. 4. Vat. Prel. s. 11. 1 Hale's P. C. 68. 1 Bl. Rep. 3. Ratcliff's Case.

How contrary to every idea of justice would it be to suppose that any man in a state of nature, indebted to another, might, by a quarrel between them, extinguish the claim of his adversary.

Such principles would tend to perpetual enmity and war among mankind •, and if an individual "could not do this himself, he could not, by any subsequent engagement with society, transfer such a right to others.

Upon the same principle, if one state is indebted to another, (and all states are in a state of nature with respect to each other,) no quarrel or war between them will extinguish the debt. So if two states join and form an empire, or if one subdivide and form two, the debts [26]*26contracted prior to such events, remain and must be satisfied. Puff. b. 8. c. 12. s. 2.

Here, then, was an obligation contracted, riot between subjects of different independent states, subject to the control, arid the prior obligations to the respective states of which they were citizens, but between two members of the same state, equally bound at the time by one common law. Could either of these, joining with others,. form a new government, and vest such powers in it as to extinguish this prior obligation, which was contracted before the government itself existed ? Government itself may be dissolved, either by breaking the public compact by general consent, or by the power of a conqueror. The obligations to, the state in these cases cease 5 but yet the contracts of private individuals remain. Ruth. b. 2. c. 10. s. 13. Ruth. b. 2. c. 6. s. 10, 11. 13. Ruth. b. 1. c. 13. 29. Vattel, b. 2. c. 14. s. 216.

When Great Britain, by her conduct, justified the resistance of America^ and the declaration of independence, all obligations to that government ceased. But our private obligations remained, and we were precisely in that predicament of a man who should contract a debt in a state of nature, and afterwards enter into civil society. We had already alienated so much of our natural liberty by the debts we had contracted, and could form no other contract, without the consent of the creditor, to defeat that obligation.

There is a wide difference between power and right. The state of Maryland might refuse the sanction of. her laws for the recovery of such a debt j but if it was necessary on this occasion, Í should contend, on the principles I have suggested, the state could not extinguish it, as being contrary to the laws of nature. Ruth. b. 2. c. 5. s. 3. c. 9. s. 6.

But in this case there can be no occasion to resort to that question ; because, when the creditor comes here to Seek his remedy, he submits to the laws of the state s if [27]*27they prohibit his recovery he must fail; if they do not, he must have judgment in his favour.

The laws of the state are the terms adjusted in writing, on which we are to live with the state, and with each other. The law of nations and public treaties, are the terms on which all states are to live with one another. Furg. Essays, 440, 441.

When there is no treaty, the law of nations, as now established, must prevail between foreigners. But the law of nations is of little import when there is a treaty, for that must be the law between independent nations in all cases to which such treaty extends.

In the consideration of this subject I shall examine,

1. Whether, by the law of nations or the common law, this debt was confiscated or extinguished, independent of any positive law of the state ?

2. Whether it was confiscated or extinguished by any law of the state ?

3. If it was, what is the force and operation of the treaty between Great Britain and this country, of the 3d September, 1783 ?

I admit that while a war exists between two nations, all intercourse between their subjects ought to cease, and that it is alone a suspension of the remedy, and may be pleaded in bar to the recovery of debts. Vat. b. 3. c. 5. s. 77. Grot. 700. 2 Bynk. 177. Park, 267.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Md. 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dulany-v-wells-md-1790.