Ogden v. Saunders

25 U.S. 213, 6 L. Ed. 606, 12 Wheat. 213, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 394
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 13, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by943 cases

This text of 25 U.S. 213 (Ogden v. Saunders) 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
Ogden v. Saunders, 25 U.S. 213, 6 L. Ed. 606, 12 Wheat. 213, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 394 (1827).

Opinion

The learned judges delivered their opinions as follows c

Mr. Justice Washington.

The first and most important point to be decided in this cause turns essentially upon the question, whether the obligation of a contract is impaired by a State bankrupt or insolvent law, which discharges the person and the future acquisitions of the debtor from his liability under a contract entered into in that State after the passage of the act ?

This question has never before been distinctly presented to the consideration of this Court, and decided, although it has been supposed by the judges of a highly respectable State Court, that it was decided in the cáse of M'Millan v. M‘Niel, (4 Wheat. Rep. 209.) That was the case of a debt contracted by two citizens of South Carolina, in that State, the discharge of which had a view to no other State. The debtor afterwards removed .to the territory of Louisiana, where he was regularly discharged, as an insolvent, from all his debts, under an act of the legislature of that State, passed prior to the time when the debt in question was contracted. To an action brought by the creditor in the District'Court of Louisiana, the defendant plead in bar his discharge, under the law of that territory, and it was contended by the counsel for the debtor in this Court, that the law undet which the debtor was discharged, having passed before the contract was made, it could not be said to impair its obligation. The cause was argued on one side only, and it would seem' from the report of the case, that no written opinion was prepared by the Court. The Chief Justice stated that the circumstance of the State law, under which the debt was attempted to be discharged', having been passed before the debt was contracted, made no difference in the application of .the principle, which had been asserted by the *255 Court in the case of Sturges v. Crowninshield. The correctness of this position is believed to be incontrovertible. The principle alluded to was, that a State bankrupt law, which impairs the obligation of a contract, is unconstitutional in its application to such contract. In that case, it is true, the contract preceded in order of time the act of assembly, under which the debtor was discharged, although it was not thought necessary to notice that circumstance in the opinion which was pronounced. The principle, however, remained in the opinion of the Court, delivered in M'Millan v. M'Niel, unaffected by the circumstance that the law of Louisiana preceded a contract made in another State, since that law, having no extra-territorial force, never did at any time govern or affect the obligation of such contract. It could not, therefore, be correctly said to be prior to the contract, in reference to its obligation, since if, upon legal principles, it could affect the contract, that could not happen until the debtor, became a citizen of Louisiana, and that was subsequent to the contract. But I hold the principle to be well established, that a discharge under the bankrupt laws of one government, does not affect contracts made or to be executed under another, whether the law be prior or subsequent in the date to that of the contract; and this I take to be the only point really decided in the case alluded to. Whether the Chief Justice was'correctly understood by the Reporter, when he is supposed to have said, “ that this case was not distinguishable in principle from the preceding case of Sturges v. Crowninshield,” it is not material at this time to inquire, because I understand the meaning of these expressions to go no farther than to intimate, that there was no distinction between the cas'es as to the constitutional objection, since it professed to discharge a debt contracted in another State, which, at the time it was contracted, was not within its operation, nor subject to be discharged by it. The case now to be decided, is that of a debt contracted in the State of New-York, by a citizen of that State, from which he was discharged, so far as he constitutionally could be, under a bankrupt law óf that State, in force at the time when the debt was contracted. It is a case, therefore, that bears no resemblance to the one just noticed

*256 1 come now to the consideration of the question, which, for the first time, has been ■ directly brought before this Court for judgment. I approach it with more than.ordinary sensibility, not only on account of its importance, which must be acknowledged by all, but of its intrinsic difficulty, which every step I have taken in arriving at a conclusion with which my judgment could in any way be satisfied, has convinced me attends it. I have examined both 'sides of this great question with the most sedulous care, and the most anxious desire to discover which of them, when adopted, would be most likely to fulfil the intentions of those' who framed the constitution of the United States. I am far.from asserting that my labours have resulted in entire success. They have led me to the only conclusion.by. which I can stand with any degree of confidence ; and yet, 1 should be disingenuous were I to declare, from this place, that I embrace it without hesitation, and without a doubt of its correctness. The most that candour will permit me to say upon the subject is, that 1 see, or think l see, my way more clear on the side which my judgment leads me to adopt, than on the other, and it pmst remain for others to decide whether the guide I have chosen has been a safe one or not.

It has constantly appeared to me, throughout the different investigations of this question, to which it has been.my duty tó attend, -that the error of those who controvert the constitutionality of the bankrupt law under consideration, in its application to this case, if they be in error at all, has arisen from not distinguishing accurately between a law which impairs a contract, and one which impairs its obligation, A contract is defined by all to be an agreement to do, or not to do, some particular act; and in the construe-, tion of this agreement, depending essentially upon the will of the parties between whom it is formed, we seek for their intention with a view to fulfil it. Any law, then, which enlarges, abridges, or in any manner changes this intention, when it is discovered, necessarily impairs.the contract itself, which is but the evidence of that intention. The manner, or the ¡degree, in which this change is effected, can in no respect influence this conclusion; fpr whether the law affect the validity, the construction, the duration, the ipqde of dis *257 charge, or the evidence of the agreement, it impairs the contract, though it may not do so to the same extent in all the supposed cases. Thus, a law which declares that no action shall be brought whereby to charge a person upon his agreement to pay the debt of another, or upon an agreement relating to lands, unless the same be reduced to writing, impairs a contract made by parol, whether the law precede or follow the making of such contract; and, if the argument that this law also impairs, in the former case, the obligation of the contract, be sound, it must follow, that the statute of frauds, and all other statutes which in any manner meddle with contracts, impair their obligation, and are, consequently, within the operation of this section and article of the constitution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 U.S. 213, 6 L. Ed. 606, 12 Wheat. 213, 1827 U.S. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogden-v-saunders-scotus-1827.