Shorter v. Cobb

39 Ga. 285
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 39 Ga. 285 (Shorter v. Cobb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shorter v. Cobb, 39 Ga. 285 (Ga. 1869).

Opinion

Brown, C. J.

The first error assigned relates to the ruling of the Court below, in dismissing the action for want of jurisdiction, without ordering an issue made up and tried by a jury, to determine whether the note in question was in fact given for slaves. The record does not show that there was any denial of this fact by the plaintiff, or that he demanded a trial by a jury. It is evidently the duty of the Court, before it orders a case dismissed for want of jurisdiction, to ascertain, in some legal way, that it has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the suit. But it may ascertain the fact in a summary manner, by examining witnesses who are cognizant of ■it; and, when satisfied, may act upon such information and evidence, unless one of the parties tenders an issue of fact (which should, I think, be verified by affidavit, as in case of pleas filed under our new Constitution), and demands a trial by jury, when it would be the duty of the Court to order the question of fact in dispute to be determined by a jury.

I. But the great question in this case, is not whether the note in-suit was given for slaves, which is not seriously controverted, but whether the Courts of this State have jurisdiction to enforce the collection of a note given for a slave or slaves. In our judgment, they have no such jurisdiction.

Much has been said in the argument, about that provision of the Federal Constitution, which forbids any State to pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts, which, I trust, [287]*287I shall be able to show has no relevancy whatever to the question now under consideration. It is not necessary in this case for me to discuss the question, whether an Act of the Legislature of a State, whose relations to the Union have never been disturbed and whose government has never been destroyed by secession or rebellion, which denies all remedy to parties to enforce a particular class of obligations, is Constitutional or not. In the former case of Gutts, et al., vs. Hardee, decided at last December Term, I had occasion to cite the opinion of that great American jurist, Chief Justice Marshall, that this section of the Federal Constitution now ' under consideration is prohibitory, not mandatory, and that no State can be compelled to organize Courts, and afford remedies to enforce contracts. Eut the discussion of that question, as applied to a State in full fellowship with the other States of the Union, is in no way necessary to the decision of the case made by this record.

Georgia was one of the States lately comprising the Confederate Government, which set aside the Constitution of the United States, and declared it no longer obligatory upon them, and adopted another Constitution and Government antagonistic to the Government of the United States, to which they required all their officers to swear allegiance. They displaced all Federal officers within their limits, who would have been punished for treason to the Confederate States, if they had attempted to hold their positions, and to uphold the authority of the Government of the United States. They organized a Government, complete in all its parts, which held supreme power over a vast territory, and maintained in the field for four years, against the Government and armies of the United States, one of the most gigantic and heroic struggles recorded in the history of the world. They rejected the flag of the United States, and adopted one of their own in its stead. They sundered the Union, which was in fact destroyed so far as it was possible to destroy it, by force, and so remained, as long as they were able, by their armies in the field, to maintain and defend the Constitution and Government set up by them, under the flag [288]*288adopted as the emblem of their nationality. The Union was not only destroyed during the period of the war, but its destruction would have been permanent, had not the armies of the United States been able to break the power of the Government of the Confederate States, and restore it by force. Had the seceeding States been successful, might would have compelled the recognition of the right of their cause; and those who were in contemplation of law rebels and traitors, by reason of their failure, would, on account of their success, have been distinguished as patriots and heroes.

When the armies of the Confederate States surrendered and its power was crushed, the people of the seceding States were not thereby restored to their former position in the Union, but they became a conquered people, subject to the fate of the conquered; and the Government of the United States, as it existed during the war, became the conqueror, with all the rights and powers of the conqueror over the conquered. And the seceding States, as the conquered, had no rights without the consent of the conqueror, to return to and restore the Union which they had repudiated, and claim the protection of the flag and the guarantees of the Constitution which they had solemnly renounced and thrown off.

The position that has- in effect been assumed and ingeniously defended, that a State may secede, or engage in rebellion against the Government of the United States, renounce its authority, refuse to perform her obligations as a State in the Union, imprison or drive the officers of the United States from their positions, and refuse to permit them to exercise their official functions, wage war, with zeal and energy, for years against the other States of the Union, and if successful, establish and maintain an independent rival power, but if unsuccessful, after she has exhausted all her strength and resources to destroy the Government, may then, as matter of right, return and take her position in the Union, and demand all her guarantees aud privileges as a member of the family of States from which she seceded, or against which she rebelled, is not only a practical absurdity, but is contrary to the usages which govern the intercourse between civilized [289]*289nations, if not contrary to equity and common sense. I venture the assertion that not a secessionist, in or out of office, in the Confederate States, held any such doctrine during the war, or expected any such result in case of our failure. The people of the seceding States took the chances when they determined to withdraw from the Union, and having failed, they could not reasonably expect to escape the penalties of defeat. And candor compels me to add, that the terms dictated were not more rigorous than we, in the then embittered state of popular sentiment, would have dictated to them had our positions been changed and we had been the conquerors and they the conquered.

If the Union still existed during the war, it was the right of either party, at the termination of hostilities, to resume the free exercise of all the rights and privileges, and to demand that the other party faithfully comply with all the obligations existing under or resulting from it, as originally formed and entered into by all the States. This would seem to be a proper test of its continued existence. Was it the right of both parties, at the end of the war, to demand its restoration upon its original basis ? If it existed at the end of the war it existed during the whole period, and it was the right of Georgia, or any other State of the Confederacy, to elect Senators and Representatives who were not individually objectionable, who would have had a perfect right to their seats in the Federal Congress. Probably the most zealous advocate of the doctrine that the Union was never dissolved would hesitate to admit this right in the seceding States during the war.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Ga. 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shorter-v-cobb-ga-1869.