Reynolds v. Bank of Indiana

18 Ind. 467
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 18 Ind. 467 (Reynolds v. Bank of Indiana) 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
Reynolds v. Bank of Indiana, 18 Ind. 467 (Ind. 1862).

Opinion

Perkins, J.

On the 1st day of April, 1862, John Reynolds presented to the Branch, at South Bend, of the Bank of the State of Indiana, certain notes or bills issued by that Branch, in the exercise of power conferred by the charter of the bank, [468]*468and, within the usual banking hours, demanded their redemption in coin. The Branch refused to redeem the notes in coin, but offered to redeem them in treasury notes, issued under late acts of Congress, and declared, by act of Congress, to be a legal tender. These treasury notes, issued, as they are, upon no specie basis, but simply upon the indebtedness and credit of the government, and designed to circulate as money, fill the definition of bills of credit. The Circuit Court decided against the plaintiff, holding that the bank might redeem in treasury notes. The charter of the bank contains this section:

“Sec. 8. The said bank shall not at any time suspend or refuse payment, in gold or silver, of any of its notes, bills, or obligations, due or payable, nor of any moneys received upon deposit.; and if said bank at any time refuse or neglect to pay any bill, note, or obligation, issued by such bank, if demanded within the usual banking hours, at the proper branch where the same is payable, according to the contract, promise, or undertaking therein expressed, or shall neglect or refuse to pay on demand, as aforesaid, any moneys received on deposit, to the person or persons entitled to receive the same, then, and in every such case, the holder of any such bill, note, or obligation, or the person or persons entitled to demand or receive such moneys, as aforesaid, shall respectively be entitled to receive and recover interest on their said demands, until the same shall be fully paid and satisfied, at the rate of twelve per centum per annum, from the time of such demand, as aforesaid; and any branch so failing to meet its engagements, may be closed, as in case of insolvency.”

In the present condition of the country, if the bank proceeds, under this section of the charter, to redeem her circulation in coin, she will probably destroy herself, ruin a large portion of her debtors, and distress the people; while, on the other hand, if she is legally hound thus to proceed, and does not, she will thereby, also, put hér .own existence in jeopardy.

[469]*469In this dilemma, the bank asks for a speedy decision of the pending cause, and the plaintiff joins in the request.

The Constitution of the United States, art. 1, sec. 10, ordains that no State shall “ coin money; emit bills of credit; make anything but gold and silver coin a legal tender,” &c. Indiana, in loyal submission to this limitation upon her power as a sovereign State, in framing her Constitution, provides, art. 10, sec. 7, that “ all bills or notes, issued as money, shall be, at all times,' redeemable in gold or silver;” and, as we have seen, the Legislature, in chartering the Bank of the State of Indiana, an institution created to issue a circulating medium of paper, required of her a compliance with this constitutional provision. Sec. 8 above quoted. From such compliance, the State can not release the bank; can the United States do so ? is the question.

If the United States, under the Constitution, can make treasury notes a legal tender in payment of debts between citizen and citizen, she can make them thus between the States of the Union, corporations and citizens. And, coming now to the particular case before us, as the section in the charter of the Bank of the State above quoted was inserted to make* it conform to the restriction upon the power of the State, imposed by the Constitution of the United States, viz: that a State shall not create money in the constitutional sense of that word, and shall not, by her own laws, recognize anything as such but gold and silver, it is not reasonable that we should construe that section as a restriction upon the right of the bank to avail herself of the privilege of using anything else as money, as a legal tender, which the United States, by her laws, might legally declare to be such. The true interpretation of the section must be that the bank shall not refuse to redeem her bills in what the Congress shall constitutionally make legal tender money. The bank can not be compelled to receive treasury notes from the citizen, in one hand, and [470]*470pay to the citizen gold and silver in the other. Under this construction of the charter, the act of Congress in question does not impair its obligation regarded as a contract. But, it may be remarked, if Congress can impair the obligation of contracts between citizens, in this particular, it can aiso, between citizens and corporations, and the States and corporations.

The decision of the cause, then, must turn upon the question, can Congress make treasury notes a legal tender ? Can' it make anything but gold and silver coin a legal tender? The answer to this question must be drawn from the Constitution of the United States; for it is a judicially established proposition that Congress can exercise such powers only as are granted, expressly or incidentally, by that instrument. And the same rule applies to every other department of the government.

It may be further observed, that if the proposition just stated is not true in every particular, then is our government, practically, one of unlimited powers, and the constitution a delusive bauble.

"We proceed to investigate the question above propounded.

1. The power to make treasury notes, or anything else but coin, a legal tender, is not expressly given in the constitution. The money-making power is granted to Congress in these words: “ Congress shall have power to coin money, regulate the value thereof, and of foreign coin.”

2. Is such power granted as an incident to any substantive power ? That it is not, the following considerations strongly tend to prove, viz:

1. The convention which adopted the constitution not only did not grant, but they expressly rejected it as a substantive power, and for the distinctly declared purpose of preventing its exercise, by Congress, under any pretext or circumstances whatever; and this, to®, after the power had been once ex[471]*471pressly granted to the Federal Government; and the States subsequently ratified the constitution with this understanding. Articles of Confederation, sec. 5; Elliott’s Deb. vol. 1, pp. 258, 276, 413, and 531; Madison Papers, vol. 2, p. 1,232; 3 id. 1,343, et seq.; Curt. Hist. Const. Vol. 2, pp. 328, 329, 364; 2 Story Com. on Constitution, 2d ed. commencing at section 1,358.

The above proposition is established by the debates in the convention; see Mad. Pap. supra; by the communication of members to their respective States; see Elliott’s Deb. supra; and by the fact that members of the convention were members of the State ratification conventions.

2. Such paper is unequal to the functions of a national currency.

It is claimed that the power to emit bills is an incident to that of regulating commerce—that a medium of exchange, currency, is a necessity of commerce, and its creation an incident in the regulation of commerce. This argument is not as satisfactory as could be wished. It has apparent weaknesses.

1. As matter of fact, the bills are not emitted on account of commerce. Commerce does not apply for their issue.

2.

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18 Ind. 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-bank-of-indiana-ind-1862.