Jones v. Walker

13 F. Cas. 1059, 2 Paine 688
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia
DecidedJuly 1, 1803
DocketCase No. 7,507
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 F. Cas. 1059 (Jones v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Walker, 13 F. Cas. 1059, 2 Paine 688 (circtdva 1803).

Opinion

JAY, Circuit Justice.

This is certainly a cause of great magnitude and expectation; all causes which affect many persons and much property, are so. It has been ingeniously and industriously managed, and it has been attentively and patiently heard. The action is for the recovery of money due on bond prior to the war. The first plea is payment, and on that the parties are at issue. The other pleas have terminated in demurrers. and the court is thereby called upon to decide on their legal efficiency.

The first which I shall consider is the last on the record. It. produces this question: Was the debt annulled by the dissolution of the government which existed when the debt was contracted? This plea, that the debt was annulled when the then existing government of this country was dissolved, appears to me to be unsupported by any principle recognized by the laws of nature or nations, it is not pretended that the debt was not contracted bona fide, or that the parties, or either of them, were under legal disabilities. The creditor, by the contract, then acquired a perfect right to demand, and a perfect obligation was at the same time imposed on the debtor to pay. By the dissolution of the government, the creditor necessarily lost the judicial means of compelling payment in this country, but the mere dissolution of the government could not destroy his right to compel it whenever and wherever he should find such means. If the debt did on that event become annulled, not only the creditor lost his right to demand, but the debtor must, consequently, have ceased to remain under any obligation to pay. We find, however, that the pleas speak a different language, and that the acts of Virginia, specified in those pleas, considered those debts as still existing, and as proper objects of legislative regard and provision. If the debt was annulled and annihilated, why enable the debtor to pay into the loan-office sums which, according to this doctrine, he was under no obligation to pay at all? Why give him a formal receipt to discharge him from so much of the debt as he should pay, when, by the prior dissolution of the government, he had been discharged from the whole of it? The subject affords room for more extensive investigation; and it would not be difficult to show that these rights do not originate in human institution, although human institutions may enforce or suspend their operation, or in certain cases declare them forfeited.

The plea which it appears to me proper next to consider is, that the king of Great Britain, by reason of the facts specified in it, is an enemy of the United States, and, therefore, that the plaintiff, who is his subject, ought not to have or maintain his action aforesaid. The question arising on this plea, is whether (admitting the facts plead to be true) the king of Great Britain hath become the enemy of the United States, in that sense which would justify the court in considering his subjects as being alien enemies, and, consequently, incapable of maintaining actions in our courts. There is a wide distinction between a power who is unfriendly and inimical to, and a power actually at war with the United States, and they with him. There is, also, a wide distinction between the existence of causes which would justify a war, and the existence of actual war in consequence of them. Whatever causes or reasons there may be to justify war, yet these causes and reasons must remain and be considered as mere inducements, until the power vested with the right to make war shall think proper, by declaration or deeds, to cause a state of war to exist. It is the duty of the court to know that peace between Great Britain and the United States has been concluded and published; that peace between them still exists; that the two nations regard each other in that light, and that the president’s late proclamation banishes every doubt on the subject. The defendant having plead in bar, that pursuant to an act passed by Virginia during the war, he had paid the debt into the loan-office of that state, and that the debt had thereby been discharged; the plaintiff replies the fourth article of the treaty of peace, which stipulates that “creditors on either side shall meet with no lawful impediments to the recovery of all bona fide debts theretofore contracted.” To this the defendant rejoins that the king of Great Britain had, in the instances there specified, violated the treaty, and further, that the said debt having been discharged in pursuance of a pre-existing act of Virginia, was not one of those bona fide debts mentioned in the fourth article. To this rejoinder the plaintiff demurs.

The first question which these pleadings naturally suggest is, whether this court has authority to take cognizance of infractions of the treaty by Great Britain, and by reason of them to declare the treaty to be void as to the United States. It is strenuously insisted that the court has such authority: (1) Because, on the distribution of the sovereignty into the three departments of executive, legislative and judicial, such authority became incident to the latter; (2) because, treaties being laws of the land, they fall within the jurisdiction and cognizance of the judiciary; (3) because the authority in question is given by the constitution, and is recognized to have been so given by the judicial act of congress.

I begin with the last, for as the power of the judiciary might have been extended, or limited, according to the pleasure of those who, by the constitution, established it, it is proper to inquire whether the constitution does extend that power to the case now before us in the sense now contended for. [1062]*1062If it does, it ougiit to be exercised; if not, it ought not to be assumed. The constitution expressly declares that the judicial power shall extend to all cases in law and equity arising under treaties. It also declares that treaties shall be the supreme law of the land.

The twenty-sixth section of the judicial act [1 Stat. S7] recognizes its power to determine cases where is drawn into question the validity of treaties. Perhaps it may tend to elucidate the subject if we were to consider “validity,” applied to treaties, as admitting of two descriptions, viz., “necessary” and “voluntary.” By “necessary validity,” I mean that which results from the treaty’s having been made by persons authorized by, and for purposes consistent with the constitution. To this kind of validity all such questions as these relate, viz.: Has the treaty been made and ratified by the president, by the advice and consent of three-fourths of the senators present? Is it temporary, and has it expired? Is it perpetual? Has it been dissolved with mutual agreement? Has it been annulled and declared to be void by the nation, or by those to whom the nation has committed that power? Does it contain articles repugnant to the constitution? Are those articles void? Do they vitiate the whole treaty? &c., &e. By "voluntary validity,” I mean that validity which a treaty, become voidable by reason of violations, afterwards continues to retain by the silent volition and acquiescence of the nation. I call it “voluntary,” because it entirely depends on the will of the nation, either to let it continue to operate, or to annul and extinguish it.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. Cas. 1059, 2 Paine 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-walker-circtdva-1803.