Philadelphia & R. R. v. Morrison

19 F. Cas. 487, 21 Leg. Int. 372

This text of 19 F. Cas. 487 (Philadelphia & R. R. v. Morrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia & R. R. v. Morrison, 19 F. Cas. 487, 21 Leg. Int. 372 (circtedpa 1864).

Opinion

CADWALADER, District Judge.

The act of congress of 25th February, 1862, authorizing an issue, on the credit of the United States, of notes to a certain amount payable to bearer at the treasury, enacts that they shall be lawful money and a legal tender in payment of all debts, public and private, within the United States, except as is therein provided. The first question is whether congress can constitutionally compel the receipt of such paper as money in private transactions. The second question is whether the enactment, if constitutional, applies to such extinguishment money of a ground rent as is the subject of this proceeding. On the second point I do not intend to express an opinion. I own some ground rents; and although not, therefore, disqualified from sitting in the cause, may, perhaps, on this point, be less disinterested than the circuit judge. We seem to differ at present in opinion upon the first point, though there has not, as yet, been a full interchange of our views upon it. The organization of the court enables either judge sitting alone to adjudicate a case. I will, therefore, in order to enable the circuit judge to decide this case on the second point, withdraw from the bench. Before doing so, however, as he has made some remarks upon the first point, I will state my opinion upon it with my reasons. The money in a country is composed of its own coins and of those imported coins of which its laws permit the circulation, either at their actual value or at a prescribed exchangeable value. A nation’s coins are portable metallic substances in pieces whose composition, weight, impression and exchangeable value are ascertained by law. The purpose of their coinage is to impart a standard value to them. Through this they constitute money, properly so called. They have an actual value which, as tested by foreign exchanges, approximates their prescribed value, or differs from it, according to their pureness or alloy.’ Motives of fiational policy, and considerations of national self-respect tend to check, if they do not altogether prevent, such abuses of sovereign power as would regulate the latter value arbitrarily.

The notes in question may be designated as bills of credit of the United States. They might, for some purposes perhaps, be called paper money of the national government. But they represent money only as they circulate upon the credit which may be given to the national faith pledged for their payment. Paper money, so called, has, in itself, no value measurable with reference to any standard of material or weight. The unqualified use of the phrase ‘‘paper money,” therefore, never can be accurate. It is, in its occasional use. which results, perhaps, from the infirmity of language, applied, in a restricted sense, to those negotiable public or private securities, which, as representatives of money, pass by delivery from hand to hand. But negotiable securities for money, though national faith is pledged for its payment, are not, in the language of constitutional law or of general public law, in the language of the jurisprudence of continental Europe or of the common law of England, or in the language of commerce, actual money. It is true that negotiable paper securities, public or private, [488]*488which circulate, whether at a discount or not, resemble money in respect of their circulation. The resemblance, in this respect is in proportion to the facility of their exchange-ableness, and in the inverse proportion of any discount at which they may pass. But such resemblance ought not to be considered as independent of the available resources for their payment in coin or its equivalent The resemblance. though they should even be readily exchangeable at their full nominal value in money, cannot make them specifically money. They have not, like the coins, a corporeal value independent of that which is inscribed on them. The similarity, therefore, does not justify their designation as money. Counsel, in arguing that paper securities may be money, have cited remarks of Lord Mansfield and some other judges, who, in administering the common law on commercial principles, have had occasion to decide questions upon transfers of title in bank notes by delivery. The same principles have, as rules of decision, been applied in like manner to questions upon the transfer of exchequer bills or treasury notes and other negotiable public securities, and also to bills of exchange and promissory notes of private associations and of individuals. Such paper may sometimes for purposes relative to transfers of title to it, and perhaps for some other qualified purposes. be called money. Lord Mansfield, with such a relation of his words, did say that bank notes are as much money as the current coin used in common payments. But he had, in the context, said that they are treated as money — as cash — in the ordinary course and transaction of business, by the general sense of mankind which gives them the credit and currency of money to all intents and purposes. He did not consider them as money to any other intents or purposes than those of credit and currency which he thus mentioned. Bor all purposes of this kind they may have their exchangeable value. But it cannot be an intrinsic material exchangeable value like that of actual money. Therefore, when stricter legal precision of language was afterwards thought necessary, the notes, bills or drafts which were the subjects of such decisions were judicially called “representatives of money." 4 Barn. & Adol. 6, 9. This was a more accurate form of expression. If, in deciding a case like the present, incidental remarks of English judges in discussing such ordinary questions of civil jurisprudence, must be thus considered, the adoption by Coke and Blackstone of the maxim nullum simile est idem should perhaps not be forgotten. The use of the phrase “paper money” can, however, derive no proper sanction from English authorities. An action for money had and received cannot be maintained in England, by an owner of bank notes to recover their value from a wrongful holder of them “unless money has been received for them,” or they have been treated, between the parties, “as money.” On the same question, whether bank notes are dealt with as money, the familiar case of a tender in them depends. If they are objected to, It is a bad tender, though otherwise it is a sufficient one. The British statute of 29th August, 183d, renewing the incorporation of the Bank of England, made its notes a legal tender so long as it should continue to pay them on demand in legal coin, but not even thus a legal tender by the bank itself or any of its branches.

The qualification thus implied in the use of the phrase “paper money” is more important as to national than as to private negotiable securities. For default as to the latter there may be judicial redress. But if the former should not be paid from the treasury, the nation or its government cannot be sued. This difference was 'judicially considered in ascertaining the extent of the constitutional prohibition of the issue of bills of credit by the states. The result of the decisions is that the prohibition applies only to negotiable paper so issued upon the credit of a state that there is no other debtor. The notes of a bank incorporated by a state, with no other stockholder than the state, and no capital stock except the proceeds of sale of bonds of the state, and managed wholly by directors elected by the legislature of the state, are not within the prohibition, because the bank may be sued, and its property taken in execution under a judgment. In one of the cases the credit of the state was pledged for the ultimate redemption of the notes of such a bank, and the state could, under a law in force, be sued.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Cas. 487, 21 Leg. Int. 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-r-r-v-morrison-circtedpa-1864.