Hopkins v. Jones

22 Ind. 310
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 22 Ind. 310 (Hopkins v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins v. Jones, 22 Ind. 310 (Ind. 1864).

Opinion

Perkins, J.

A mortgage and note were executed as follows:

“We, Lemuel Kinyon and Zelpha Kinyon, of the county of Madison, in the State of Indiana, do assign over and transfer to the State of Indiana, all the following described pieces of land, to-wit: the east half of the south-east quarter of section 5, in township 21, north of range 8 east, 20 acres in the southeast corner excepted, containing 60 acres, more or less, which we declare to be mortgaged for the payment of 141 dollars and 14 cents, with interest, at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum, payable annually in advance, according to the conditions of the note hereto annexed.

“In testimony whereof we have hereunto set our hands and seals this 24th of January, 1848.

“L. Kinyon, [seal.]

“ Zelpha Kinyon, [seal.]

“Attest: Daniel Pickard.”

“ I, Lemuel Kinyon, promise to pay to the State of Indiana, on or before the 24th day of January, 1853, the sum of 14T dollars and 14 cents, with interest thereon, at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum, payable annually in advance, commencing on the 24th day of January, 1848; and do agree, that in case of failure to pay any installment of interest, the said principal sum shall become due, and collectable, together with all arrears of interest; and on any such failure to pay principal or interest when due, 5 per centum damages on the whole sum shall be collected, with costs, and the premises mortgaged may forthwith be sold by the auditor of Madison county for the payment of such principal sum, interest, damages and costs. L. Kinyon.”

The mortgage was duly acknowledged and recorded..

[312]*312A default in payment of interest, and a sale of the land upon the mortgage, occurred.

"When the mortgage and note in question were executed, it is agreed by counsel that the law provided that notice of sale should be giyen 60 days before a sale of the mortgaged premises should take place, on account of a default of payment of interest, &c., on the mortgage.

. Before the sale upon the mortgage took place, a new law had been enacted, touching loans, notes, &c., which provided for notice of sale to be given no more than 21 days before ■sale, and a notice of 60 days was not given in this case. It is contended that the sale was void, because the notice of sale required by the statute at the date of the mortgage was not given, and this is the only question in the cause.

1. Bid the statute, reducing the length of time of notice, impair the obligation of the contract, supposing it operative upon it?

If it did, the statute was void for want of power in the State to enact such a statute.

The inviolability of contracts is most carefully guarded in the United States. It is probably a power, admitted to exist in unlimited governments, to impair or abrogate contracts, between the subjects of such governments, by legislation. Hence, the provision in the Constitution of the United States that no one of the States composing the Union should enact such a law. Hence, also, as there is no such restriction on the power of the Government of the United States, in the Eederal Constitution, it may be, though we do not assert the proposition, that Congress might enact a statute of that character, to be operative within the sphere of that government; but such act of Congress, if passed, could not, unless it were a general bankrupt law, operate upon the domestic contracts between citizens of a State; because the jurisdiction of the General Government does not extend, as a general proposi [313]*313tion, to that subject. That power was uot ceded to it by the States at the adoption of the Constitution. The prohibition upon the States to exercise it, is a concession that it had not been granted away to the Federal Government. Such an act of Congress could only operate upon contracts executed within the sphere of jurisdiction of the Federal Government; such as contracts in the District of Columbia, &c., or between itself and its officers, or contractors, &c. The United States i-s a government over specified subjects and objects, and over persons, as connected therewith, within a certain sphere; and its legislative power extends only to those; and its executive and judicial powers extendían passu with, and, as a general proposition, are bounded by the same limits as the legislative. This follows from the fundamental fact that the Government of the United States is one of granted powers, which are circumscribed by the Constitution containing the grant. Griffin v. Wilcox, 21 Ind. p. 370, and-cases cited; Warren v. Paul, and Thayer v. Hedges, ante, pp. 276, 282.

Those powers do not extend to the interference with purely iomestic contracts between citizens of a State, except through a general bankrupt law. For example, the United States could not provide by law that State Courts should not regard as valid any contracts between citizens of a State, unless they were in writing; though Congress may enact a statute of frauds to operate on contracts falling within the jurisdiction of the United States Government.

Domestic contracts, then, between the citizens of Indiana can not be impaired, except by a bankrupt law, as before mentioned, either by the Government of the State or United States; not by the former for want of power, in the abstract, to enact such a law; not by the latter for want of jurisdiction over the subject matter.

The obligations of a contract exist between the parties to it, and may be said to consist in the mutual duties of per[314]*314forming its requirements. Those obligations might be impaired by the government, if it had the power, in two ways, viz: by expressly abrogating the contract, releasing parties from perfonnance; or, secondly, by depriving the parties of all means to enforce its obligations, or furnishing to them thé power and means of enforcing the contract before due, or in a manner variant from its terms.

In the case at bar, if the State has attempted to impair the obligation of the contract, it has done so by expediting its enforcement, after breach by one of the parties, not by allowing it to be enforced before the stipulated time.

"What were the obligations of the contract disclosed in this suit? There was an obligation on the side of the creditor to wait till the money, named in the securities appearing in the case, became due, before attempting to enforce its payment; and an obligation on the part of the debtor to pay that money when due, and to permit the land in question to be sold forthwith, if he failed to make the payment. x

The contract did not provide for the manner of sale, but an existing statute of the State did. Whether the parties could have prescribed, by contract, a mode different from that prescribed by statute, it is not necessary now to decide, and the authorities upon the point are conflicting. It is true, generally, that what pertains to the right between the parties may be regulated by contract, what to the remedy may not, but must be left to the law, though this proposition is true only as applicable to executory stipulations, not to those accompanied by a power of execution, coupled with an interest. But where the line is between the right and the remedy, is not easily defined. See 2 Par. Mar.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Ind. 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-jones-ind-1864.