Faw v. Marsteller

6 U.S. 10, 2 L. Ed. 191, 2 Cranch 10, 1804 U.S. LEXIS 249
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 14, 1804
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 6 U.S. 10 (Faw v. Marsteller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faw v. Marsteller, 6 U.S. 10, 2 L. Ed. 191, 2 Cranch 10, 1804 U.S. LEXIS 249 (1804).

Opinion

6 U.S. 10 (1804)
2 Cranch 10

FAW
v.
MARSTELLER.[*]

Supreme Court of United States.

February 14, 1804.

The circuit court decreed, that the rents which accrued during the existence of paper money should be reduced according to the scale for the time when they became payable, but that the subsequent rents should be paid in specie. From this decree Faw appealed, and the case was now argued by Swann and Mason for the appellant; and by E.J. Lee, Jones, and Key, for the appellee.

For the appellant, it was conterded.

The case, as stated by Marshall, ch. j. in delivering the opinion of the court, was as follows:

*11 in the month of May, 1779, the executors of John Alexander in pursuance of a power contained in the will of their testator, set up to the highest bidder on a ground rent for ever, certain lots of land lying in the town of Alexandria.

One of these lots containing half an acre, was struck off to a certain Peter Wise, at the rent of £26 per annum, current money of Virginia. Wise bid for Jacob Sly, a citizen of Maryland, who transferred the lot to Abraham Faw, to whom the same was conveyed in fee-simple, by a deed bearing date the 5th of August, 1779, in which the said ground-rent of £26 per annum, current money of Virginia, was reserved.

In the year 1784, Abraham Faw divided the said half acre of ground into eight smaller lots, five of which he has sold, reserving a ground-rent for ever, amounting to £84 12s per annum. One of these lots was conveyed by Faw, to Jacob Hess, in the year 1784, at the ground-rent of £25 16s per annum, which lot has been since purchased by Philip Marsteller, the apellee, who has also purchased from the devisee of John Alexander, all his rights in, or issuing from the half-acre lot of ground conveyed to Abraham Faw. Thus Abraham Faw becomes liable to Philip Marsteller, for the rent accruing under the deed of August, 1799, who is himself liable to the said Faw, for the rent accruing on part of the same lot, under the deed executed by Faw to Hess, in November 1784.

In November, 1781, the legislature of Virginia, passed an act, calling paper money out of circulation: and also another act directing the mode for adjusting and settling contracts made in that currency.

The second section of this latter act, after stating, by way of preamble, that "the good people of the State "would labour under many inconveniences for want of "some rule, whereby to settle and adjust the payment "of debts and contracts entered into, or made between "the first day of January, 1777, and the first day of "January, 1782, unless some rule should be by law "established for liquidating and adjusting the same, so *12 "as to do justice as well to the debtor as the creditor;" enacts that from and after the passing of the act, "all "debt and contracts entered into or made in the current "money of this State or the United States, excepting, " at all times, contracts entered into for gold and silve "coin, tobacco, or any other specific property, "within the period aforesaid, now remaining due, and "unfulfilled, or which may become due at any future "day, or days, for the payment of any sum or sums of "money, shall be liquidated, settled, and adjusted agreeably "to a scale of depreciation herein after mentioned "and contained; that is to say, by reducing the "amount of all such debts and contracts to the true "value in specie, at the days or times the same were "incurred or entered into, and upon payment of said "value so found, in specie or other money, equivalent "thereto, the debtors or contractors shall be forever "discharged of and from the said debts or contracts, "any law, custom, or usage to the contrary, in any "wise notwithstanding."

The fourth section establishes the scale of depreciation which shall constitute the rule by which the value of the debts, contracts, and demands, in the act mentioned, shall be ascertained; and the fifth section enacts, "that "where a suit shall be brought for the recovery of a "debt, and it shall appear that the value thereof "hath been tendered and refused; or where it shall appear "that the non-payment thereof hath been owing to "the creditor; or where other circumstances arise "which, in the opinion of the court, before whom the "cause is brought to issue, would render a determination "agreeable to the above table unjust; in either case "it shall and may be lawful for the court to award such "judgment as to them shall appear just and equitable."

The act then empowers the court to direct at what depreciation any judgment shall be discharged on a verdict given for damages, between the first day of January, 1777, and the first day of January, 1782, having "regard to the original injury or contract on which the "damages are founded, and any other proper circumstances "that the nature of the case will admit."

*13 It was proved in the cause, that the contracts made by the executors of John Alexander excited at the time very great attention, and were the subject of general conversation. The prevailing opinion among the bidders was, that the rents would be paid in paper money so long as paper should be the circulating medium, after which they would be paid in specie. Such too was the opinion of Peter Wise, the purchaser of the particular lot which occasioned the existing controversy, and there is reason to suppose it was also the opinion of those who were disposing of the property; it was also thought the rent reserved was low, when considered as payable in paper, but high if to be paid in specie.

It was further proved, that a lot not more valuable than that which occasioned the present contest, was sold in 1774, on a ground-rent of £13 5s per annum, forever, and that a lot less valuable was sold in the year 1784, on a ground-rent of £35 per annum. But it appeared from other parts of the testimony, that the lots which were sold in the year 1784, in Alexandria, on ground-rent, were contracted for so much above the value they afterwards bore, that the lessors in very many instances, were under the necessity of reducing the rents one half below the sum originally stipulated, and in some instances the reduction was still greater.

*22 Marshall, Ch. J. After stating the facts of the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was instituted to recover the rent in arrear, under the deed, executed in August 1779, a part of which rent had accrued during the circulation of paper money.

The circuit court decreed that the rents which became payable in the years 1780, and 1781, should be adjusted by the scale of depreciation, when they respectively became due, and that the rents accruing afterwards should be discharged in specie.

From this decree Faw appealed to this court, and it is alleged that the decree of the court below, is erroneous, because,

1st. The contract of August 1777, is within the 2d section of the act of the Virginia assembly, which has been cited. And if so,

*23 2dly. That it is not within the 5th section of that act.

The descriptive words of the act of assembly are "all "debts and contracts entered into, or made, in the current "money of this state, or of the United States,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 U.S. 10, 2 L. Ed. 191, 2 Cranch 10, 1804 U.S. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faw-v-marsteller-scotus-1804.