Gist v. Gans

30 Ark. 285
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 30 Ark. 285 (Gist v. Gans) 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
Gist v. Gans, 30 Ark. 285 (Ark. 1875).

Opinion

English, Ch. J.:

On the 12th day of August, 1867, Leon Gans, after notice to James M. Gist, administrator, presented to the Probate Court of White county, for allowance and classification, the following claim against the estate of John F. Thomas, deceased, properly authenticated by affidavit:

“ Stony Point, April 25th, 1862.
$895.25. Due Leon Gans eight hundred and ninety-five 25-100 dollars borrowed money, and payment for a mule, for-which I promise to deliver cotton at Des Arc at eight cents per pound when called for. Jno. F. Thomas.”

Gist, the administrator, interposed two pleas: First — A special plea of non est faotnm. Second — That the note sued on was a Confederate money contract, and illegal and void. Demurrers were interposed to both pleas, sustained as to the second and overruled as to the first, and the plaintiff declining to answer over to the first plea, judgment was finally rendered, after protracted proceedings not material to be stated, in favor of defendant, and plaintiff appealed to the Circuit Court.

The Circuit Court reversed the judgment of the Probate Court for errors appearing of record, and opened the case for trial de novo. A demurrer to the second plea was sustained, defendant was permitted to amend the first plea. The cause was tried by the court sitting as a jury on the first plea, finding and judgment in favor of plaintiff, motion for a new trial was overruled, bill of exceptions and appeal by defendant.

First — The second plea, as amended in the Probate Court, and to which a demurrer was there sustained,, as well as in the Circuit Court, is, in substance, as follows.:

“ And for a second and further plea in this behalf, said defendant says actionem, non, because he says that as to the sum of-dollars, the loaned money mentioned in said note, the same was the amount of a certain currency commonly called Confederate money, which was pretended treasury notes, issued and circulated by the late so-called government of the Confederate States, as a currency to aid, assist and support said so-called Confederate States in the prosecution of the late war of resistance and rebellion against the authority of the government of the United States, and to dissolve the Union of the States of the said United States, contrary to the peace and public policy of said United States and the people thereof, which Confederate money was then loaned by said plaintiff to said deceased in his lifetime, as money and currency to be by him paid out and circulated as currency, contrary to the public policy and the peace and interest of the people of the United States, and the mule mentioned in said promissory note was estimated and sold to said deceased by said plaintiff at its estimated value in the same pretended currency, to-wit — Confederate money, and that said note was to be paid off and discharged in cotton at its estimated value in Confederate money, and was dischargeable in Confederate money if not paid off and discharged in cotton, according to the original stipulation thereof. And so defendant says that said contract was against the public policy of the government and people of the United States, to the great detriment of the interest and peace of said government and people, and is void, without this that said note was executed for or upon any other consideration whatever than as' aforesaid ■, and this defendant is ready to verify. Whereupon,” etc.

The causes assigned for demurrer are numerous and need not be stated.

The plea attempts to answer and defeat the whole cause of action, on the ground that the note was a Confederate money contract, illegal and void.

The logic of the plea is that Confederate money was illegally issued, and therefore a contract between individuals in an ordinary private transaction, based upon such money is tainted with the illegality and void.

The substance of the plea is that plaintiff loaned defendant’s intestate Confederate money, the amount not stated; that intestate owed plaintiff for a mule, value in like money, for which sums the note was given payable in cotton, and to be discharged in Confederate money if the cotton was not delivered, and therefore the whole note was alleged to be illegal and void.

In Latham v. Clark, 25 Ark., 574, a majority of the judges of this court (sitting under the constitution of 1868) decided that contracts based upon Confederate money between individuals in the ordinary course of their private transactions, were illegal and void. Mr. Justice Harrison dissenting, thought proper to follow the more reasonable views of the Supreme Court of the United States, as expressed by the Chief Justice in Thorington v. Smith, 8 Wallace, 1, and to which views the same court has adhered in a number of later decisions, as shown by us in the case of Berry, adx. et al. v. Bellows, adm’r, ante.

Had the plea sought to scale the contract to a Confederate money value (as in Roane v. Green and Wilson, 24 Ark., 210), we might examine the act of March 5th,-1867 (Acts of 1866, p. 195) to inquire whether it was unconstitutional as impairing the obligation of contracts, as held in Leach v. Smith, 25 Ark., 246, and Green & Wilson v. Roane, 24 Ark., 15, or whether it merely attempted to change a rule of evidence, and permit parties to prove, by parol evidence, the character of written contracts made when Confederate money was circulating as a currency. But such was not the object of the plea, its substance and purpose being to defeat the whole cause of action, on the ground that the contract was illegal and void. The court below properly sustained a demurrer to the plea.

Second — The special plea of non est factum, as amended, and on which the cause was tried in the Circuit Court, is as follows :

“ Defendant says, upon information and belief, that the words when called on,’ appearing on the instrument sued on, were not on or a part of said instrument when it was executed by said John E. Thomas, but have been (as he believes) fraudulently added thereto by said plaintiff, or by his procurement, since it was executed, and without the knowledge or consent of said deceased in his lifetime, or of the defendant since his death.”

A demurrer was interposed to this plea, and overruled, and the cause submitted to the court sitting as a jury, and the court found for the plaintiff and gave judgment $1,170.50, being, as stated in the entry, the principal and interest on the instrument sued on from time payment was demanded.

It appears from the bill of exceptions taken by the defendant that on the trial, the plaintiff read in evidence the note sued on, and copied above. Also the notice served by plaintiff on the defendant, 20th July, 1867, that application would be made to the Probate Court for the allowance and classification of the claim, etc.

Plaintiff was then permitted to réad in evidence, against objection of defendant, the following portion of a deposition of plaintiff taken at Philadelphia, Pa., on the 13th day of February, 1871: '

“ I reside in the city of Philadelphia, and am the plaintiff in this suit. I knew John F. Thomas in his lifetime; he executed the note sued on, just as it is; it has not been altered in the least.”

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Bluebook (online)
30 Ark. 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gist-v-gans-ark-1875.