Hamiltons v. Eaton

11 F. Cas. 336, 1 N.C. 1, 1 Hughes 249
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of North Carolina
DecidedJune 15, 1792
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 F. Cas. 336 (Hamiltons v. Eaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamiltons v. Eaton, 11 F. Cas. 336, 1 N.C. 1, 1 Hughes 249 (circtnc 1792).

Opinion

Sitgreaves, J.

This is an action of debt, brought by the plaintiffs, to recover of the defendant, on an obligation made in the year 1776. The defendant has pleaded four several pleas in bar, which are now for the decision of the court by demurrer.

I shall consider of the case, as it appears by the first plea; which places the defendant, on the most advantageous ground: as a decision on that will probably govern all the cases arising out of the subsequent pleas.

The case as it appears by the first plea, is as follows: the plaintiffs were merchants, residents of North Carolina, before and at the time of the declaration of independence. By an act of the legislature of North Carolina, passed in April 1777, it was among other things enacted, that all persons, being subjects of this state, and "now living therein, or who shall hereafter come to live therein “who have traded immediately to Great-Britain or Ireland, within ten years last past, in their own right, or acted as factors, storekeepers of agents here, or in any of the United States of Ameri"ca, for merchants residing in Great-Britain or Ireland, shall take "an oath of abjuration and allegiance, or depart out of the state." By the same act, such persons were permitted to sell their estates, to export the amount thereof in produce, and to appoint attornies to sell and dispose of their estates for their use and benefit. The plaintiffs, falling within the description of persons contemplated by this act, and refusing to take the oath, departed the state: the debt which is the subject of the present suit then existing. By subsequent acts of the legislature, all the estates, rights, properties and debts of certain person, among which the plaintiffs are specially named, are declared to be confiscated: and the debts due to such [71]*71persons are directed to be paid to certain commissioners, to be appointed by the county courts for that purpose, by all persons within the state, owing the same, under pain of imprisonment: which payment it is declared shall forever indemnity and acquit the persons paying the same, their heirs, &c. against any future claim for then money mentioned in the receipts or discharges of such commissioners, In obedience to those acts, the defendant paid the debt in section, to the commissioners authorized to receive it, and relies that payment as legal, and a full and sufficient discharge. The plaintiffs, admitting the fact of payment, rely on the construction the treaty of the peace; the law of the state declaring that treaty to the part of the law of the land; and the constitution of the United States. The counsel for the plaintiffs, in support of their claim, is in the course of his argument, presented to the view, a doubt whether the debt in the present question has been confiscated in a strictly legal sense, by any of the acts called confiscation acts? and is urged that doubt strenuously, and with much force of argument: contemplating them as a body of penal law, and of course subject to the legal rules of construction in such cases. The observations that point would merit much attention; but I deem it not absolutely necessary to investigate that question, in forming an opinion upon the present case: and shall confine my observations solely to the law and the facts, as they arise out of the pleadings, in the first plea of the defendant, which admits alone of this question, viz.

Are the plaintiffs barred of a recovery?

It would appear quite unnecessary, to enquire whether congress, under whose authority the treaty was negociated, was vested by the states with a power competent to enter into such a contract, I not part of the arguments of the defendant’s counsel seemed to inquire it. No one will doubt, if they had the power, the treaty insequently became obligatory on the people of the United States, when made and duly ratified.

Whatever agreement the states may have entered into, at the declaration of independence, and to what purposes and extent that agreement may or may not have bound them, as a confederated bond; it is clear that at a subsequent period, and previous to the negociation of this treaty, they, by their delegates in congress, formed and entered into a solemn compact, by which they plight and engage the faith of their constituents, to abide by the determination of the United States in congress assembled, on all questions which by the confederation, are submitted to them; and that the articles thereof, shall be inviolably observed by the states. Among many other portions of sovereignty which the states thought proper to defit in that confederated head, was the sole and exclusive right and over of determining on peace and war, (except in certain cases specially enumerated) of sending and receiving ambassadors, entering into treaties and alliances. No words can be more comprehensive or express, relative to the point in question: nor is there of[72]*72fered to my mind the least room for doubt. Admitting for argument’s sake what has been contended, that the ministers, who negociated the treaty, exceeded the powers granted them, certainly the ratification of that instrument, by congress confirmed and legalized all that had been done by them; and if it could be supposed, as has been said, that congress in the ratification of it, exceeded the powers vested in them by the state, the act of Assembly of the state, passed in 1787, must have extinguished every scintilla of doubt, as to its validity and obligatory force on their citizens. That act is a perfect recognition of the whole treaty, declares it to be part of the law of the land, and directs the Judges to decide accordingly. The last mentioned act must surely be sufficient to satisfy the mind of the most scrupulous and sceptical. For myself, I do not hesitate to declare, that it adds nothing to the validity, or legality of the treaty; that its ratification by congress was alone sufficient, and that the act of Assembly of the state was superfluous.

The counsel for the defendant has contended that, by the operation of the acts of confiscation, and the payment into the treasury, the plaintiffs were wholly divested of their right; and the same, if existing at all, was vested in the state. This forms a material part of his defence, and if it had been clearly evinced, that the right of the plaintiffs was wholly extinguished, by the operation of the confiscation acts, and could not possibly be revived or restored, by any subsequent act of the state, or the nation, it would follow of course, that they could have no demand against the defendant. In support of this argument, it is said, 4 Bacon, 637, that all acts done under a statute while in force, are good notwithstanding a subsequent repeal. I am ready to admit the principle in its fullest extent, in the exposition of a statute or municipal law of any particular state. It is consonant with reason, and is justified by the necessity of the case; it prevents much confusion and embarrassment and insures a ready submission to the laws, by a confidence in the security impliedly promised to such obedience. If the treaty was now to be considered as an act of the state, and emanating from the same authority only that produced the acts of confiscation, this reasoning might be solid. But that instrument cannot be subject to the ordinary rules construction, which govern in the exposition of statutes of particular state.

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. Cas. 336, 1 N.C. 1, 1 Hughes 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamiltons-v-eaton-circtnc-1792.